Earl Woods was a black man who passed on his love of a game to his son.
Tiger Woods may have never
acknowledged what race he was, but there was no doubt of what his
father was, and the game of golf saw Tiger through the prism of his
paternal bloodlines.
Our Community
How America Made Niggas!!! (Part I of Four: Ignorance and Dependence)
Nigger pathology is something America, black
and white (and now Brown and Yellow), has yet to overcome. “We Shall
Overcome” was the mantra of the 20th Century Civil Rights, and we have
overcome a few things (not many). But one thing we, fo’ sho’, have not
overcome is this Nigger pathology.
How America Made Niggas!!! (Part II of Four: Apathy and Excuses)
In the second part of this series, I want to
examine why African Americans, Blacks, Negroes, Negritudes (whatever we
choose to call ourselves) can’t seem to escape the word Nigger—and its
afterbirth, Nigga.
How America Made Niggas!!! (Part III of Four: Greed and Jealousy)
No matter what you think (or how you think)
about this discussion on eradicating these words (and according to your
e-mail responses, the discussion is now a national one), we cannot deny
what African Americans, as a people, have become as a result of a four
hundred year effort to frame Blacks in a sub-human context and
marginalize their equality.
How America Made Niggas!!! (Part Four of Four: False Hope and Despair)
Niggerism is just not an invention of sub-human capacity, it’s a
circumstance that many Blacks, in most cases, choose not to overcome.
Many of our people act a certain way and call being it “hard” or
“keeping it real,” but only become examples of how the media and
mainstream wants to portray the whole race.
Streets University: Community-Focused Future Making
With the widespread, poverty, homelessness,
unemployment, underemployment, unhealthiness and criminality in the
Black community, a new model of entrepreneurship needs to emerge.
The Open Door
As Africans in America, those of us who
understand the struggle know that it is important to highlight the most
courageous of us. It is important to magnify those of us who step into
an arena where none of us have walked before. When one of us blazes a
path, we talk about how that person has "opened a door" for others who
will come later.