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by ANGELA ARDS


Each generation must out of relative obscurity discover its mission, fulfill
it, or betray it.

         --Frantz Fanon, The Wretched of the Earth

I have stood in a meeting with hundreds of youngsters and joined in while
they sang, "Ain't Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me Around." It's not just a song;
it is resolve. A few minutes later, I have seen those same youngsters refuse
to turn around before a pugnacious Bull Connor in command of men armed with
power hoses. These songs bind us together, give us courage together, help
us march together.

         --Martin Luther King Jr., Why We Can't Wait
"You'll turn around if they put you in jail," a young black man quips to
a peer as counselor LaTosha Brown belts out the classic freedom song.

It's the kickoff of the 21st Century Youth Leadership Movement's annual
winter summit, held last December at Tuskegee University in Alabama. In
1985 former SNCC activists and their children founded 21st Century on the
anniversary of the Selma marches, which ushered in the 1965 Voting Rights
Act. Three times a year the group convenes camps to teach movement history
to a generation with little appreciation of its accomplishments. They've
heard of sit-ins but little of SNCC. Media soundbites provide piecemeal
knowledge of Malcolm X and Martin Luther King, but who was Ella Baker? 21st
Century seeks to fill in the gaps before this generation slips through.
Yet the paradoxical pull of preparing for the future by building a bridge
to the past reveals just how wide the chasm has grown.


"When spirits got
low, the people would sing," Brown explains: "The one thing we did right/Was
the day we started to fight/Keep your eyes on the prize/Oh, Lord." Her rich
contralto, all by itself, sounds like the blended harmonies of Sweet Honey
in the Rock, but it's not stirring this crowd of 150 Southern youth. Two
fresh-faced assistants bound on stage to join in like cheerleaders at a
pep rally. Most of the others, however, take their cues from the older teens,
slouched in their seats in an exaggerated posture of cool repose. Brown
hits closer to their sensibilities when she resorts to funk. "Say it loud,"
she calls. "I'm black and I'm proud," they respond. But a brash cry from
the back of the room speaks more to their hearts. "Can we sing some Tupac?"
Another cracks, "Y'all wanna hear some Busta Rhymes?"


By the weekend's
close, 21st Century co-founder Rose Sanders is voicing a sentiment activists
who work with young people increasingly share. "Without hip-hop," says Sanders,
53, "I don't see how we can connect with today's youth."


In Hiphop America,
cultural critic Nelson George writes that this post-civil rights generation
may be the first black Americans to experience nostalgia. Although it's
proverbial that you can't miss what you never had, or what never truly was,
romantic notions of past black unity and struggle--despite the state violence
that created the sense of community--magnify the despair of present realities.
Public schools are almost as segregated today as at the time of the 1954
Brown v. Board of Education ruling. "Jail, no bail"--the civil-disobedience tactic
used by sixties activists to dismantle Southern apartheid--could just as
easily refer to the contemporary incarceration epidemic, ushered in by mandatory
minimum sentencing, three-strikes-you're-out laws and the "war on drugs."
The voter registration campaigns for which many Southern blacks lost jobs,
land and lives are now mocked by the fact that 13 percent of African-American
men--1.4 million citizens--cannot vote because of criminal records meted
out by a justice system proven to be neither blind nor just.


Hip-hop was
created in the mid-seventies as black social movements quieted down, replaced
by electoral politics. It has deep sixties cultural and political roots;
Gil Scott-Heron and The Last Poets are considered the forebears of rap.
But once the institutions that supported radical movements collapsed or
turned their attention elsewhere, the seeds of hip-hop were left to germinate
in American society at large--fed by its materialism, misogyny and a new,
more insidious kind of state violence.


Under the watch of a new establishment
of black and Latino elected officials, funding for youth services, arts
programs and community centers was cut while juvenile detention centers
and prisons grew. Public schools became way stations warehousing youth until
they were of prison age. Drugs and the violence they attract seeped into
the vacuum that joblessness left. Nowhere was this decay more evident than
in the South Bronx, which came to symbolize urban blight the way Bull Connor's
Birmingham epitomized American racism--and black and Latino youth in the
Boogie Down made it difficult for society to pretend that it didn't see
them.


In the tradition of defiance, of creating "somethin' outta nothin',"
they developed artistic expressions that came to be known as hip-hop. Rapping,
or MCing, is now the most well-known, but there are three other defining
elements: DJing, break dancing and graffiti writing. For most of the seventies
hip-hop was an underground phenomenon of basement parties, high school gyms
and clubs, where DJs and MCs "took two turntables and a microphone," as
the story has come to be told, creating music from the borrowed beats of
soul, funk, disco, reggae and salsa, overlaid with lyrics reflecting their
alienated reality. On city streets and in parks, hip-hop crews--the peaceful
alternative to gangs--sought to settle disputes through lyrical battles
and break-dancing competitions rather than violence. On crumbling city walls
and subways, graffiti writers left their tags as proof that they'd passed
that way, or that some friend had passed on. Eventually, all of these mediums
shaped in New York morphed into regional styles defined by the cities in
which they arose--Los Angeles, Oakland, Chicago, Philadelphia, Atlanta.
Underground tapes showcasing a DJ's skills or an MC's rhymes were all the
outside world knew of rap music until 1979, when the Sugar Hill Gang released
"Rapper's Delight" on a small independent black label. It wasn't the first
rap album; many of the lyrics were recycled from artists with more street
credibility. But it was a novelty to the mainstream. The record reached
No. 36 on US charts and was a huge international hit, purchased largely
by young white males, whose tastes have dictated the way rap music has been
marketed and promoted ever since. From those classic "a hip hippin to the
hip hip hop" lyrics and risqué "hotel-motel" rhymes, rap music has
gone through various phases--early eighties message raps, late-eighties
Afrocentricity, early nineties gangsta rap, today's rank materialism--and
shows no signs of stopping.


