Unhappy Kwanzaa - the media are still falling for that  fake holiday 
created by a felon
 
 
By _Paul Mulshine/The Star  Ledger_ 
(http://connect.nj.com/user/pmulshin/posts.html) The Star-Ledger ( NJ )
on December 26,  2012
 
 
It's that time of year again. You know what time I mean - the time when the 
 media promote that fake holiday created by a crazed california felon who 
wanted  to create racial discord.
That's right - Kwanzaa.
Do a news search and you'll find hundreds of  articles about wonderful 
Kwanzaa celebrations held all over America. Good luck  finding a single one 
that 
mentions the sorry fact that the holiday's creator was  imprisoned for 
torturing a couple of African-American women.  

You'll have to go _here _ 
(http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/600011/posts?page=7) to my  original 
article on Kwanzaa to find that. The article 
originally ran in  FrontPage Magazine back in 1998. It's easily found on the 
Internet by any  journalist willing to do the tiniest bit of research into 
Kwanzaa. I like to run  it this time every year as a corrective to all of the 
dreadful journalism that  occurs in every report of Kwanzaa.  
If the media told the truth about Kwanzaa in these articles, then every  
right-thinking American would realize it's a fraud. Instead we get the same  
silly endorsement of this "African" feast that has nothing to do with Africa 
and  everything to do with California in the 1960s.  
If you don't have the time to read that long expose then you can read the  
column I wrote on the subject back in 1998. Here it is in full:


One of my alert readers called me the other  day to inform me that the 
public schools in New Jersey aren't allowed to  celebrate Christmas but are 
celebrating Kwanzaa.  
This is intriguing. Christmas celebrates the legacy of Christ who, by all  
accounts, was a nonviolent man who believed that people of all types could  
learn to live in peace. Kwanzaa celebrates the legacy of an extremely 
violent  man from California who has dedicated his life to spreading dissension 
among  the races.  
More on that later. First let's deal with the question of why schools can  
propagate a belief in Kwanzaa but not Christmas or Chanukah. For an answer, 
I  called Ed Martone of the American Civil Liberties Union.  
''Kwanzaa isn't a religious holiday," said Martone. "It's a cultural  
holiday. It doesn't have the same restrictions as Chanukah or Christmas."  
I'll grant that there is a certain logic to the view. After all, once the  
government gets involved in religion, the potential conflicts among 
Catholics,  Protestants, Jews, Muslims and atheists are so complex that perhaps 
we 
are  better off avoiding them altogether.  
But by that same logic, the public schools should not be pushing certain  
cultural practices. And the schools especially shouldn't be endorsing 
cultural  practices created by a character with the beliefs and the background 
of 
Ron  Karenga.  
It is not easy to get a hold of the facts about the background of the  
creator of Kwanzaa. In fact, it is nearly impossible. The history of the  
founder of Kwanzaa has disappeared into an Orwellian time warp. If you look up  
the name "Ron Karenga" on any of the many newspaper data bases that are  
available these days, you will read a glowing account of a deep-thinking  
philosopher who comes across as a sort of jolly Father Christmas for  
African-Americans.  
You won't find any reference to murder or torture. Yet murder was a  
specialty of US, the paramilitary organization that Karenga ran in Los Angeles  
in 
the late 1960s.  
As for torture, Karenga took that more personally. The accounts of his  
personal role in a particularly sadistic episode of brutality have been  
largely lost to history. The episode seems to exist only on a few microfilmed  
pages of the Los Angeles Times. It took two days of research and phone calls  
to track them down. Here is an excerpt from an article headlined "Woman  
describes two days of torture" on the May 1971 trial of Karenga for torturing  
two dissident members of his group:  
''Deborah Jones, who once was given the Swahili title of an African queen,  
said she and Gail Davis were whipped with an electrical cord and beaten 
with a  karate baton after being ordered to remove their clothes. She testified 
that a  hot soldering iron was placed in Miss Davis' mouth and placed 
against Miss  Davis' face and that one of her own big toes was tightened in a 
vise. Karenga,  head of US, also put detergent and running hoses in their 
mouths, she said."   
Karenga was convicted and served more than three years in a state prison.   
This was not an isolated incident. In 1967, Karenga was accused of having  
his thugs beat up a student who asked him an impertinent question at a 
college  forum. In 1969, US got involved in a struggle with the Black Panthers 
for  control of the black studies program at UCLA. All involved carried guns 
on  campus. The US guys were quicker on the draw; they killed two Panthers in 
a  shootout at the student center.  
It would be nice to say that after Karenga got out of jail in 1975 he  
repented, saw the error of his ways and invented Kwanzaa as a means of atoning  
for his past. Nice, but untrue. Karenga has never atoned for his thuggery,  
probably because no one ever asked him to. And his sole concession to  
repentance was his 1975 conversion to Marxism. For him, this was considered to  
be a sign that he had moderated his views.  
Karenga invented Kwanzaa at the height of his gang days, in 1966. And he  
made it up not to bring peace among the races but to divide them. That's why  
he placed this alleged "harvest festival" in competition with Christmas, 
which  he derided because of its ties to the hated capitalist system.  
It may be true that Kwanzaa has evolved into a ceremony that has importance 
 to a great number of well-intentioned people, people who have no knowledge 
of  its creator's questionable history. But Karenga himself continues to 
champion  the holiday as an example of what he terms "cultural nationalism." 
This is the  view that black people are a separate "nation" within a hostile 
country.  During a visit to Newark in 1987, Karenga defined America as "an 
insane,  socially decaying society." "We need a value system and a support 
system . . .  because the world is organized against your Africanism," he told 
Newark  residents.  
Karenga remains a leading spokesman for the multicultural movement, a  
movement based on the idea that Americans should emphasize their differences  
rather than their similarities. The idea of Kwanzaa fits firmly within  
multiculturalism. And however you feel about multiculturalism, you must admit  
that it is a political movement and therefore one that should not be supported  
with tax dollars.  
As for Karenga himself, he should be given all the respect due a convicted  
torturer. Call me an old fuddy-duddy, but I believe that once a man inserts 
a  hot soldering iron into a woman's mouth, he should be excluded from 
public  discourse for eternity. I may be wrong, however. Certainly, the people 
in  California don't seem to share this view. Karenga is now a professor at  
California State University in Long Beach.  
That's California for you. By that standard, there's a university  
presidency waiting somewhere for Charles Manson when he finally gets  out.

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