From:
Dcy2kinfo@aol.com
Sent: Friday, October 20, 2006 7:29 PM
Have the courage to act instead of react.
May God continue to bless you and your efforts.
Brother Mikal Muhammad
The other day, a friend of mine came to my dorm room just to chat while
her
laundry was drying. As we were chatting, two young freshmen came by. One
of
the boys wanted to "talk" to my friend (as in date). She asked him how old
they were, and both of the boys replied 18. My friend and I both laughed
hysterically because we are both 22 years old. After my friend left, the
young men were still hanging around and one wanted to know how he could
gain
her interest.
The first thing I told him to do was to pull up his pants! He asked why,
then said he liked saggin' his pants. I told him to come over to my
computer and spell the word saggin'. Then I told him to write the word
saggin' backwards.
S-A-G-G-I-N
N-I-G-G-A-S
I told him the origin of that look was from prison. Men in prison wore
their pants low when they were spoken for by another man. The other
reason their pants looked like that was because they were not allowed to
have belts because prisoners were likely to try to commit suicide.
We as young black people have to be the ones to effect change. We are
dying. The media has made a mockery of the Black American. Even our
brothers and sisters from Africa don't take us seriously. Something as
simple as pulling up your pants and standing with your head high could
make the biggest difference in the world's perception of us.
It is time to do right by ourselves. We need to love and embrace each
other. No one is going to do it for us. It all comes down to perception.
What people perceive is what is reality to them. We have to change not
only the media's perception of us, but we need to change our perception of
ourselves. Remember all eyes are on you Black Man. All eyes are on
you Black Woman. All eyes are on you Black Child.
People are waiting for us to mess up. We have let not only the media, but
the government and the world taint the pure essence of us. They have
stripped our culture down to the point where we only believe we can become
rappers and athletes. We are so much more.
To all Black Men:
It's time to stand up. There are billions of Black Women who want to do
nothing more than love you. We are so in love with your potential. We
want to have your back, we want to love, support and cherish every ounce
of your being. But with that you have to show that you are willing to be
the head of our households. You have to prove yourselves worthy of our
submission. We need you to be hard working...Not a hustler. We need you to
seek higher education, to seek spirituality. We need you to stand! And
trust us; we
will have your back. We know that it gets hard, we know you get weary.
Trust and believe that there is nothing that a Black Woman and a Black Man
can't handle with GOD on their sides.
To all Black Women:
It is also time for us to stand up. It is time for us to stop using our
bodies as our primary form of communication. It is time to be that
virtuous woman that Proverbs spoke of. We can not sit by the wayside while
our men are dying by the masses. We are the epitome of Black Love. It
starts within us. We need to speak with conviction to let not only our
Black Men know, but the world know that we are the Mothers of this world.
We are so powerful.
We are so beautiful. We need to love and embrace every blessing God has
given
us physically, emotionally and spiritually.
For all Black Children:
We need to love them. We need to teach them. We need to stand up for them.
We need to protect them. We need to show them that there are no "get rich
quick" schemes. We need to tell them that they WILL die trying if they
submit to a life of crime and deceit. We need to teach our children that
no
one will love them the way we can. And being a basketball player, a
rapper,
or a drug dealer is not reality. It's not realistic and only a small
percentage of people ever make it as a rapper or professional athlete. We
need to teach our children that we can be more than rappers and athletes.
We
can be the owners of these sports teams; we can be the CEO's of our
fortune
500 companies. We need to believe in literacy. I am almost certain if we
were to look back to the 1930's and 40's, the literacy rates for Black
American Children are probably still the same. So to all my Black
Brothers
AND Sisters...
Pull Up Your Pants!!!
"If you do not understand White-Supremacy (Racism), what it is, and how it
works,
everything else that you understand, would only confuse you." [Neely
Fuller,1971]
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