This past February, Time trumpeted hip-hop
on its cover: "After 20 years--how it's changed America." In the past year
it has been the subject of at least five academic conferences--from Howard
to Harvard to Princeton to UCLA to NYU. In January 2000, the Postal Service
plans to issue a hip-hop stamp. Nation colleague Mark Schapiro reports that
in Macedonian refugee camps, Kosovar Albanian youth shared tapes of home-grown
hip-hop, raging against life in prewar Kosovo. This creation of black and
Latino youth whom America discounted is now the richest--both culturally
and economically--pop cultural form on the planet.


Given hip-hop's social
origins and infectious appeal, there's long been a hope that it could help
effect social change. The point of the music was always to "move the crowd,"
for DJs to find the funkiest part of the record--the "break beat"--and keep
it spinning until people flooded the dance floor and the energy raised the
roof. In the late eighties, Chuck D of Public Enemy declared rap "the black
CNN" and argued that the visceral, sonic force that got people grooving
on the dance floor could, along with rap's social commentary, get them storming
the streets.


If nothing else, rapping about revolution did raise consciousness.
Public Enemy inspired a generation to exchange huge gold rope chains, which
the group likened to slave shackles, for Malcolm X medallions. From PE and
others like KRS-ONE, X-Clan and the Poor Righteous Teachers, urban youth
were introduced to sixties figures like Assata Shakur and the Black Panther
Party, then began to contemplate issues like the death penalty, police brutality,
nationalism and the meaning of American citizenship.


These "old school
hip-hop headz," in the parlance of the culture, have come of age along with
the music. Many of them are activists, artists, educators, academics, administrators,
entrepreneurs, hoping to use hip-hop to awaken a younger generation in the
way it began to politicize them. Much of this "hip-hop activism" is in New
York, emanating from the culture's Bronx birthplace, but flashes of organizing
are being seen in San Francisco, Los Angeles, Washington, Atlanta and cyberspace.
Last September former Nation of Islam minister Conrad Muhammad launched
A Movement for CHHANGE (Conscious Hip Hop Activism Necessary for Global
Empowerment) and its Million Youth Voter Registration Drive. El Puente Academy
for Peace and Justice in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, has a Hip Hop 101 course
that borrows from Paulo Freire's teaching model: Educate to liberate. In
1993 the Central Brooklyn Partnership, which has trained people since 1989
to organize for economic justice, opened the first "hip-hop credit union"
in Bedford-Stuyvesant to offer low-interest loans. The Prison Moratorium
Project, a coalition of student and community activists dedicated to ending
prison growth and rebuilding schools, is producing No More Prisons, a hip-hop
CD featuring Hurricane G, The Coup and Cornel West. In Atlanta, the Youth
Task Force works with rap artists Goodie Mobb to teach youth about environmental
justice and political prisoners. In the Bay Area, the Third Eye Movement,
a youth-led political and arts organization, has initiated a grassroots
campaign against police brutality that combines direct action, policy reform
and hip-hop concerts that serve as fundraisers, voter education forums and
mass demonstrations. The New York chapter of the Uhuru Movement, a black
nationalist organization that promotes communal living and self-determination,
has as its president Mutulu Olugbala, M1 of the rap group Dead Prez. In
cyberspace, Davey D's Hip-Hop Corner, produced by an Oakland radio personality,
keeps aficionados up to date on the latest industry trends and issues affecting
urban youth. On his own Web site, Chuck D is waging a campaign to get rap
artists to plunge into the new MP3 technology, which offers musicians creative
control and immediate access to a global audience, bypassing corporate overhead
and earning more profits for themselves and, potentially, their communities.
For many activists, the creation of hip-hop amid social devastation is in
itself a political act. "To--in front of the world--get up on a turntable,
a microphone, a wall, out on a dance floor, to proclaim your self-worth
when the world says you are nobody, that's a huge, courageous, powerful,
exhilarating step," says Jakada Imani, a civil servant in Oakland by day
and a co-founder of the Oakland-based production company Underground Railroad.
Concerted political action will not necessarily follow from such a restoration
of confidence and self-expression, but it is impossible without it. Radical
movements never develop out of despair.


It's too early to say whether
the culture can truly be a path into politics and not just a posture, and,
if it can, what those politics might be. But what is emerging throughout
the country--when the influence of the black church has diminished, national
organizations seem remote from everyday life and, in some sense, minority
youth have to start from scratch--is an effort to create a space where youth
of color can go beyond pain to resistance, where alternative institutions,
and alternative politics, can develop.


