This is a post from another blogsite I write that I believe is very appropriate for our family story blogsite. We had to continue in a time of great uncertainty and we were embraced by our community teachers that would change our lives forever. I wish that these teachers were still around for this generation. We are in such need of them. I have only myself to send, and my words...
Leader Teachers-Are You One?
"The most important thing to remember is
this: To be ready at any moment to give up what you are for what you might
become."
__W.E.B. DuBois
As a life-long political activist and
teacher, trainer and leader, I know first-hand that my education includes an
unusual upbringing, over four decades of community work, and the culmination of
three successful university degrees. In Northeast Detroit, I took part in
intense teachings and trainings by my community's pro-active leaders following
the 1967 race riots through the 1970's. This education became a necessary means
to freedom's better ends. What the schools didn't teach us, our leaders taught
us. What the textbooks didn't teach us, our leaders taught us. What we didn't
know ourselves, our leaders taught us. Our leaders were many teachers of the
Civil Rights Movement, as well as individuals who lead politically aware lives.
One of my early teachers used to tell us that she had a "Ph.D. in Life" and she
did. She was and is wise, celebrating now 84 years young.
Detroit,
during these turbulent times, imposed the controversial STRESS (Stop the
Robberies and Enjoy Safe Streets) program, especially prominent in use among
Black males, Vietnam War protestors, and community people who began activating
to address local social, economic and educational issues. Keeping good people
out of trouble became a major concern for our community. In efforts to organize
and unify community people towards better ends, we were taught by the leaders of
a newly developed non-profit community organization. North End Concerned
Citizens Community Council (NEC4). They provided us with free lectures,
seminars, retreats and other functions intended to uplift people's hopes and
realizations. They offered conversations and sharing of experiences, applied to
our local community, our nation, and the Civil Rights Movement. Their intentions
were to educate and activate positive change. Irrespective of race, we took part
in strategies to offset the unfair limitations that were imposed through a wide
variety of racist and prejudiced systems. Self-education became part of the
lexicon of our plans to create change, allowing us to believe we can gather
knowledge and exercise wisdom, giving us the power to break our economic,
educational and self-imposed bonds.
A lot of students didn't finish
school in my neighborhood. The paths of formal education dwindled over time,
especially among the schools serving the impoverished people of color. The
majority of young people often fell into only a couple of categories. They 1)
joined the military, 2) went to jail, 3) moved away, and/or went to college, or
4) died, often violently. It was necessary for community leaders to stem the
tide of failure and help us recognize our real potential as young people who
took part in our own life decisions. All too often, there were others that
decided for us that we were "locked in a poverty cycle." Poverty and civil
rights issues have been around for a long time, but we have to ask ourselves,
and answer ourselves, whether or not we can do better than to embrace the
limiting ways of poverty's traps, racial traps, gang and violence traps, drug
traps, or any other crooked roads laid before us. As young adults, we were
taught to become aware and informed, and to step out of the suppressions,
oppressions, and depressions we faced. We were taught to recognize the
limitations and learned how to define ourselves as capable, and our goals as
attainable.
Education comes from schools, yes. But it also comes from
parents, mentors, from community leaders and church leaders, and volunteers
whose work furthers community goals. We all can learn from books, from essays
and poems, from experience and from others' experiences. We can learn from
President Barack Obama whose community organizing skills LEAD our nation, in
more ways than one. As a nation, we continue to learn from each other in our
continued walk towards full citizenship, endowed with full citizenship rights
and responsibilities.
During the Civil Rights Movement, I benefitted from
the teachings of my community leaders, my community teachers, who taught us that
we could advance ourselves by following effective strategies, to develop an
understanding of “self-awareness, self-determination and self-respect to attain
self-sufficiency.” These became the goals that we were taught—to offset the
limitations imposed and perpetuated by racism and classism in America. We
learned that we do not let others keep us ignorant, define us, or convince us to
lower our opinions of ourselves, no matter the race, or culture, or religion, or
creed. What I came to realize is that the beautiful individuals that our youth
are can only lay down all the arguments against success—by growing success
anyway. Education plays a key part of success’ growth.
Educating our
communities can be accomplished by efforts of leaders and teachers, by reading,
thinking and communicating, witnessing and steering yourself toward worthy
goals. It is important to come together in unity and strength when creating
strategies for positive and effective change. Self-education can be improved by
each one assuming the responsibility of being their own first teachers. It can
be improved by taking counsel from those who came before us, and are with us
still, that share valuable lessons learned. Literacy allows the book learning
necessary for us to prevent mistakes made from happening again, by not repeating
them. Historical and future reference points can be constructed through
knowledge gained. Ask yourself, “What has your solid education showed you that
are worth sharing?” We automatically become teachers when we have learned,
hopefully helping each other to achieve and practice self-awareness,
self-determination, self respect and attaining self-sufficiency.
Although
education does not guarantee absolute success, not learning takes you nowhere
and keeps you there. Learn and learn how to lead, and you will become a leader
who is a teacher.
“Ignorance is a cure for nothing.”
W.E.B. DuBois
About the Author: http://www.linkedin.com/pub/nancy-bell/30/231/855
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