00:00:00
[Music]
00:00:42
good evening
00:00:44
this week and next we will present a
00:00:46
black paper on white racism
00:00:49
frequently the definition and effects of
00:00:51
racism are greatly misunderstood
00:00:53
certainly the impact on blacks can only
00:00:56
be described by us
00:00:58
an operational definition of individual
00:01:00
racism is
00:01:02
subordination of a person or group
00:01:04
because of race
00:01:05
but we will focus on the institutional
00:01:08
practice of racism
00:01:10
when a group is subordinated by factors
00:01:12
indirectly related to race
00:01:14
an example would be a union with all
00:01:16
white members
00:01:18
you can only get in the union if a
00:01:19
member sponsors you
00:01:21
and automatically whites select one
00:01:23
another so this pattern of selection
00:01:25
automatically keeps blacks out
00:01:28
the union is white in the first place
00:01:30
because its membership
00:01:31
reflects the leftover patterns of
00:01:33
slavery therefore
00:01:35
racist behavior is both intentional and
00:01:38
unintentional
00:01:40
our institutions mostly involve
00:01:41
unsuspecting individuals
00:01:43
who are part of a racist pattern all
00:01:46
definitions
00:01:47
of black people's standards and values
00:01:50
have been defined by whites in a society
00:01:52
basically european as simple as it may
00:01:55
seem
00:01:56
we have never made any definition of our
00:01:58
condition beauty standards
00:02:00
social etiquette even our names have
00:02:02
been given us
00:02:03
by white culture to make an
00:02:06
authoritative statement of our concept
00:02:08
of christianity history education
00:02:12
values and culture war colonialism and
00:02:15
imperialism
00:02:16
and psychological development and how
00:02:19
these institutions
00:02:20
operate in a white racist society six
00:02:23
black scholars and philosophers
00:02:24
have been invited to present positions
00:02:26
and analyses of these topics
00:02:29
with me tonight are john henrik clark
00:02:33
an associate professor of african and
00:02:34
afro-american history at hunter college
00:02:36
in new york
00:02:37
mr clark is also author of 11 books
00:02:40
including harlem usa
00:02:42
preston wilcox head of the education
00:02:45
workshop of the congress of african
00:02:46
people
00:02:47
is president of afram associates a black
00:02:50
educational consultant firm
00:02:51
and as an outstanding author reverend
00:02:54
albert clegg is
00:02:55
pastor of the shrine of the black
00:02:56
madonna in detroit michigan and an
00:02:58
advocate of black christian nationalism
00:03:00
he is author of a soon-to-be published
00:03:02
book black christian nationalism
00:03:04
new directions for the black church
00:03:07
brother clark
00:03:08
i'd like to begin by establishing some
00:03:10
kind of a frame of reference
00:03:12
exactly what are we talking about
00:03:16
and i think in order to do this i'm
00:03:18
going to try to dismiss the subject then
00:03:19
come back to it
00:03:21
and deal with it there is no such thing
00:03:24
as a race nature created no races
00:03:28
man created races racial classifications
00:03:32
and he had his own reason for doing it
00:03:35
now
00:03:36
who benefited from this artificial
00:03:38
creation
00:03:39
at first who benefits from it now
00:03:43
now let's look at the historical roots
00:03:46
of this whole thing
00:03:47
and you're not going to understand it
00:03:49
until you understand the implications
00:03:51
the far-reaching effects of the opening
00:03:53
up of the so-called new world
00:03:55
christopher columbus and other thugs
00:03:58
coming
00:03:59
suppressing the um the indians and
00:04:02
finding a justification for this kind
00:04:05
of thing let's look at europe in the
00:04:08
15th
00:04:08
and the 16th century because racism
00:04:12
has its roots in that second rise of
00:04:15
europe
00:04:16
in the 15th in the 16th century they had
00:04:19
to justify
00:04:20
what they were going to do to most of
00:04:23
mankind
00:04:24
they were about to take over the whole
00:04:27
world
00:04:28
now there's a myth about an argument
00:04:31
about whether the world was round or