As Tricia Rose, professor of Africana
studies and history at New York University and author of Black Noise: Rap
Music and Black Culture in Contemporary America, puts it, "The creation,
and then tenacious holding on, of cultural forms that go against certain
kinds of grains in society is an important process of subversion." It is
"about a carving out of more social space, more identity space. This is
critical to political organizing. It's critical to political consciousness."
Because of its osmotic infusion into the mainstream, Rose argues, hip-hop
culture could be used to create a conversation about social justice among
young people, much as black religious culture influenced the civil rights
discourse of the sixties.


Come on, baby, light my fire/Everything you
drop is so tired/Music is supposed to inspire/How come we ain't getting
no higher?

         --Lauryn Hill, "Superstar"


The parallel may stop
with broad social appeal. There are critical distinctions between black
religious culture and hip-hop that make using hip-hop for social change
a complicated gesture, suggests Richard Yarborough, English professor and
director of the Center for African-American Studies at UCLA. "Black religious
culture didn't threaten mainstream white liberals the way hip-hop does,"
notes Yarborough. "It grew directly out of black social institutions, while
hip-hop has few sustained institutional bases. Black religious culture never
became fodder for the mainstream commodity economy the way hip-hop has.
It provided a central role for black women, while the role of women in hip-hop
is still problematic. Black religious culture was associated with the moral
high ground, while hip-hop is too often linked to criminality."

 Indeed,
Davey D dubbed 1998 "The Year of the Hip-Hop Criminal." Scores of artists,
from Busta Rhymes and DMX to Ol' Dirty Bastard and Sean "Puffy" Combs, were
arrested that year on charges ranging from assault to drug and weapons possession
to domestic and sexual violence. Given the hip-hop mandate to "keep it real,"
to walk the talk of rap music, the inescapable question becomes, What kind
of perspectives are youth tapping into and drawing on in hip-hop music?
At the 21st Century youth camp, students are attending the workshop "Hip-Hop
2 Educate." Discussion facilitator Alatunga asks the students to list the
music's major themes, prompting a lugubrious litany, in this order: death,
pain, drugs, sex, alcohol, gangbanging, guns, struggling in life, reality,
murder and childbirth (an odd inclusion, perhaps provoked by Lauryn Hill's
joyful ode to her firstborn). The young woman who offers "childbirth" then
suggests "love." A fan of Kirk Franklin's hip-hop-inflected gospel says
"God." It is Alatunga who suggests "politics." The students duly note it
on their list.


For the next exercise, he has each person name a "positive"
rapper. The first to respond cite the obvious: Lauryn Hill, Goodie Mobb,
Outkast. The rest struggle, coming up with current, though not necessarily
politically conscious, chart toppers: Jay-Z, DMX, the whole No Limit family.
Gospel singer Fred Hammond is allowed because Kirk Franklin was before.
Tupac gets in because everyone feels bad he died before fulfilling his potential.
Master P, chief exec of the No Limit label, raises some eyebrows because
of his hustler image but slides in because it's argued that the distribution
contract he negotiated with Priority Records, which secures him 80 percent
of the sales revenue, upsets the classic master-slave relationship between
the industry and artists. Alatunga finally draws the line at master marketer
Puff Daddy, reminding the group that by "positive" he means political, not
just "getting paid."


It's a tricky business fitting culture into politics.
Adrienne Shropshire, 31, is a community organizer in Los Angeles with AGENDA
(Action for Grassroots Empowerment and Neighborhood Development Alternatives),
which came together after the 1992 "Rodney King riots." "Oftentimes the
music reinforces the very things that we are struggling against," she says.
"How do we work around issues of economic justice if the music is about
'getting mine'? How do we promote collective struggle when the music is
about individualism?"


In 1995, AGENDA tried using hip-hop culture in its
organizing efforts against Prop 209, the anti-affirmative action ballot
measure that eventually passed. Organizers hoped to get youth involved in
canvassing around voter education and peer education workshops in schools
through open-mike poetry nights. The organizers succeeded in creating a
space to talk about social justice issues. They also were able to introduce
themselves to artists whom they often failed to reach doing campus-based
work. And the events were fun, balancing the unglamorous work of organizing.
Overall, though, Shropshire said, "people didn't make the leap" between
raising issues and taking action. They would attend the Friday night poetry
reading but pass on the Saturday morning rally. "The attitude was 'If I'm
rapping about social justice, isn't that enough?' They wanted to make speeches
on the mike, but there was not a critical mass who could take the next step
in the process."


This failed experiment forced AGENDA organizers to return
to more tried and true techniques: door-to-door canvassing; editorials for
local, college and high school newspapers; educational workshops on campuses;
collaboration with on-campus student organizations. At their meetings they
passed out "action cards" for people to note the areas in which they had
expertise: media, outreach, fundraising, event security, etc. And they came
to understand that the solid core of people who remained were not the dregs
of the hip-hop open-mikes but the die-hard troops who could be counted on
over the long haul of a campaign.


