meditations on life & writing
an activist/poet/mother/writer's journal
Friday, October 29, 2004

WE ARE HERE
A Note To Marie Daulne and All The Warriors Who Know

Here we stand. Here we are. And have always been. We are not new.
And this is not a revolution. This is not a new age. Rather, a rising.

Something like a strong heat rising.

Once the scales have been removed, we feel each other's presence,
the vibrations, steady like drums, somehow. The race begins.
We run with open arms to that place we know and recognize as home.
We are one. Separated once by lies and greed and miles and miles of
sand and water, we have endured. Determined to never be separated again.
Not by miles and certainly not, ever again, by thought. We are united
for the common purpose of preservation. Preservation of our souls.
Preservation of our minds. Preservation of what has and always will be most holy: Spirit. Preservation of the indigenous. The innate. The aboriginal.
Preservation of the sacred. When we find each other, there is, in our hearts, a joyful celebration; a reunion.
For we know, that this in our hearts, this song, these letters,
this way of mind is a gift.

When we are alone, we feel strange things. We do not read between the lines,
rather, we live there. We live between the lines, between the black and white;
the top and bottom; the beginning and end. For we are not of extreme mind, rather, we are of balance. We are told that our thoughts and our beliefs and our hopes are altruistic, unreal, impossible.

But we recognize that the impossible may take a little while. May not happen tomorrow. Nor the next day, but it will happen. For ours is derived from a
greater Source.

And though we are peace loving, we are not afraid to get righteous. Righteously indignant. Warrior marks indelible on our souls.

We are happy for the healing sounds of music, poetry, dance. For it is in those spaces that we are most alive, and certainly, most free. There on the edge, where only the warrior will tread and only the courageous will survive. We accept the gifts of our ancestors and we strive hard to carry on the tradition. We seek knowledge always. Always.

We run with open arms. Moving with all deliberate speek. Open arms, always.

---ANGEL

PS: It's called: Ancestry In Progress. And if you don't know, I suggest you ask somebody.


===============================================================================
The essence of Zap Mama goes back to Marie Daulne's birth. It was a very difficult time in Zaire, a time of revolution. The Simba rebels sought to kill interracial couples. Her mother was a Bantu. Her father was Belgian. Threatened, her mother took her into the jungle to stay with the Pygmies for eight months. They were safe because the rebels were scared of the strong magic of the forest peoples. Eventually they were taken to Belgium where Marie grew up. It is this dual cultural heritage which lies at the root of the music and mission of Zap Mama.

By l989 she had spent several years singing in jazz cafes and bars in Brussels when she decided to create a group to musically merge the cultures of her life, both which she cherishes. Marie remembered Sylvie Nawasando from singing on the train to school and later at the university. Their brothers had played music together. Sabine is a mixture of peoples like Marie, Zairean and Belgian. With three, Marie held an audition and discovered Marie Alfonso. Finally they found Sally Nyolo and performed their first concert in 1989.All the women contributed in different ways, spiritual, emotional, information, stories. Marie does most of the researching for the songs.


In the first release, the group focused on the European and Zairean connections, striving to combine the vocalizations of the Pygmies with vocal styles from the European choral traditions. It was, in a sense, autobiographical, with Marie researching where she came from and the songs of her mother's people. The first recording on Crammed Disc,was an unbelievable international hit, not on the commercial charts certainly, but by the eager response of those who listen to world music. The ability to tour and learn of other cultures increased Marie's desire to widen her horizons and incorporate even more of the world into her music. Sabsylma was the result of her growing understanding of other cultures. It's full of Indian, Moroccan and Australian influences. Not only are musical influences expanded but the purpose of healing is enhanced such as uncovering the problem of child abuse in the song "India." It was an effort to bring to light a universal problem for that is how the healing begins.

