I Celebrate United Black World Month

Tonight, the night of February 19th, I attended the Student Life Multicultural Center’s featured keynote address and celebration for United Black World Month entitled, “Education, Civil Rights, and Equality: Cornerstones For Our Future” as it pertains to the month’s theme of “Imagining Black Futures.” It started a little after 6pm and was so moving I couldn’t wait to write about it. The event was advertised to have current CNN commentator Bakari Sellers as the keynote speaker but he wasn’t able to come due to unforeseen weather circumstances. In his place, a well-regarded professor that teaches African-American history in the History department at Ohio State, Dr. Hasan Kwame Jeffries, spoke on the topic. My observation I made of this event even before I attended was the focus being on the African diaspora as whole instead of just African-American history alone.  This explains the month being called United Black World Month instead of Black History Month, the name February is most widely called and the only name I’ve ever heard until now. This event relates to the topic of International Affairs because it recognizes the entire diaspora, all communities worldwide that are descended from Africa.

The event not only consisted of the keynote address but it also had food and entertainment. Entertainment included spoken word poetry, ethnic African dance, and singing all from black artists sharing their experience of being black in an American context and global context. Through watching the entertainment, I gained other perspectives on the injustices happening against black people and gained a new way of thinking about my identity as an African-American at a predominantly white institution.

There were two spoken word pieces given by a young guy about the destructive cycle of lacking good father figures, violence, police brutality, and over-incarceration for African-American males and how it can be broken. The poet emphasized how it was up to the black community to build each other up because we aren’t getting positive reinforcement from the predominantly-white society they live in and we are not seeing enough positive representations of ourselves in the media to know we have the potential to be better and break the cycle. Being told who we are by people who historically oppressed us and don’t want us to progress can subconsciously cause us take on the identity and that future for ourselves. Right after this piece, a black woman performed a spoken word poem intertwining with the song, “Go Tell It on the Mountain” and its imagery of rising up to share her experience of understanding her identity and the powerful narrative that comes with being an African-American woman in America as it pertains to all her ancestors struggled and died for. She proclaimed that she came from a legacy of strength and endurance and only she can set her limits and define herself. She inspired me by saying that she values herself by what’s inside and not by how society sees her physically.

The last thing that stuck with me was the keynote address. Dr. Jeffries centered his talk around the importance of people of color especially young people of color to imagine their own futures. He spoke of the African diaspora and how many people were dispersed to predominantly white countries to be slaves. He said that ever since this time, descendants have been struggling and working to be seen as equals to their oppressors and what that means for our futures and identities. He referenced the historic success of the movie Black Panther and what the fictional country of Wakanda represented for people of the African diaspora as a prosperous society where people are equal and foreigners, later, are welcomed and included. Dr. Jeffries mentioned that history has always shown how we imagined our future to conflict with how white people imagined our future and how we cannot sit and hope the progress happens. We have to act. We have to act because of proof from recent years and a different presidential administration that things don’t naturally get better. If we do nothing, they will always get worse. He ended by saying that we should act unified with our different educations and backgrounds. This event gave me so much to think about and to relate to. I’m so glad I went.

P.S. Steven, I’m really sorry I exceeded the word count by about 200 words.

 

My Crash Course of Germany and What It Offers Today

For my academic event, I attended the event called, hosted by my fellow International Affairs Scholar and past TA Kate Greer, Dinner + All Things Deutschland held at the German House on January 31st at 7:00 pm. This event relates to International Affairs because it revolved around the history, culture, food,  and current political climate of the foreign country Germany in Europe. Kate also took time to highlight the opportunities to study abroad and intern in Germany that Ohio State and Columbus has to offer in her presentation. I learned so much from her presentation and enjoyed how she presented factual, sometimes complex information in a way we can all understand without getting bored. She kept our attention really well.

One of the main things I learned from her presentation was about the history of Germany. I never knew about its troubling history, especially the events leading to the Nazi party gaining power in Germany. Since I’m not yet accustomed to keeping up with other countries’ politics, I did not know anything about Germany’s current political climate and the party system. I enjoyed hearing about that. The most impactful thing I gained from this event was a new, less judgmental perception of Germany. Without really realizing it, I had a negative perception of Germany that I projected unfairly over its government and its people after first learning of the Holocaust and other horrendous events that Germany caused during World War 2. Learning how Germany has tried to rectify what happened during World War 2 and take the necessary steps to make sure nothing like it ever happens again made me face my unfair generalizations and assumptions head on and acknowledge that they were wrong and I was wrong for having them for so long. During this realization, I said a silent apology to Germany and promised myself that I would never judge a country at it’s present state so harshly by it’s gruesome past.

Unfortunately, I am not able to pinpoint anything specifically that relates to my coursework from this event. Instead, I can pinpoint a strange parallel I noticed between generalizing and judging an entire country and its people to doing the same thing to human beings. Just as it is unfair to perceive an entire people or culture today as one characteristic based on past actions so many years ago, it is unfair to do the same for countries with human beings in them. People change. People can grow, evolve, and improve and usually do, but I never associated that principle with an entire country before. But it makes sense to me now.

After the event, I was left with two questions. Fortunately, I stuck around with some friends and had the opportunity to ask and get them answered. I asked Kate and her friends about the concept of American cities having sister cities in Germany and other countries in general. I asked if the acknowledgement of being a sister city is reciprocated on both sides, and the answer was yes. I also asked about the process of finding your sister city and how that worked. I learned that there are official national organizations in a lot of countries that create this relationship.