As AGENDA learned firsthand, the pitfall
organizers have to avoid is becoming like advertisers, manipulating youth
culture for their own ends. About a decade ago, Tricia Rose recalls, Reynolds
Wrap had a campaign with a cartoon figure reciting rhymes over corny beats
about using the plastic wrap. Since teenagers rarely purchase Reynolds Wrap,
the commercial was rather odd and largely unsuccessful. "But once the advertisers
moved into the realm of youth products," says Rose, "then the fusion was
complete. There was no leap. You could do sneakers, soda, shoes, sunglasses,
whatever, because that's what they're already consuming."


We don't pull
no rabbits from a hat/we pull rainbows/from a trash can/we pull hope from
the dictionary/n teach it how to ride the subway/we don't guess the card
in yo hand/we know it/aim to change it/yeah/we know magic/and don't be so
sure that card in yo hand/is the Ace

         --Ruth Forman, "We Are the
Young Magicians"


"I believe in magic," poet/actor Saul Williams chants
into the mike at CBGB in New York's East Village, backed up by a live band
with violin, viola, drum, bass and electric guitars, and accompanied by
a "live performance painting" by Marcia Jones, his partner. In 1996 Williams
won the Grand Slam Championship, a competition among spoken-word artists
who bring a hip-hop aesthetic to poetry. "Magic," Williams riffs, "not bloodshed,"
will bring on "the revolution." The transformative power of art is the theme
of his hit movie Slam, in which Williams plays a street poet cum drug dealer
incarcerated for selling marijuana. Through his poetry, and beautiful writing
teacher, the protagonist transforms himself and fellow inmates. At the movie's
end, he raps, "Where my niggas at?" both demanding to know where all the
troops are who should be fighting against injustice, and lamenting that
they are increasingly in jail. At CBGB, when Williams asks, "Where my wizards
at?" the challenge to the hip-hop community to transform society through
art is clear.


Later, Williams predicted a "changing of the guard" in hip-hop,
from a commodity culture to an arts renaissance that reconnects with hip-hop's
sixties Black Arts Movement roots. There are plenty of skeptics. Last September,
at a festival of readings, panels and performances in Baltimore and College
Park, Maryland, sixties poet Mari Evans argued that while the Black Arts
Movement was the cultural arm of a political movement, the work of contemporary
artists is "an expression of self rather than the community."

 Considering
that these are not the sixties and there is not yet a movement to be the
arm of, a better analogy would be to the Beat poets of the fifties, whose
subversive art prefigured the political tumult that would arise only a few
years later, even if they didn't anticipate it. Today, what look like mere
social events may represent a prepolitical phase of consciousness building
that's integral to organizing. Often, these open-mike nights and poetry
slams have politically conscious themes that the poets address in their
rhymes. They are also increasingly used for education and fundraising. For
instance, Ras Baraka, son of Black Arts father Amiri Baraka, used the proceeds
from his weekly Verse to Verse poetry nights in Newark to raise money for
his political campaigns for mayor in 1994 and city council in 1998. (He
lost both races narrowly, in runoffs.)


Others are developing companies,
curriculums and performance spaces to institutionalize hip-hop and reclaim
it as a tool for liberation. Mannafest, a performance company, seeks to
develop the voice of black London by creating a space where people can express
their ideas on political and social issues. This fall the Brecht Forum in
New York will sponsor a nine-week "course of study for hip-hop revolutionaries."
Akila Worksongs, an artist-representation company, evolved out of president
April Silver's work in organizing the first national hip-hop conference
at Howard University in 1991. One of its missions is to "deglamorize" hip-hop
for school-age kids. About the responsibility of artists, Silver says, "You
can't just wake up and be an artist. We come from a greater legacy of excellency
than that. Artists don't have the luxury to not be political."


At the
Freestyle Union (FSU) in Washington, DC, artist development isn't complete
without community involvement. That philosophy grew out of weekly "cipher
workshops," in which circles of artists improvise raps under a set of rules:
no hogging the floor, no misogyny, no battling. The last of those, which
defies a key tenet of hip-hop, has outraged traditionalists, who see it
feminizing the culture. What this transformation has created is a cadre
of trained poet-activists, the Performance Corps, who run workshops and
panels with DC-based universities, national educational conferences, the
Smithsonian Institution and the AIDS Project, on issues ranging from domestic
violence to substance abuse and AIDS prevention. This summer FSU and the
Empower Program are holding a twelve-week Girls Hip-Hop Project, which tackles
violence against women.


Obviously, as Tricia Rose points out, this stretching
of the culture, even if it does raise political consciousness, "is not the
equivalent of protesting police brutality, voting, grassroots activism against
toxic waste dumping, fighting for more educational resources, protecting
young women from sexual violence." Toni Blackman, the founder of FSU, admits
as much. "As artists," she says, "we're not necessarily interested in being
politicians. We are interested in making political statements on issues
that we care about. But how do you give young people the tools to decide
how to spend their energy to make their lives and the world better?"