00:04:33
flat
00:04:33
that's an old wives tale the european
00:04:37
had gained
00:04:38
enough knowledge and had enough guns
00:04:41
and he had been hungry enough within the
00:04:43
body of europe
00:04:44
until he decided that he was going to go
00:04:46
out and take the world
00:04:48
be it round our flat now
00:04:51
in order to understand the religious
00:04:53
basis of racism we have to go back
00:04:57
to a papal bull that the pope issued
00:05:00
in 1455 in an argument between
00:05:04
portugal and spain he turned to them
00:05:07
impatiently and said
00:05:10
you are both authorized to reduce to
00:05:12
servitude
00:05:13
all infidel people and it just so
00:05:16
happens that most of the so-called
00:05:18
infidels
00:05:19
were non-european people non-white
00:05:23
people
00:05:24
europe not only had its bases
00:05:27
for racism it had its basis for the
00:05:30
slave trade
00:05:31
and the same basis would be good in the
00:05:34
colonial system
00:05:35
that followed racism was created
00:05:39
to justify the slave trade to justify
00:05:42
the colonial system
00:05:44
and to justify the up to ruthlessness
00:05:47
that had to
00:05:48
go into the making of modern capitalism
00:05:53
mr wilcox let me begin by suggesting
00:05:56
that the
00:05:57
clearest evidence of racism and
00:05:58
education is the essential control
00:06:00
over black education both in so-called
00:06:03
integrated settings and in segregated
00:06:05
settings
00:06:06
by white people many of whom are
00:06:09
incapable of responding to the people
00:06:11
that are educating as people
00:06:13
many of whom are incapable of
00:06:16
understanding the culture and the
00:06:17
history of the people who are educating
00:06:19
many of whom really
00:06:22
do not see any kind of responsibility
00:06:25
for involving these communities and
00:06:26
managing their own education the second
00:06:30
kind of
00:06:30
aspect is the the ability of white
00:06:34
communities to keep
00:06:35
black people out of their communities
00:06:37
and still
00:06:38
yet exercise some influence over the
00:06:40
education
00:06:41
and black communities that is uh even
00:06:43
when there's no blacks in the white
00:06:45
community whites are still
00:06:46
having some kind of influence over the
00:06:48
education in black communities
00:06:50
a third example is the ways way in which
00:06:52
our schools are organized
00:06:55
despite the fact that we know we live in
00:06:57
a racist society the schools
00:06:59
continue to be organized as though
00:07:01
racism does not exist
00:07:02
that is there has been no real shift of
00:07:05
power within the school there's been no
00:07:07
effective change in the content uh
00:07:09
there's been no
00:07:10
uh forthright recognition of the
00:07:13
politics involved in in
00:07:15
education for instance in new york city
00:07:18
about 55 percent of
00:07:19
the students are black and puerto rican
00:07:21
yet we have one
00:07:22
black and one puerto rican member on a
00:07:24
school board of five people
00:07:26
so three white people are making
00:07:27
decisions that affect 55
00:07:29
of people who they may not be able to
00:07:30
respect his people
00:07:32
reverend clay well i think the the basic
00:07:37
uh reason or symptom
00:07:41
or proof for the racism of the
00:07:44
christian church is the simple fact that
00:07:46
white people have pretended for so long
00:07:48
that that jesus was white
00:07:50
and that they've had the necessity to
00:07:53
interpret jesus as being white when
00:07:55
essentially white christianity is
00:07:58
racially uh
00:07:59
is historically false and
00:08:02
theologically absurd and practically in
00:08:06
terms of its effect on black people
00:08:08
it's a debasing institution that
00:08:10
enslaves black people
00:08:12
i think we have to understand though
00:08:13
that this we're not making moral
00:08:14
judgments here any institution that
00:08:16
exists in any society exists to serve
00:08:18
the interests of the people who set it
00:08:19
up
00:08:20
and christianity uh began as a black
00:08:23
man's religion it's an african religion
00:08:26