In 1996 Marie once again heard the siren song to create, so she took another African trip. She departed for Mali where she lived with the Touaregs and learned more of her outward world as well as inward. From a man in Mali, she learned that human beings have seven senses, rather than just the five of western description. The sixth sense is emotions and the seventh sense, which not everybody has, is the power to heal others. It is the power to heal with music, calm with color, to soothe the sick with harmony. She returned home to Brussels fired with the knowledge of her capacity to heal with music. Upon her return from Mali, Marie got a call from a good friend, Michael Franti of the hip-hop soul group Spearhead. Michael believes that America needs the connection to the African spirit which Marie embodies.

The result is Seven, Zap Mama's third album. The title refers to the seven senses of a human being. Marie says, "I made music on on Seven the same way as on the other albums. I only used acoustic instruments... I'm looking for instruments that have vocal sounds, forgotten instruments like the guimbri... The first and second albums were about the voice, what came before. This album is about introducing those sounds into modern, Western life. As her horizons continue to expand no one can suspect what the creative outpouring of this remarkable musician will be. We do know it will be extraordinary!


shared with you at 7:46 PM by angel

Saturday, October 23, 2004

DEFINITION OF TERMS

Womanist

1. From womanish. (Opp. of "girlish," i.e., frivolous, irresponsible, not serious.) A black feminist or feminist of color. From the black folk expression of mothers to female children, "You acting womanish," i.e., like a woman. Usually referring to outrageous, audacious, courageous or willful behaviour. Wanting to know more and in greater depth than is considered "good" for one. Interested in grown-up doings. Acting grown up. Being grown up. Interchangeable with another black folk expression: "You trying to be grown." Responsible. In Charge. Serious.

2. Also: A woman who loves other women, sexualy and/or nonsexually. Appreciates and prefers women's culture, women's emotional flexibility (values tears as natural counterbalance of laughter), and women's strength. Sometimes loves individual men, sexually and/or non-sexually. Committed to survival and wholeness of entire people, male and female. Not a separatist, except periodically, for health. Traditionally universalist, as in: "Mama, why are we brown, pink, and yellow, and our cousins are white, beige and black?" Ans.: "Well, you know the colored race is just like a flower garden, with every color flower represented." Traditionally capable, as in: "Mama, I'm walking to Canada and I'm taking you and a bunch of other slaves with me." Reply: "It wouldn't be the first time."

3. Loves music. Loves dance. Loves the moon. Loves the Spirit. Loves love and food and roundness. Loves struggle. Loves the Folk. Loves herself. Regardless.

4. Womanist is to feminist as purple is to lavendar.

---sister Alice Walker, In Search of Our Mothers' Gardens: Womanist Prose



"I come out of a tradition where those things are valued; where you talk about a woman with big legs and big hips and black skin. I come out of a black community where it was all right to have hips and to be heavy. You didn't feel that people didn't like you. The values that [imply] you must be skinny come from another culture .... Those are not the values I was given by the women who served as my models. I refuse to be judged by the values of another culture. I am a black woman, and I will stand as best I can in that imagery."

---sister Bernice Reagon, Black Women and Liberation Movements

shared with you at 4:42 PM by angel

Wednesday, October 20, 2004

THE REVOLUTION MAY NOT BE TELEVISED ....
but it will be on the internet

cuba & the fight against hiv/aids

http://www.monthlyreview.org/nfte0904.htm

Cuba & the Fight Against HIV/AIDS
Notes from the Editors
Monthly Review

The nations of the Caribbean have the world's secondhighest HIV infection rates, after sub-Saharan Africa. One Caribbean nation, Cuba, however, has largely escaped the disease with only a 0.07 percent infection rate, one of the lowest infection rates in the world. On July 15 Cuba announced at a meeting with its counterparts from the 15-nation Caribbean Community (Caricom) that it was launching an initiative to helpthe other Caribbean nations fight HIV/AIDS by providing them with antiretroviral drugs at below market prices, as well as doctors and instruction in public health methods for combating the AIDS pandemic. Cuba's offerto help is viewed as nothing less than "spectacular" by the other Caribbean nations. Why has Cuba managed largely to escape the AIDS pandemic? And why is Cuba in a position to offer so much aid to the other Caribbean nations--aid that is not forthcoming from much richer countries such as theUnited States?