 It's
a good question, but activist/artist Boots of the Oakland-based rap group
The Coup laid the challenge far more pointedly in an interview with Davey
D in 1996: "Rappers have to be in touch with their communities no matter
what type of raps you do, otherwise people won't relate. Political rap groups
offered solutions only through listening. They weren't part of a movement,
so they died out when people saw that their lives were not changing. On
the other hand, gangsta groups and rappers who talk about selling drugs
are a part of a movement. The drug game has been around for years and has
directly impacted lives, and for many it's been positive in the sense that
it earned people some money. Hence gangsta rap has a home. In order for
political rap to be around, there has to be a movement that will be around
that will make people's lives better in a material sense. That's what any
movement is about, making people's lives better."


In order to have a political
movement, you have to have education and consciousness. It's very difficult
to mix education and consciousness with capitalism. And most people, when
confronted with an option, will pick money over everything else.


--Lisa Williamson, a k a Sister Souljah


It's all about the Benjamins,
baby.

         --Sean "Puffy" Combs, a k a Puff Daddy, No Way Out

Organizing the hip-hop generation is "an idea whose time has come," says
Lisa Sullivan, president of LISTEN (Local Initiative Support Training Education
Network), a youth development social change organization in Washington.
"But there's no reason to believe that it will happen naturally."


No organizing
ever does. The grassroots work that is going on around the country is mostly
small, diffuse and underfunded. For it ever to reach a mass scale, Sullivan
argues, there will have to be an independent infrastructure to support 
close-to-the-ground
organizing. That means training, coordination and leadership building. It
also means money. There is plenty of that among the most successful rappers--for
the uninitiated, "the Benjamins" refers to $100 bills--but for the most
part they, and the projects they get behind, are in thrall to the corporate
ideology that made them stars.


Consider Rock the Vote's Hip-Hop Coalition,
designed to register black and Latino youth for the 1996 presidential election
using the same model by which rock artists have tried to convince white
youth that voting is relevant to their lives. The brainchild of rapper LL
Cool J, the Hip-Hop Coalition was led by former Rock the Vote executive
director Donna Frisby and involved artists Chuck D, Queen Latifah and Common
Sense, among others, registering almost 70,000 youth of color, versus hundreds
of thousands of white youth.


This media strategy didn't succeed as Frisby
had hoped, so the coalition took its show on the road, staging political
forums where rap artists and local politicians talked to teenagers about
the political process. What was clear from these open forums was that, besides
the political apathy characteristic of most young people, there is a deeper
sense of alienation. "African-American and low-income youth feel that the
Constitution and the Declaration of Independence were not created with us
in mind," says Frisby. "So people felt, the system isn't doing anything
to help me, why should I participate in it?"


>From these experiences Frisby
learned that not only will programs for minority youth always be given short
shrift by mainstream underwriters--the Hip-Hop Coalition never got the media
support of its white counterpart--but they won't even reach their audience
unless they are specifically designed for youth of color. Now she and Chuck
D have a new venture, Rappers Educating All Curricula through Hip-Hop (REACH).
Building on the Hip-Hop Coalition, REACH is recruiting a cadre of artists
as "conduits of learning," making public appearances at schools, juvenile
detention centers, community centers. In nurturing more conscious artists,
Chuck D and Frisby hope more conscious art will result. The group also plans
to develop educational tools incorporating hip-hop songs. "Hip-hop is first
and foremost a communication tool," says Chuck D. "For the last twenty years,
hip-hop has communicated to young people all across the world, people in
different time zones, who speak different languages, teaching them more
about English, or black hip-hop lingo, quicker than any textbook can." REACH
aims to narrow the cultural and generational gap between teachers and students
in the public schools, and to promote the idea that "being smart is being
cool."


As described by Chuck D, however, REACH seems in many ways to be
an if-you-can't-beat-'em-join-'em approach. To compete for the short attention
spans of youth, he says, social change organizations have to be like corporations.
"A lot of organizations that have been out there for a long time are not
really on young people's minds. In the information age, there are so many
distractions. Organizations have to market themselves in a way so that they
are first and foremost on young people's minds and supply the answers and
options that they might need."


But political organizing isn't about supplying
"answers." As Sister Souljah puts it, "Just because you have the microphone
doesn't mean you know what you're talking about. Just because you can construct
a rhyme doesn't mean that you know how to organize a movement or run an
organization." Souljah came to broad public attention during the 1992 presidential
campaign when Bill Clinton, gunning for Jesse Jackson to woo the conservative
vote, distorted a statement she had made about the LA riots. But before
there was Sister Souljah, rap icon, there was Lisa Williamson, activist.
At Rutgers University, she was involved in campaigns against apartheid and
police brutality. With the United Church of Christ's Commission for Racial
Justice, she mobilized young people for various events in the black community
and organized a star-studded concert at Harlem's Apollo Theater to fund
a summer camp she'd developed. Impressed with her organizing skills, Chuck
D christened her "Sister Souljah" and designated her minister of information
for Public Enemy.