we have to remember that israel went
00:08:28
into egypt
00:08:30
with 70 people and after approximately
00:08:32
750 years came out with over 2 million
00:08:35
people
00:08:36
and hordes of other slaves who came out
00:08:38
and became also part of the emerging new
00:08:40
nation of israel
00:08:41
so israel the biblical israel was a
00:08:43
black nation an african nation
00:08:45
that came out of uh of africa
00:08:48
and kept constant ties with africa and
00:08:51
so we have to remember then that jesus
00:08:52
was a
00:08:53
was a black messiah not a not a white
00:08:55
messiah and he comes out of the whole
00:08:57
historical background of of africa
00:09:00
of african traditions of african history
00:09:02
of african culture
00:09:03
the concept of communalism the concept
00:09:06
of the chosen people
00:09:07
the concept of kingdom of god on earth
00:09:09
all these things were
00:09:12
out of african tradition not out of the
00:09:14
white man's tradition
00:09:15
and jesus was essentially a
00:09:17
revolutionary
00:09:18
messiah who was trying to lead a black
00:09:20
people in a revolt
00:09:21
in a struggle and conflict with a white
00:09:23
gentile oppressor
00:09:25
so the whole church has to be viewed
00:09:28
from the point of view of the white
00:09:29
oppressor
00:09:29
the white oppressor has one kind of
00:09:31
christianity as one kind of church
00:09:32
the black church has to become
00:09:34
independent and go back to the historic
00:09:36
african roots of christianity
00:09:38
because the slave church that the white
00:09:39
man set up for black people
00:09:41
tends to continue the enslavement of
00:09:42
black people so the black church has to
00:09:44
become again a revolutionary
00:09:46
instrument in the hands of black people
00:09:47
controlled by black people
00:09:49
fighting as jesus fought for the
00:09:51
liberation of black people against white
00:09:53
gentile oppression
00:09:55
i'd like to continue well from reverend
00:09:58
klig's
00:09:59
point and deal briefly with image
00:10:02
because
00:10:03
image is the paramount factor in keeping
00:10:06
racism
00:10:07
alive now exactly when did the christian
00:10:11
church
00:10:12
become um become white in as much as
00:10:15
christ is
00:10:17
described in early literature as being
00:10:19
swarthy and heaven hair like
00:10:21
sheep's wool and that's surely not a
00:10:24
caucasian's hair
00:10:25
um the first image of the church the
00:10:28
first image of the madonna was
00:10:30
the black madonnas and these black
00:10:32
madonnas were very prevalent
00:10:34
in the churches of europe up until the
00:10:36
16th and the 17th century
00:10:38
there was no white madonnas in the
00:10:40
churches of europe and some of the
00:10:41
churches of europe to this very day
00:10:43
have black madonnas all right at what
00:10:46
point
00:10:46
did christianity become um all white and
00:10:49
at what point did christ become
00:10:51
a blonde blue eyed person that hangs in
00:10:55
your churches and with a haircut and a
00:10:57
uniform he'd probably be a good nazi
00:10:59
all right um one thing the jews seem to
00:11:03
have forgotten is that
00:11:04
the pitch of christ as in present-day
00:11:06
literature is an insult to them
00:11:09
because there's nothing particularly
00:11:10
jewish
00:11:12
about him physically um or otherwise
00:11:15
all right now another thing we're going
00:11:18
to have to look at
00:11:19
seriously is that when the europeans
00:11:23
projected themselves out into the
00:11:24
broader world
00:11:26
they not only colonize most of mankind
00:11:30
they colonize the teaching of history
00:11:32
itself
00:11:33
and gradually so many things black
00:11:37
became um became white
00:11:40
i'd like to just say one little word
00:11:42
about the when did christianity become
00:11:44
white
00:11:45
the process uh by which christianity
00:11:49
became gradually to be interpreted as
00:11:51
being white began at a very early point
00:11:53
with
00:11:54
apostle paul who wrote the epistles of
00:11:57
the new testament
00:11:58
and who was even at that time with black
00:12:00
israel and black jews
00:12:01