In 1983 Fidel Castro spoke to the Institute of Tropical Medicine in Cuba declaring that the mysterious illness, later known as AIDS, would be"the disease of the century." Cuba moved quickly to ban the import of blood from other countries and to test Cuban blood donations. Cuba also instituted mandatoryHIV testing of at-risk communities such as soldiers returning home from abroad, tracing the history of sexual contacts of infected persons, and beginning in1986 committing all those who tested positive for HIV to sanatoriums. The policy of quarantining those who were HIV positive came under heavy criticism from numerous global human rights groups, who saw it as a human rights violation. Cuba had rightly come under criticism for disgraceful anti-gay police measures taken in the late '60s and early '70s and then later repudiated. T here were fears that all of this would be repeated in the context of the AIDS crisis (though the earliest AIDS patients in Cuba were heterosexuals whohad worked abroad). Nevertheless, Cuba's AIDSs anatoriums were praised for their conditions and the health provisions made for those living there. In the early 1990s Cuba allowed some of the patients in the sanatoriums to return home, and in 1994 it ended mandatory long-term confinement of those who were HIV positive. Building on its powerful public health model Cuba focused on AIDS education. Currently most patients spend a minimum of three months learning how to live with their illness, how to manage their medicines, and how to avoid spreading HIV to others. Faced with the embargo from the United States that limited access to medicines and medical equipment, Cuban scientists beginning in 1993 placed heavy emphasis on developing antiretroviral drugs that could combat HIV. By 2001 Cuban medical research had on its own devised five different varieties of antiretroviral drugs. Every Cuban who is HIV positive has been put on therapeutic regimes utilizing these drugs. Cuba is now offering these antiretroviral drugs to all other Caribbean nations at affordable prices. Thus far poor nations have not been able to obtain the drugs they needed because of the high prices of such drug semanating from pharmaceutical corporations in theUnited States and other capitalist countries. Cuba's response to the AIDS pandemic is thus a blow against imperialism as well as a contribution to global human health and worldwide humanitarian goals. Recalling the sad history of the anti-gay police campaign of three decades ago, initial criticism of the harsh sequestration policy was certainly understandable. But today it is clear that the overall Cuban public health response to AIDS has worked. It strikingly conveys the difference between a capitalist and a socialist society: the highest priority for the latter is the people. C uba's willingness to help other poor countries combat the AIDS pandemic is an important example of international solidarity, not domination ofother countries.

Sources: "Cuba to Help Caribbean Fight AIDS," BBC News, July 16, 2004;
"Cuba to Help Caribbean Fight AIDS,"Bellaciao, July 16, 2004; Sheri Fink, "Cuba's EnergeticAIDS Doctor," American Journal of Public Health, May 2003.


There is hope indeed.


shared with you at 10:52 AM by angel

Friday, October 08, 2004

AND THIS IS WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU'RE AWAY FOR SO LONG


I’ve been away for so long. Away from this repository for my thoughts. This time now reminds me of how ephemeral time is. Indeed. While I was away, engaged in the living of life, the leaves have grown crisp and brown at the edge; the wind swift and chilled. Acorns are strewn about the ground for those bushy-tailed creatures who have enough good sense to prepare for hard times. (What a lesson we humans could learn!) The growth of the grass has slowed and every morning dew coats the earth a shimmering silver. The sun is a good and welcome friend these days; for those of us in the Northeast know that this kind of bright, warm light is what we shall all be longing for once Winter makes her arrival. We—at least, I—rush to it, to the neglect of long-put-aside chores, projects, necessary self-promotion and, in my case, novels—wanting to drink in as much of it as is humanly possible; wanting to package it in a jar, tuck it in my closets for the dark and dismal days of snow and ice and muddy slush. Today I feel an overwhelming sense of gratitude for so many things: the book now published and out in the world on its own, the writing workshop (my first teaching assignment!), for the new poems that are filling the empty spaces, for the novel that I can now return to, for my husband and children who keep me grounded and sane with simple, ordinariness, for my girlfriends near and far—the puzzle pieces of my life who, together, make up the complete woman I want to be when it’s all said and done.