Today, Souljah is executive director of Daddy's House--the
nonprofit arm of Puffy's rap empire, Bad Boy Entertainment--which runs a
summer camp for urban youth and provides meals for the homeless during the
holidays. "The stars we choose to celebrate are reflections of who we are
as a people," she says. "Right now we celebrate those with money, but that
has nothing to do with understanding history, culture or understanding your
future. And I think that's missing in hip-hop right now."


Last November
in an Essence profile, Combs said that he wanted to use his popularity and
influence to galvanize his generation to exercise their political power
in the 2000 presidential election. Last September Master P's nonprofit foundation
helped finance the Million Youth March. Rap artists are clearly not political
leaders--they might be better described as representatives of their record
labels than of their communities--but they do have one obvious role to play
if they want to foster activism. While Sullivan embodies the idea of organizing
as a fundamentally grassroots undertaking, she knows that it can't survive
on sweat alone. "Hip-hop is a billion-dollar industry," she says, "and there
are people who can play a venture philanthropist role. But that would require
educating them about different ways to be philanthropists." No doubt, Master
P and Puffy get capitalism. In 1998, the two were the top-selling rap artists,
with Master P earning $57 million and Combs $54 million. But "the $64,000
Question," says Sullivan, "is could [they] become what Sidney Poitier and
Harry Belafonte were for the civil rights movement? Those two guys actively
financed how people got from Mississippi to Atlantic City," she recalls,
referring to the historic all-black Mississippi State delegation, led by
Fannie Lou Hamer, that demanded to be seated at the 1964 Democratic convention
in place of the state's white segregationists.


Sullivan was the field
coordinator of the Children's Defense Fund and, until 1996, manager of its
Black Student Leadership Network, a service and child advocacy program.
Her subsequent stint as a consultant at the Rockefeller Foundation convinced
her that a movement of the hip-hop generation will have to fund itself.
"Traditional foundations are not going to support this work. You have a
couple of program officers in the arts and humanities who get how important
youth culture is to reaching alienated young people. While they tend to
be radical and politicized, the institutions that they money-out from are
not anywhere comfortable supporting what a mature hip-hop political agenda
could be."


For Sullivan, such an agenda would address three issue areas.
Top on the list is the criminal justice system, including police brutality
and the incarceration epidemic. "It's the whole criminalization of poor,
urban youth," she says. "That's a policy area that folks have got to get
a handle on quickly. And it's also a place where our constituency numbers--our
power--if organized well, could move the policy agenda away from its current
punitive, negative stance." Public education is agenda item number two:
"People are being set up. This is the system that is the most dysfunctional
in the country, and something drastic has to occur so that people acquire
the skills and have a fighting chance in terms of the economic future. A
bad public education system feeds a whole generation of young people into
the criminal justice system." Finally, activists need to address people
losing the vote because of incarceration: "This is about the health of American
democracy. What is happening to the hip-hop community around the loss of
citizenship is permanently preventing many of us from ever being able to
participate in the democratic process."


If you ain't talkin' about endin'
exploitation/then you just another sambo in syndication/always sayin' words
that's gon' bring about elation/never doin' shit that's gon' bring us vindication/and
while we getting strangled by the slave-wage grippers/you wanna do the same,/and
say we should put you in business?/so you'll be next to the ruling class,
lyin' in a ditch/cuz when we start this revolution all you prolly do is
snitch.

         --The Coup, "Busterismology"


Once all this activism
matures, it's hard to say whether it will resemble hip-hop, or the left,
as we know it. But a few operations on the ground suggest some necessary
features. First off, it has to be youth led and defined.

At the weekly
rally for A Movement for CHHANGE, everyone is frisked as they enter the
National Black Theater in Harlem, women on the left, men on the right. "Hip-hop
minister" Conrad Muhammad, the motive force behind the group, is waging
a mass voter registration drive in preparation for 2001, when he hopes to
sponsor a convention to announce a bloc of young urban voters with the political
clout to influence the mayoral agenda. The minister's roots lie in the Nation
of Islam, but at the rally he sounds more like a Southern Baptist preacher.
"Would you, please, brother, register today?" Muhammad pleads with a dreadlocked
black man sitting with his wife. Their new baby just had a harrowing hospital
stay. They're relieved that the baby is healthy and that insurance will
pay for the visit, but initially neither was a certainty. After the minister's
hourlong pitch, the man is still unconvinced that casting a ballot and then
hounding politicians, of any color, will assure strong black communities
of healthcare, good schools and intact families.


Voter registration is
an odd, and hard, sell coming from a man who, until three years ago, never
cast a ballot and, while minister of the Nation of Islam's Mosque #7 in
Harlem, preached against it. But Muhammad, 34, tries. It's mid-November
1998, the same week Kwame Ture, a k a Stokeley Carmichael, died and the
Madd Rapper, a k a Deric "D-Dot" Angeletti, ambushed and battered the then-editor
in chief of the hip-hop magazine Blaze. Someone, Muhammad figures, ought
to be the bridge between the civil rights tradition and the hip-hop generation,
and it might as well be him.