an uncle tom jew uh he was an uncle town
00:12:04
black jew
00:12:05
and he wanted to identify with white
00:12:07
gentile world he prided himself on being
00:12:10
a pharisee but more
00:12:11
on being having roman citizenship so as
00:12:14
soon as he had
00:12:15
sunstroke on the damascus road and said
00:12:17
he's been converted
00:12:18
he started out to take the christianity
00:12:22
the teachings of jesus to the gentile
00:12:24
world
00:12:24
now he could not take the revolutionary
00:12:27
teachings that jesus had actually taught
00:12:28
because jesus was a zealot
00:12:30
and they they were engaged in revolution
00:12:32
i mean open revolution he was one of the
00:12:34
the zealot leaders of that time so he
00:12:36
couldn't take that to the gentile world
00:12:38
so he had had to make an image a symbol
00:12:41
out of jesus on the cross which was
00:12:43
compatible with the heathen symbolism of
00:12:45
the roman
00:12:46
and greco-roman heathen world
00:12:49
so he made jesus a kind of a heathen
00:12:52
symbol that he could take to the gentile
00:12:54
world
00:12:54
and the whole writings of the apostle
00:12:56
paul tend then
00:12:57
to destroy the basic uh
00:13:00
african background of christianity and
00:13:03
to make it compatible
00:13:05
with the uh greco-roman heathen world
00:13:08
so it it began there but the actual
00:13:11
identification
00:13:12
of christianity as being a white
00:13:14
religion didn't really take place until
00:13:16
the 14th 15th 16th centuries
00:13:18
when the pictures were being painted uh
00:13:20
and paid for by the
00:13:22
catholic church at that point white
00:13:25
people had decided to declare black
00:13:26
people inferior
00:13:27
and so the whole concept of of of jesus
00:13:30
being black or the madonna being black
00:13:32
was unacceptable to white people at all
00:13:34
a whole new type of slavery was
00:13:36
beginning to emerge
00:13:37
the old type of slavery in egypt joseph
00:13:39
was a slave
00:13:40
who rose to be second only to pharaoh a
00:13:42
whole different concept to slavery
00:13:44
you were a slave only in the terms that
00:13:46
your labor was taken but gradually the
00:13:48
white man declared that anyone who was
00:13:50
non-white
00:13:51
who was enslaved was declared to be
00:13:53
inferior therefore had a whole different
00:13:54
kind of existence
00:13:55
so the whole gradual thing was a part of
00:13:57
the slavery process that dr clark
00:13:59
mentioned
00:14:00
a part of the uh the betrayal of the
00:14:02
apostle paul
00:14:03
and a part of the fall of uh jerusalem
00:14:06
and the fort
00:14:06
and when jews were scattered all over
00:14:08
the world we have to remember one thing
00:14:09
i think it's very important that the
00:14:11
white jews that we see today
00:14:12
have no bloodline connection with with
00:14:15
the jews of the biblical period
00:14:16
they were converted to judaism in europe
00:14:19
and in in
00:14:20
in russia they were converted and have
00:14:22
no bloodline connection with the black
00:14:24
jews
00:14:24
who make up the biblical israel that the
00:14:27
bible writes about and of which jesus
00:14:28
was a part well what happened to the
00:14:29
black jews
00:14:30
the black jews are still in existence
00:14:32
they're black jews in america they're
00:14:33
black jews all over africa they're black
00:14:35
jews in palestine they're black jews
00:14:37
everywhere
00:14:38
diane's daughter complained not not more
00:14:40
than two years ago
00:14:41
that black jews had moved on either side
00:14:43
of her house and therefore her property
00:14:45
had depreciated
00:14:46
in palestine black jews had depreciated
00:14:49
her property
00:14:50
jews had moved directly from palestine
00:14:53
to india
00:14:53
and the community celebrated its uh
00:14:56
1900th
00:14:58
anniversary or something and they had
00:14:59
white jews who had emigrated from europe
00:15:01
and black jews would originally come
00:15:03
from jerusalem at the fall of
00:15:05
jerusalem had an uninterrupted straight
00:15:07
line of connection from
00:15:09
the fall of jerusalem to india all over
00:15:11
the world there are black jews
00:15:12