First: the book launch.

Simply said, the night was magical. Alive. A living, breathing organism. There was a lot of preparation (both mental and physical) leading up to the night and of course, as always, my last minute indecisions about what to wear. I live on vibes, I move on vibes. What is set aside to be worn is easily cast aside when I examine my mood, the wind, the flow of air into and around my soul. I am visual, drawn to vibrant colors like oranges, blues, reds and greens. I knew I’d be wearing a wrap (sarong) that I’d bought on vacation. It has beautiful waves of orange and gold, mud earth brown and a hint of sage. I remember how irrevocably drawn to it I was a the time, the moment I touched its fringes. Yet it’s colors are the kind that are difficult to “match up” with anything, so I went in search of a sage green shell, opting for a “coordinated” look instead. I found the perfect one. Next, the necessary and very careful selection of accessories. I remembered the necklace and earring set from Kenya, sent to me from my loving Sisterfriend, Nehanda Dreams. I also thought of my silver ring and a silver bracelet artfully crafted in swirls with a topaz teardrop at the center—silver for the feminine energy. My locs were braided into an “up-do” style and quite pretty. A tad of gloss on the lips made the look complete.Spouse looked at me with the look of a man who still loves his woman after two babies, ten hairdo's, twenty extra pounds and a whole lotta ups and downs. He smiled and said, “You look beautiful.” I felt radiant, as if carried in the arms of the Creator. I felt fortunate to be loved.

The host who introduced me was gracious and kind. She said that mine is a “remarkable new voice in contemporary literature” and for that I was deeply humbled. She spoke about my stories, particularly the one entitled “What Remains,” and the craft that went into the making of the piece. Another friend and writing colleague spoke about me as a person who, “deeply questions the meanings and truisms of life” saying that “this is what you want in your writers because it tells you that they are seeking and those are the writers who find the answers that we all begin to live by.” How humbling! And how remarkable the ways in which people see you!

The room was near complete capacity—a great deal of students for which I was very glad—my friends and good folks who support the arts. My heart is with the young people who are still fresh, still malleable to the discussion of ideas and creation of workable solutions. Before the reading began I spoke briefly about how I began my life as a writer, which was first as a reader. I spoke about how I’ve been avidly reading all of my life and, as I say in the opening of my Introduction in the book that “the moment I discovered Black women writing, I discovered my Self.” I urged the students to not only read but to think critically about what is being read. And of course, I could not step away from that podium without urging everyone in that room to be involved in the political process because even by NOT voting, you are voting.

So I read the bulk of my poems and an excerpt from my fiction. I took questions from the audience about finding Voice and about my writing process. I gave suggestions to the ever present question of “what advice would you give to an aspiring writer?” (which is always an interesting question to me since I don’t understand what it means to ‘aspire to write’). Many questions about my Vietnam poem dedicated to both my father and to Maya Lin, architect of the Vietnam War Memorial (a must see for every human being with breath and a voters card) and questions about the Voice in my story “Butterflies In Brooklyn.” More questions about how I came up with such a visual scene in the opening paragraph of "What Remains" (click on the excerpt on the side bar). I felt very warm and special and that dream of being taken seriously as a writer became a solidified reality. It is an oddly humbling experience to have someone ask you to “sign” a copy of your book, something you’ve painstakingly brought to life and to know that someone (in these budget tight times) has spent money and valuable time listening to what you have to say. For that reason, signing becomes for me an act of service, the least that one can do. I went home on a high that evening and slept quite soundly (in part because of the evening, in part because of the celebratory marguerita that followed). I missed the Furious Flower Conference at JMU but felt it had been very, very worth it. And on top of it all I sold quite a few books, too.

