Kwanzaa
Vulchor
Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 4,176
Hope I dont offend any black brothers here (not meant to sound as it did, lol)......But I decided to take a read about Kwanzaa a few minutes ago on old Wikipedia.
May I just say that if there were such a "holiday" started by a white man, with the same ideals-tenets-ect as this one, and made specifically for white anglo saxons-----it would be immediately lambasted by the media, declared illegal by the courts, likened to the KKK, ect. I understand what the ideas area, and what people appear to accept it as now. However, in my own opinion, this seems to have been a Holiday started in a type of black power, or at leat black empower movement-----and again, if I decided to celebrate white culture, white family, white business, ect.......Id be David Duke.
May I just say that if there were such a "holiday" started by a white man, with the same ideals-tenets-ect as this one, and made specifically for white anglo saxons-----it would be immediately lambasted by the media, declared illegal by the courts, likened to the KKK, ect. I understand what the ideas area, and what people appear to accept it as now. However, in my own opinion, this seems to have been a Holiday started in a type of black power, or at leat black empower movement-----and again, if I decided to celebrate white culture, white family, white business, ect.......Id be David Duke.
Comments
While the celebration was never meant to become permanent, it has and I say for the better. What a better thing is there to celebrate than taking care of your local community?
Just so everyone understands, I am a middle class white male. While I know the season was not designed for me, the tenents work for everyone and were even more important in '66 when civil rights were just getting their beginning and it was espescially important for the black community to stick together and support each other, as in much of the country they weren't getting any support from the outside. One can probably make the same arguement today, in fact...
Originally yes, it was all about supporting the black community because, like I said, in 1966 no one was. Just like you, my community is extremely mixed. On the right of me lives a Mexican family, on the right a black family, across the street is a Cambodian family and a gay couple lives next to them. Long Beach rocks that way!
The modern take on Kwanza is to celebrate your community, no matter who it is. Like I said, that Black Power thing disappeared long ago for the most part.
OMG!!!! HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
OMG That was the funniest thing I have ever read.
OK I'm a black guy and I just have to let you know you are wrong.
Compared to the 70's? Come on, man, there are still a few militants around, but for the most part it's over.
mmmmmmmmm...Roscoes...........