but the the zionist jews who had been
00:15:15
converted to judaism
00:15:16
have taken over the the control of the
00:15:19
definition of what
00:15:20
judaism is that's why people do with
00:15:21
anything if they come into it they take
00:15:23
it over and define what it is
00:15:24
as you state in your introductory
00:15:26
statement so we have to remember that
00:15:27
white jews when you see them on the
00:15:29
street
00:15:29
are not the jews of the biblical period
00:15:31
and that sometimes confuses black people
00:15:33
who ought to be black christian
00:15:34
nationalism
00:15:35
one of the things i'm hearing from both
00:15:37
of the brothers is that
00:15:38
not only if whites tried to deceive
00:15:41
blacks about
00:15:42
uh the realities but they in effect
00:15:46
deceived each other about the realities
00:15:48
that is uh i'm sitting here thinking
00:15:50
about uh the institutions in society all
00:15:52
of which are racist
00:15:53
you know which quite created in which
00:15:56
whites have used in order to advance
00:15:57
themselves
00:15:58
but never at any point uh stopping
00:16:01
recognizing for instance that the
00:16:02
prisons have nothing to do with
00:16:03
rehabilitation
00:16:04
or the courts in most cases really have
00:16:06
nothing to do with justice what about
00:16:08
school
00:16:08
what what specifically is uh is a racist
00:16:11
pattern
00:16:12
in your opinion as far as the
00:16:13
educational process or the schools is
00:16:15
concerned
00:16:16
well i would say that the overwhelming
00:16:18
educational
00:16:19
process that is racist is a tendency to
00:16:22
educate people
00:16:23
against their own interests that is to
00:16:25
educate black kids to hate themselves
00:16:27
to educate blacks uh to
00:16:30
feel alienated from their own people uh
00:16:33
to educated blacks to
00:16:35
become advocates for the mainstream
00:16:37
against their own people how is that
00:16:38
done specifically
00:16:40
well i would say that you know the
00:16:41
traditional educational process is
00:16:42
number one the concealing of the truth
00:16:44
about history
00:16:46
uh the educating of black students away
00:16:48
from
00:16:49
the problems of their own community for
00:16:51
instance very few black students on
00:16:52
college campuses
00:16:55
are unable to use their minds to work on
00:16:57
the problems that bedevil the black
00:16:58
community
00:16:59
like sickle cell anemia or the housing
00:17:01
problems
00:17:03
the drug problem problems that are
00:17:04
imposed on the black community by
00:17:06
by the outside very few black students
00:17:08
on white campuses or any campus
00:17:10
are spending their energies and their
00:17:11
minds on trying to find solutions to
00:17:13
those problems
00:17:14
in most cases they're being educated say
00:17:17
with a drug problem
00:17:18
learn how to uh use methadone you know
00:17:20
now look
00:17:21
let's deal with our own historical
00:17:23
naivete until we deal with it we're not
00:17:25
going any place
00:17:27
black people have no right to expect
00:17:29
anything from this establishment
00:17:31
because it wasn't set up for them they
00:17:33
wasn't brought to this country to be
00:17:34
given democracy
00:17:36
it was brought to this country to do
00:17:38
some work to labor and to obey
00:17:41
and once the machines made a whole lot
00:17:44
of these jobs
00:17:45
obsolete it tended to make a whole lot
00:17:47
of the people
00:17:48
obsolete now we keep worrying about the
00:17:51
american promise in the american dream
00:17:53
and we forget it wasn't made to us
00:17:56
the white man has not betrayed anything
00:17:59
because he didn't promise us anything
00:18:01
in the um in the first place now
00:18:04
the role of institutions in a dominant
00:18:07
in a society
00:18:09
is to reflect the power that controls
00:18:13
that society so we have american
00:18:16
institutions arrayed against us
00:18:19
and we not even expect these
00:18:20
institutions to reform themselves
00:18:23
because if they reform themselves that's
00:18:25
tantamount to presiding
00:18:27
over their own demise i'd like to say
00:18:29