I’ve also been very busy trying to finish up the teaching materials for my portion of a writing workshop entitled: INSIDE OUT: Writing and The Creative Process which I taught last Sunday. So busy, I neglected to post it here on the Upcoming Events Page. I really enjoyed putting this workshop together with the other two sisters who taught. We addressed such topics as the Creative Process, Finding/Sustaining Voice and of course, Productivity and establishing good work habits. It was, more or less, a beginners type of workshop for those who’ve scribbled and dabbled but are having that ever present trouble “getting started.” This was my baby; an idea that sparked in my mind and morphed into a three-way street. I learned a great deal about the ways in which teaching materials can/should be presented. I realized how much I’ve learned over the years and it (the process) reinforced some good creative habits that have slipped away over time; habits I need to revisit that would more than likely make me more productive than I am. But doing this taught me a few other things about myself; I realized how much of a solitary person I am and how little I enjoy collaborative work. Opinions can be like hand grenades and how much or how little of one’s original vision for a thing can be totally washed away in the drift is a constant and disconcerting, unpredictable and ultimately inevitable reality. The other thing is that I went home with raving feedback on the Course Evaluation forms. People asked when we’d be teaching again and said they felt “charged” to go home and write (which is always the way one feels after any artistic gathering, I suppose). I supplied “Ocean Music” or meditative music as it’s classified in stores and the participants (mostly women) came away with very insightful, very thought-provoking drafts. I left that evening feeling wonderfully full and empty at the same time—somewhat exhausted overall—which solidified yet another something that I’d been wrestling with: I have no desire to teach with regularity (i.e, -- day to day university or school level teaching) because of how far away it takes you from your own work; how mentally depleting it can be. And I settled in my mind a long-standing internal wrestle I'd had going on. I realized with a new and focused clarity that the MFA (that degree one needs in order to teach in those places and earn some type of sustainable income) would be for my informational purposes only, which in my case does not justify the debt nor the inevitable distraction that those years of study would involve. Which brings me to the discussion of Life Work and something else I have come to learn about my Self, my path, and my duty, as I see it, as a writer.

A quote from Alice Walker, during an interview with Amy Goodman on Democracy Now a year or two ago. Asked to expound upon the difficulty of living as a writer and having learned that her daughter, Rebecca Walker, was often pained during the process, she said:


“I feel like I’ve been a priest for the past 30 years and it’s been damn hard on everyone in my life…but I have not had a choice. I feel like the ancestral priestess up their, whoever, has said this is the work…only you can really do this, right here, because you have been placed right here in Eatonton, Georgia, in this family, where you can actually see what slavery was like; because you are still the sharecropper’s slaves. And then you get to be educated, you end up at Sarah Lawrence College. You’re taught how to write, uh…and you do have to do this, there’s nobody else. All of these things—I take them very seriously. They are like the synchronicity that Jung talks about in a life. Where you start to see that there is a reason for all your joys and your sorrows and you begin to see that there is a work for you to do in the world. And I have done that. And I have been absolutely faithful to it. And it has been difficult to me and it has been difficult to everyone in my life.”

And a quote from brother Kalamu Ya Salaam, poet/teacher/critic/literary activist who attended and moderated at the Furious Flower Conference and made a comment about what was and wasn’t at there (making reference, too about what is and isn’t within the body of Cave Canem) and about the bland-ness of today's poetry (and writing) how so much of it is personal yet not political like during the BAM (the Black Arts Movement):