He appeals to that sense of competition supposedly
at the core of hip-hop: "If Kwame at 21 could go down to Lowndes County
and register his people to vote, so can we." He appeals to a sense of shame:
"This is the talented tenth that Du Bois said was supposed to come up with
solutions to the problems of our people, and here they are fighting and
killing each other up in corporate offices. Brothers and sisters, you know
we got to make a change from that kind of craziness." He goads: "Talkin'
'bout you a nationalist, you don't believe in the system. You're a part
of the system!" He suggests outright poverty: "Somebody had to say, 'I'll
forgo the riches of this world to make sure that my people are in power.'
If Stokeley died with $10 in his pocket I'd be surprised." He pushes the
willingness-to-suffer motif that characterized the early civil rights movement:
"James Meredith decided to have a march against fear. We need one of those
today in the 'hood, where dope is being sold, people are destroying themselves,
frivolity and ignorance are robbing this generation of its substance. Meredith
marched by himself--of course, he was shot down. You make that kind of stand,
you're going to be shot down." At long last, he gets to his point: "If A
Movement for CHHANGE can organize the youth, get them off these street corners,
get them registered, make them conscious, active players in the political
landscape, maybe we can vote Sharpton into office as mayor or Jesse as President."
The grandmothers of the amen gallery in the audience punctuate each exhortation
with cheers, and a few raised fists. The young folks quietly mull over the
prospects: poverty, suffering, Sharpton, Jesse. At one point, a 17-year-old
decked in the "ghetto fabulous" hip-hop style--baggy jeans, boots, black satin
do-rag, huge rhinestone studs weighing down each lobe--challenges the voter
registration model of political empowerment. "They [politicians] always
say things, do things, but soon as they get in office, they don't say and
do what they're supposed to. The community that I live in is mostly, like,
a drug environment. And they're always talking about, we're going to get
the drug dealers, we're going to bust them, we're going to stop all the
gangs, we're going to stop all the black-on-black crime, we're going to
have our own businessmen. And they never follow their word, so what's the
sense in voting?"


"Let's put you in office," says Muhammad. "In 2001,
when forty-two City Council seats come up [in New York City], let's run
you."


"Run me?" the young brother asks incredulously, biting a delighted
grin. He is clearly interested in the idea of being involved, even a leader,
in his community. But if these are the terms, he and his peers don't seem
so sure.


Secondly, a mature hip-hop political movement will have more
than a race-based political analysis of the issues affecting urban youth.
Increasingly, the face of injustice is the color of the rainbow, so a black-white
racial analysis that pins blame on some lily-white power structure is outdated.
At the 21st Century meeting in Tuskegee the theme of the weekend was miseducation
and tracking. In the Selma public schools, however, more than 90 percent
of the students are black, so whatever the remedial tracking, it is happening
along class lines, instituted by black teachers, principals and superintendents.
"All teachers except for the whites told me that I wasn't going to be anybody,"
says a heavyset, dark, studious young man, who transferred from the public
school system to a Catholic school. When he asked many of the black teachers
for help, the response was often flip and cutting: "Your mama's smart, figure
it out."


Ras Baraka tells of how Black NIA F.O.R.C.E., the protest group
he founded while at Howard University in the late eighties, descended on
a Newark City Council meeting to oppose an ordinance banning citizens from
speaking at its sessions. They were arrested for disrupting city business
on the orders of Donald Tucker, a black councilman. "Stuff like 'the white
man is a devil' is anachronistic," Baraka says. "The white man didn't make
Donald Tucker call the police on us. He did that on his own."


In explaining
his actions, Tucker invoked his own history in civil rights sit-ins. "That's
their disclaimer to justify doing anything," Baraka says. "If it were white
people [jailing peaceful demonstrators], the people would be outraged. The
irony is that we went down there singing civil rights songs. We thought
we would call the ghosts of Martin Luther King and Medgar Evers and Kwame
Ture on their asses, but it didn't even faze them. They have more in common
now with the people who oppress us than with us. In that sense the times
are changing, so our level of organizing has to change."


Like many activists
working on a range of issues across the left in this country, these organizers
are beginning to shift focus from civil rights to human rights. As Malaika
Sanders, the current executive director of 21st Century, puts it, "Civil
rights is based on the state and what the state has defined as the rights
of the people." Human rights, on the other hand, is based on the rationale
that "no matter who or where I am, I have some basic rights, so it's not
about voting rights or what the law is." She argues that human rights presents
a more motivating rationale for activism. Whereas a civil rights philosophy--focused
on a finite set of principles that define citizenship--can lead to despair
as those rights are never fully attained or are subject to the mood of the
times, "a human rights approach allows a vision that's bigger than your
world or what you think on a day-to-day basis."


On the West Coast, the
Third Eye Movement has developed a theory of organizing that goes from civil
rights to human rights, from nationalism to internationalism. It couples
grassroots organizing with programs and policy analysis, using hip-hop culture
not just to educate and politicize but to help young people express their
concerns in their own language, on their own terms. Third Eye activists
used rap and song to testify before the San Francisco Police Commission
in 1997 after Officer Marc Andaya stomped and pepper-sprayed to death Aaron
Williams, an unarmed black man. By the sixth week of these appearances,
three of the five commissioners had resigned. Their replacements fired Andaya
for his brutal police record shortly after being seated. Third Eye also
worked recently on the case of Sheila DeToy, a 17-year-old white girl shot
in the back of the head by police.