one thing on that i think
00:18:31
the question you asked is how how do the
00:18:33
schools
00:18:34
accomplish this i mean you were
00:18:35
concerned about the process i think we
00:18:37
got to understand
00:18:37
that there's no such thing as objective
00:18:39
truth which is implicit in in everything
00:18:41
that
00:18:41
clark says that white people use the
00:18:44
institutions
00:18:45
to accomplish white purpose the white
00:18:47
purpose is to maintain a power position
00:18:49
and keep everybody else in a subordinate
00:18:51
powerless kind of position
00:18:53
now that's the institution's purpose and
00:18:55
that's what it's that's the way it
00:18:56
functions and how it functions
00:18:57
and we've got to realize that that
00:18:59
everything that the schools teach
00:19:00
is designed to fit into that purpose the
00:19:03
schools
00:19:04
teach not objective truth but what the
00:19:06
white man
00:19:07
wants to project is truth now that's
00:19:08
from the from the very kindergarten
00:19:10
right straight on
00:19:11
for example what uh sociology
00:19:15
sociology is not a science in the sense
00:19:17
that it's
00:19:18
dealing objectively with the way people
00:19:20
live together it's dealing with the
00:19:22
white man's pattern of living together
00:19:24
as the norm
00:19:25
by which we judge how other people live
00:19:27
if you live like white people live then
00:19:29
you're living
00:19:29
the way you are supposed to live if not
00:19:31
you're either primitive or insane
00:19:33
as a people psychologically it's the
00:19:35
same thing psychology does not deal
00:19:37
with any uh objective kind of
00:19:40
discussion or development of how people
00:19:43
live or analysis of how people
00:19:44
function as individuals but how does the
00:19:47
white man function
00:19:48
if the white man does it this way then
00:19:50
this is the norm by which we judge
00:19:52
all other people if the white man is
00:19:54
violent then actually all people have to
00:19:55
be violent to be normal
00:19:57
if you're not violent obviously there's
00:19:58
something wrong with it you should be in
00:19:59
an insane asylum
00:20:01
the whole pattern that's set up as a
00:20:03
norm for human behavior by psychologists
00:20:05
all the whole library full of it
00:20:07
psychiatrists everybody that's dealing
00:20:09
with it is dealing with it from a white
00:20:10
point of view
00:20:11
so they have they teach white children
00:20:13
black children and white children to
00:20:15
look to white eyes
00:20:16
from the kindergarten on the black child
00:20:18
is beginning to look at the world and
00:20:20
interpret it through white eyes
00:20:21
everything he is is wrong everything
00:20:25
that exists in his community is wrong
00:20:27
we ought to declare that white music
00:20:28
really is no good that white psychology
00:20:30
is no good
00:20:31
the black the white man either acts like
00:20:33
we do or he's insane
00:20:35
white sociology is no good the very
00:20:37
structure of white society indicates
00:20:39
that white people obviously
00:20:41
in social structure are either insane or
00:20:43
they're abnormal
00:20:44
so we have to project down a black
00:20:45
psychology of black sociology or black
00:20:47
music a black history
00:20:49
that takes in the realities and that is
00:20:51
essentially sound
00:20:52
as opposed to the mythology that the
00:20:54
white man has developed
00:20:55
out of his own uh ignorance for one
00:20:58
thing out of his non-creativity because
00:21:00
white man has never created anything
00:21:02
he's stolen things but never created
00:21:03
anything he cannot
00:21:05
actually deal with history because
00:21:07
history is a recital
00:21:08
of his total failure in his total
00:21:10
absence of making any genuine
00:21:12
contributions
00:21:12
if we define a black psychology of black
00:21:14
sociology
00:21:16
uh where will we use these where would
00:21:18
we
00:21:19
we'd use them first to unscramble our
00:21:21
own mixed up minds
00:21:23
if we could understand that black
00:21:24
psychology is is is the psychology that
00:21:26
black man has to have
00:21:28
