FORUM Hmerico*/ Oujn Child; flliiii/tei loui / forrokhan Can America feel the healing warmth of its Black Rage? In what is really a conservative, pull- less)? Who else challenges the most dispossessed ? America's Harvard s otticial watcher of African-American lite and cul- yourself-up dictum, he challenges legions of black ex-offenders ? to clean themselves up, to get off ture, Henry Louis Gates, would have loved it. Minister Louis Far- them to relieve and improve the drugs, to stop the fratricide, and to take on responsible and manly rakhan, leader of the Nation of Islam, came to Winston-Salem the conditions in neighborhoods com- behavior? other night. The local media trumpeted his coming to speak at prised entirely of people who He strikes fear mostly in the hearts of white liberals, who, it WSSU, heralding him as "the controversial leading spokesman of are debased, slack and offen- seems, sometimes want to rid society of its ills. But they want to black rage in America. Visions of treachery and treason and agi- sive. Not always through ? ? ... d? it in their oft-times disputable ways: where blacks would be tating otherwise peaceful politics abound. One would have fault or making of their dependent on them and the government. Louis Farrakhan is thought that Attila the Hun had returned, on Martin Luther King own. respected by many because he is up-front. He is nothing like the ?Drive, no less. Who out there these executives at Texaco or Avis Car Rental. He's never been caught There were throngs of police escorts and bow-tied Fruit of days, besides Farrakhan, is "on tape" belittling whites and plotting to destroy his documented Islam security guards on rooftops and behind bushes and cars. The speaking about that part of actions. He speaks forcefully and nondefensively about his right air was expectant of a fiery oration filled with anti-white denunci- America that is decidedly to have open relations with certain African and Arab leaders who ations and tongue- ^;are considered despots and dictators. lashings. Neither can he be found following "legal ambulances, running But the next to the corporate trough." He never seeks the spoils of race dis day, after the bright >.A- y - - crimination lawsuits and diversity consulting contracts. Some lights went down, Mr. ^B' ^\w other African-American leaders and business people can't say that. Some can be heard, in the rhetoric of what is little less than blackmail, "deal with us, or deal with Farrakhan." He exposes and terrorizes the "us" that is "them," the so-called black underclass. Farrakhan also puts the cuffs on middle class blacks, who are wary of charges that they are not genuine and who suffer from deeply-felt racial uncer tainties. Most blacks find his Baptist preacher-like oratory alluring, even if they don't DR WILLIAM H. TURNER chaotic BUI agree with his messianic message. But, since Martin Luther King was killed. African Americans have with loud biting realism ? is still there. He is on to the next those places continued to look for the Farrakhan's detractors, adherents, and disci ples alike all went home ? to the same America that was there before he came. The America Far rakhan speaks of ? at once with comical simplicity and sarcasm, and, in the next sentence place, like any good evangelist. LIFT EVERY VOICE messiah. Not entirely When the murmuring stopped and the students went to sleep, many black unexpected of a people America, even Winston-Salem, yet had a critical mass of its citi- kids live in who, for every one son zens of African descent ? that Mr. Farrakhan neither invented Godless ^^^BB^K^ 1 ' t :.\%n graduating college. 100 nor perpetuates. Those faces stuck at the bottom of the well, worlds, go to prison. Beyond the platitudes, including Mr. Farrakhan's, there are some where mil- America's stark realities in Black America that may well, without him, fester of these ship with Louis "Man even Farrakhan ? man Perhaps he alone can articulate it; but whatever other purpose children, too many love to hate sym they serve, his eloquent utterances provide a venting to African more than bolized by an ancient Ethiopian proverb: "A cow Americans. Until somebody else, perhaps someone keen to "mak- half of them gave birth to a fire; she wanted to lick it, but it ing people feel good about America" comes along, Farrakhan in poverty, burned; she wanted to leave it; but she could not, actually helps people, especially young black males. He helps are father- because it was her own child." Until further them to discharge the frustrated thinking that comes with the sim- less (and notice, we will always need and have a Minister pie act of reading about the goings-on in urban America in "Jet" if the it M Louis Farrakhan, who freely says that America every week. If they don't read, all they have to do is walk out fathers made him what he is today. Even Harvard's their front doors and get bashed in the face with a brick. Others are Gates agrees that some alternatives to Farrakhan look to the pages of "Readers Digest" and the "Wall Street Jour- around, are frightening, to read about a generation of remorseless killers and radically ^ We Need to Turn Welfare Repeal Into Real Reform Pat's daily battle to escape an abusive husband and keep a roof over her child's head has not always been victorious. The welfare system she turned to in times of great need was not perfect. She often called it "a major roadblock" ? another "trauma" of life for a woman with few skills and a child to raise alone. Sometimes trying to get help was "so hard that she nearly went back to the abusive husband whose violence had driven her and son Jonathan out into shelters and even onto the streets. But when the welfare check came, she felt there was some chance to crawl out of her situation and create a better life. The check certainly didn't make her rich ? no Cadillac, no pent house, no fancy wardrobe ? but it gave her some hope, and a lit tle more time to think and get herself together. Pat is one of the many women who have turned to the welfare rolls with their babies in tow. By and large, they are neither teen mothers nor daughters of women who had been on welfare. Nor are they "welfare queens." Many rely on welfare only when emergencies hit. Most have held some type of job before. Most are victims of domestic violence. All live near the edge, one step from falling over. Aid for Families with Dependent Children (AFDC), created in 1935 as a joint state and federal program, ensured that women like Pat could get the help they needed, regardless of the state they chanced to live in during recessions and times of economic peril. The states chose how much to pay, hut all who met basic eligibility guidelines were ensured crucial, though meager, gov ernment cash assistance to help their families survive crises. For a poor family, AFDC was making all the difference between hav ing a place to live or not. Data show that those not getting assis CHILDWATCH By MARIAN WRIGHT EDELMAN tance ended up on the street at three times the rate of those who got benefits. AFDC was the life preserver many clung to on stormy seas while they searched for a way to shore. But the wel fare revisions passed by Congress and signed into law by the president abolished this six-decade-old guarantee for poor chil dren and their families, without putting anything in place to help people work. As a result, many may go under, unless President Clinton, Congress, and governors act to ensure jobs and adequate supports to help parents work and protect their children. The sad dest thing about the welfare legislation is its assault on working families and legal immigrants who work every day. More than two-thirds of the nearly 13 million people on wel fare are children, who cannot work to support themselves or vote, so they were easy targets in an election year. In 1997 we must insist that our political leaders turn welfare repeal into real reform by acting to lift children out of poverty and getting them off to a healthy start. Pat's child is not the cause of all of Amer ica's current problems, but he is a part of America's future. Will it be a productive or dependent one9 The answers lie with the choices we and our leaders make today. To find out how you can help your state protect children under the new welfare law, please call (202) 662-3542. (Marian Wright Edelman is the president of the Children's Defense Fund, and a leader of the Black Community Crusade for Children (BCCC), whose mission is to leave no child behind. For information, call 1-800-ASK-BCCC.) Winston-Salem Chronicle The Choice For African-American News USPS 067910 617 N Liberty Street Winston-Salem, N C 27102 The Winston Salem Chronicle is published every Thursday by the Winston-Salem Chroni cle Publishing Co Inc. The Winston Salem Chronicle was established by Ernest Pitt and Ndubisi Egemonye in 1974 The Chronicle is a proud member of: ? Audit Bureau of Circulation ? National Newspa pers Publishers Association ? North Carolina Press Association ? 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