Kwanzaa Celebration In Jamaica Queens
Black Candle Film - Kwanzaa At The African Poetry Theatre In Jamaica NY
Kwanzaa originated in this country in Los Angeles, arising out of the racial strife of the sixties. In the sixties African Americans were guaranteed rights under the Constitution, but the law was not applied equally. Actually, that’s putting it way too mildly as the law was applied against African Americans with great bias and discrimination. Hence the struggle for full equality began anew and the marches on Washington and in other cities throughout the nation began occurring, most notably in the large northern urban areas and in the south where slavery had been institutionalized for centuries.
African Americans Were Called Negroes Prior To 1960’s
African Americans Shed The Negro Associations With Their Enslaved Past
African Americans Start Redefining Themselves & Their Culture
Having been brought over as slaves and stripped of their own culture, African American leaders began to address their ‘culture crisis’ head on by seeking to create / recreate their own cultural heritage. There weren’t any holidays that African Americans could call their own, so in 1966 on the west side of Los Angeles, Dr Maulana Karenga held the first Kwanzaa celebration with a small group of people from the 'Us' organization.
Kwanzaa Is An African Celebration With Universal Appeal
During the latter half of the sixties Americans saw athletic greats like boxer Cassius Clay rename himself Muhammad Ali and basketball great Lew Alcindor rename himself Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, as an entire people began collectively struggling to redefine themselves in a more appropriate light.
Kwanzaa spread beyond America’s shores to Europe and other transplanted African communities, as well as to Africa itself. For decades, however, it was largely unknown to people outside of the African community. Then in the early nineties a stamp was made which popularized the celebration and today over 40 million people of some African parentage celebrate the holiday.
The Seven Tenets Of Kwanzaa – Jamaica NY
The following is a brief description of the seven tenets of Kwanzaa, one for each day in the order shown below.
1. Unity / Family – This is a time for life, love, unity and family. A time to share music and story among the family and friends.
2. Self-Determination – To enhance ones future, it is important to honor ones past. Imagine your future and begin forging it.
3. Collective Work & Responsibility – It is the collective responsibility of everyone to work for the greater good of the community.
5. Focus – One’s life needs purpose. Improve yourself, improve the planet, do something.
6. Creativity – Express yourself. Use your skills to build harmony in your community.
7. Faith – Believe in yourself. Together we can do anything. Be the spark, the substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen.
After the movie John Watusi the director of the Afrikan Poetry Theatre held a brief discussion with movie-goers about the significance of the film they just saw. I spoke with him afterwards and noted that he’d been celebrating Kwanzaa for somewhere around forty years.
I recommend this film to anyone who is interested in learning more about the African American experience in this country, as well as to anyone who is interested in strengthening their own culture within their own family as the tenets of this new celebration are appropriate to all.
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