if he's going to escape from
00:21:29
powerlessness in a white man's world
00:21:31
now the struggle is a struggle between
00:21:33
black people for power
00:21:34
and white people to keep power now we
00:21:36
all we're dealing with is a power
00:21:37
struggle
00:21:38
every institution that the white man has
00:21:40
he uses in this power struggle
00:21:41
there's nothing wrong with that nothing
00:21:43
immoral about any people would do that
00:21:44
when we get on top we're gonna do
00:21:46
exactly the same thing
00:21:47
we're gonna use every institution to
00:21:49
perpetuate black power
00:21:51
and the white man's gonna have to fight
00:21:52
up from the bottom again for another you
00:21:54
know 100 million years trying to get
00:21:56
back to a position of power
00:21:57
there's nothing wrong with fighting for
00:21:58
power but the thing that's wrong is for
00:22:00
powerless people to accept their
00:22:02
powerlessness
00:22:03
and to accept the definition by which
00:22:04
they are maintained
00:22:06
powerless and to accept the institutions
00:22:07
which perpetuate their powerlessness
00:22:09
so that's why i think the new the black
00:22:11
church has to become a power base
00:22:13
for black people and changing this total
00:22:15
institutional conception
00:22:17
uh structure that black people are
00:22:19
living in we've got to use it as a base
00:22:20
to spin off all the institutions that
00:22:22
black people need
00:22:23
that come from a black perspective a
00:22:25
black orientation and are concerned with
00:22:26
black power
00:22:27
as opposed to white power let's go back
00:22:30
to this value
00:22:31
and i think we we i don't think we've
00:22:33
gone over it
00:22:34
too well um we need to look at what kind
00:22:38
of societies did black people come out
00:22:40
of what happened before this
00:22:42
interference
00:22:43
now we came out of basic pluralistic
00:22:46
societies
00:22:47
but we came out of sharing societies
00:22:50
where
00:22:50
nobody was very rich and nobody at all
00:22:53
was poor
00:22:55
now an african-american society would no
00:22:57
more kill a deer and say this is mine
00:22:59
and he would fly
00:23:00
because he didn't think that way he
00:23:02
thought of all poverty
00:23:04
as belonging to the total community now
00:23:07
we were brought into a society as slaves
00:23:11
just at the time the concept of private
00:23:13
property
00:23:14
and capitalism was getting well underway
00:23:17
with the backing of the church
00:23:19
now there is a clash between the values
00:23:22
of the
00:23:23
the best values of the society we came
00:23:25
out of
00:23:26
in the society that enslaved us and
00:23:29
too many of us are tied up with these
00:23:32
values the sacredness
00:23:34
of private property what is so sacred
00:23:36
about private property
00:23:37
what is so sacred about one man taking
00:23:39
upon himself
00:23:41
more than he could use in a lifetime
00:23:43
while people walking by this mountain of
00:23:46
wealth
00:23:46
starving nothing particularly sacred
00:23:48
about this
00:23:49
and these things did not exist in these
00:23:51
old societies
00:23:53
until these old societies began to have
00:23:55
internal differences
00:23:57
and the european came in
00:24:00
and the african naively permitted him to
00:24:03
arbitrate an
00:24:04
african family dispute until we
00:24:06
understand
00:24:08
that up on site the african
00:24:11
invited the european for dinner that's
00:24:13
the first thing he did
00:24:14
the indian invited the european for
00:24:16
dinner the polynesians invited the
00:24:19
european for dinner
00:24:20
now if you invite people for dinner
00:24:24
you first place you've got plenty dinner
00:24:27
and you have a society that is
00:24:28
traditionally hospitable to strangers
00:24:32
the indians invited christopher columbus
00:24:34
for dinner
00:24:35
the first thing they did all right
00:24:39
now let's look at what was happening
00:24:40
inside of christopher columbus's mind
00:24:43
and we can go to his own diary for this
00:24:46
he said i wonder why they're so friendly
00:24:49
they'll be easier to conquer
00:24:51