"They've taken hip-hop where it's never
been before. They've taken hip-hop ciphers to the evening news," boasts
Van Jones, executive director of the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights
in San Francisco, one of the principals of Third Eye. Mixed with hip-hop's
aggressive attitude, the political message can get "scary," he says. "You
won't find it in a traditional civics-class curriculum: We're willing to
take issues into our hands if the system won't work. As scary as people
thought gangsta rap was, it's nothing compared to young people using hip-hop
to express what they're going through and targeting the people who are really
responsible."


Jones says he founded the Ella Baker Center--named to honor
the soul mother of SNCC--in response to the failures of the civil rights
establishment, which had become "too tame and too tired." "I don't believe
the true power of the people can be confined to a ballot box," he says,
but must express itself in strikes, boycotts, pickets, civil disobedience.
"We need to be about the whup-ass. Somebody's fucking up somewhere. They
have names and job descriptions. You have to be creative about how you engage
the enemy, because if you do it on his terms, the outcome is already known."
Most important, a mature hip-hop movement will have to deal with the irony
of using hip-hop. Organizing for social change requires that people tap
into their mutual human vulnerability and acknowledge their common oppression
before they can bond, and band, together in solidarity. Though born in and
of alienation and extreme social vulnerability, hip-hop culture is not eager
to boast of it. Whereas the blues embraced pain to transcend it, hip-hop
builds walls to shield against further injury. So getting to that place
where the music might once again speak of individual frailty and collective
strength is a difficult task.


At a December 12 rally for Mumia Abu-Jamal--co-sponsored
by Third Eye and STORM (Standing Together to Organize a Revolutionary Movement),
among others--students from the Bay Area crowd the steps of Oakland's City
Hall. It's the kind of rally a traditional leftist would recognize. White
radicals pass out socialist papers, petitions to end the death penalty and
"Free Mumia" decals. Placards and banners quote Malcolm X, Assata Shakur,
Che Guevara. The difference is that hip-hop headz take center stage, leaving
older white lefties on the periphery with their pamphlets.


It is not exactly
a changing of the guard. The rally begins on a shaky note. The Ella Baker
Center's youth coordinator, Jasmin Barker, steps to the mike and calls for
a moment of silence. Minutes before, the sound system was blaring what might
be called less than conscious rap. It's difficult for some to make the switch
from the gangsta lyrics to a spirit of solidarity with Mumia. Barker persists
like a schoolmarm and finally gets the reverence she demands. She then calls
for a "moment of noise" to put the city government on notice. But it's Saturday.
City Hall is closed. Downtown Oakland is empty. If mass demonstrations are
for the onlookers, at first glance it seems as if these young activists
have made the most basic of organizing errors: staging an action for a targeted
constituency that's not even around. But soon enough it's evident that the
objective here, this day, is to assert a generational identity, a collective
sense of political possibility.


"Chill with the sellin' papers while the
rally's goin' on," a young brother named Ryan scolds a man passing out Workers
Vanguard during a step routine by seven Castlemont High School students.
They are wearing blue jeans, sneakers, white T-shirts and fluorescent orange
decals that say "Free Mumia," distributed by Refuse and Resist. They stand
at attention, in single file, each girl holding two empty aluminum cans
end to end. The lead girl sets the beat with a syncopated chant: "Mu-miiiiii-aa!
Free Mumia, yeah! Mu-miiiiii-aa!" The other six chime in, and the line begins
to move like a locomotive, with hands and legs clapping and stomping to
recreate the diasporan rhythms that are at the heart of hip-hop.

 Speakers
pass the mike. Castlemont junior Muhammad, 15, explains the uses of the
criminal justice system, from police brutality to the death penalty, to
uphold the interests of the ruling class in his own hip-hop lingo. Latifah
Simon, founder of the Center for Young Women's Development in San Francisco,
relates Mumia's predicament to their lives: "If they should kill Mumia what
will they do to you? If they should kill a revolutionary, people got to
be in the streets screaming. It was young people like the ones here," she
reminds the 300 on the steps of City Hall, "who made the civil rights movement
happen." A white kid named Michael Lamb, with UC Berkeley's Poetry for the
People collective, pays tribute to Saul Williams and Slam in reciting a
rap with the refrain "Where my crackers at?" suggesting that the struggle
for true democracy in America needs to be an equal opportunity affair.
It is Dontario Givens, 15, who best illustrates the impact a burgeoning
hip-hop movement could have on a generation so long alienated. His favorite
record at the moment is Outkast's tribute to Rosa Parks, the mother of the
civil rights movement. But when his social studies teacher asked him to
speak at the rally on behalf of Mumia, his first response was pure hip-hop:
"Why should I care?" It took him three weeks to sort through his initial
resistance before hitting on that space of empathy and recognition that
is the cornerstone of organizing. "What would I want the world to do if
I was Mumia?" he asked himself. "Come together and make the revolution.






----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Angela
Ards is The Nation Institute's Haywood Burns Fellow. This article is part of the 
Haywood Burns Community Activist Journalism series.



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