than i thought they would be i wonder
00:24:53
why they're bringing such small amounts
00:24:55
of gold
00:24:57
i wonder where the minds are his
00:25:00
intentions were not
00:25:01
good it wasn't good then
00:25:04
the intentions are not good now and the
00:25:07
black man
00:25:08
is still hung up with this dinner
00:25:11
invitation
00:25:12
this kindness with the thought that if
00:25:14
you create a create
00:25:16
treat a person humanely then he would
00:25:19
accumulate toward you
00:25:21
black people have not seen white people
00:25:24
at
00:25:24
all that is why they can't deal with
00:25:27
them i won't say one
00:25:28
but i think we have to be careful black
00:25:30
people
00:25:31
we we're too much tied up in this what's
00:25:34
good
00:25:34
and what's bad i think what we need to
00:25:36
begin to look at is what's real
00:25:38
now i don't care whether it's good or
00:25:40
bad i just care whether it
00:25:42
it works whether it doesn't work whether
00:25:43
it helps black people it doesn't help
00:25:45
black people
00:25:46
white people are individualistic white
00:25:48
people are materialistic
00:25:49
and i think dyches is absolutely correct
00:25:51
in the definition of this of black
00:25:53
civilization african civilization
00:25:55
communalistic whole concept is different
00:25:57
but the white man's
00:25:59
individualism and materialism stems from
00:26:02
the fact that he comes
00:26:03
out of a situation a a place where you
00:26:05
could hardly live
00:26:07
you know the barren land where you could
00:26:09
hardly grow no resources
00:26:11
where they had to fight each other just
00:26:12
to keep alive and where each person had
00:26:14
to try to steal all he could to keep
00:26:15
somebody else from getting it so he
00:26:17
could stay alive
00:26:17
now that builds individualism and
00:26:19
materialism now he didn't have much in
00:26:21
the way of materialism but he had
00:26:23
the need the desire so he built ships he
00:26:25
built guns
00:26:26
everything in order to take something
00:26:27
from somebody else now you got to
00:26:29
realize that the black man came up in
00:26:31
a different whole different kind of
00:26:32
environment where there was
00:26:34
everything that a person needed they
00:26:35
didn't have to to
00:26:37
to cheat and lie and steal to get enough
00:26:39
to eat enough to eat was everywhere
00:26:41
nobody had to take from somebody else
00:26:43
all the resources of the world were
00:26:44
right there in the ground and
00:26:45
they had everything they didn't need to
00:26:47
build ships and go conquer someplace
00:26:49
else
00:26:49
if if africans build a ship where would
00:26:51
they go any place they went was worse
00:26:53
than where they were
00:26:54
but the white man could build a ship and
00:26:56
go any place because any place he went
00:26:58
was better than where he was
00:27:00
anything that he could take was better
00:27:01
than what he already had so we're
00:27:03
dealing with the coaches of two people
00:27:05
that stem
00:27:05
from the kind of situation in which they
00:27:07
live black people today
00:27:09
are trying to be individualistic and
00:27:10
materialistic because we are now in a
00:27:13
slave culture
00:27:14
the white man has dominated us so
00:27:15
completely we try to accept his values
00:27:17
what we've got to do is reject his
00:27:19
values go back and accept
00:27:20
the old values that come from africa our
00:27:23
own historic black values
00:27:25
and have a black value system that we
00:27:27
put in opposition to the white man's
00:27:29
materialistic
00:27:30
materialism and individualism thank you
00:27:32
very much gentlemen
00:27:34
uh this week we have presented a black
00:27:37
paper on white racism part one
00:27:39
we have discussed education history
00:27:43
and christianity and how these
00:27:45
institutions in a racist pattern
00:27:47
affect the lives and mentality of black
00:27:50
people
00:27:51
next week we'll present part two we will
00:27:54
deal next week with
00:27:55
values and culture war colonialism and
00:27:58
imperialism
00:27:59
and personality development or
00:28:04
[Music]
00:28:11
psychology