“…and no one has the right to tell anyone else what they have to write. Ultimately, all writing comes out of the life that the writer lives. My question is: where do we stand on the major issues of the day? I think writers need to be involved in struggle not as writers per se, but as concerned people. Further, once we are actively engaged in struggle, our participation in struggle will inspire our written work. It may inspire us directly so that we write overly political pieces, or it may inspire us indirectly so that we write with a passion for living and self expression although not necessarily about a particular issue. My concern is that too often political involvement is totally absent from the lives of many of us today. I understand that many of us are caught up under the heavy manners of institutions, corporations, and governments that make it difficult, dangerous and sometimes impossible for us to speak out without suffering severe repercussions. I understand that livelihood is often dependant on compliance with restrictive rules and regulations. I understand that some of us have very little room for self expression, but there is a big difference between caution on the one hand and, on the other hand, outright cowardice, collusion and/or callous indifference to the major issues of the day. My concern is that the poetry of the personal is cool for what it is but there is more to life than the individual view, that concentrating inwardly or to put it another way: if we remove the black arts movement poets (and those self-admittedly directly influenced by BAM, eg Ethelbert Miller, Tony Medina) from the mix of poets represented at Furious Flower, what would be the nature of the poetry that remains and where would be the furious in the flowering?

I am not calling for one way to write. Everyone should write what the want to. But I am criticizing a lack of engaged and socially conscious literature. I am criticizing the very nature of most academically oriented poetry in this era of American neo-imperialism.

Academic critics often criticized some of us, calling us shrill propagandists and one-note johnnies rather than artistic writers. But look at the body of our work. Go back and read the Journal of Black Poetry, Negro Digest/Black World, The Black Scholar and other journals of that era. Read them and see if in fact we were only advocating one particular point of view, if only one type of writer was given a forum. The breadht and diversity of what you will find will amaze you.

[clip]

...I want the whole spectrum of social life represented in our poetry and not simply an insistence on only one part. I embrace both personal poetry and I embrace political poetry. Not one without the other. I want both. And when I see the absence of either one, I will speak out about what I perceive as a major deficit. We need both the furious and the flower. --Kalamu Ya Salaam



What I wish to extrapolate here is the beginning line: “I think writers need to be involved in struggle not as writers per se, but as concerned people. Further, once we are actively engaged in struggle, our participation in struggle will inspire our written work.”


As far as I am concerned, I, at this time, feel more than ever before that this is the work that I am put here to do. And like Alice, it has been painful. Being a nurse and a mother makes me highly sensitive to the conditions of suffrage. Knowing what I know about AIDS and HIV, how the virus literally attacks every healthy cell in the body from head to foot, is painful information. And coupled with the knowledge that the international community is doing very little to thwart it’s rampant spread on the African continent makes me ill. Knowing that women are cutting wire with their teeth, right now, in Sudan, to build huts (see current issue of TIME magazine) makes me ill. Knowing the numbers of Cambodian girls sold into prostitution by the age of 6 makes me cringe. Knowing the suffrage of my ancestors whose story still has not been adequately reported makes me furious.


And so I have come to the place, after having experienced how moved people can be by my writing and by the honesty that I strive to put forth on the page, I have come to know and appreciate this thing we called Voice and I am committed not to entertainment, not to worldwind book tours and fame, but for the illumination of those who cannot speak for themselves—the women, the children especially. For my father sent into the Vietnam War who I, unfortunately, never had a chance to know. For the men and women in Iraq now who are brainwashed to believe that self-sacrifice and patriotism are interchangeable terms. I take on the cloak that my good friend and mentor, E. Ethelbert Miller terms “literary activist,” with the knowledge that this is the least I can do, the very least I can do, for the gift of having been alive.


Writing is no longer all encompassing for me; rather, I strive everyday to be engaged. Engaged in my children, in my environment, in nature, in life. I strive toward true gratitude; a gratitude that asks not for more and more and more but asks now, “How can I serve?” Yes, I am a poet and a writer but I am also a human and I understand now, with greater clarity, what the great poet Rumi meant when he wrote:


I am not a poet
I don’t earn my living from poetry

I don’t need to boast
My knowledge
Poetry is the wine
Of love that I
Accept only from
The hands
Of my
Beloved


And I strive not for the writer-li-ness of writing, but toward the art of living fully.

ANGEL

shared with you at 8:47 PM by angel


Now That's Worth Writing Down

When we let Spirit lead us, it is impossible to know where we are being lead. All we know, all we can believe, all we can hope is that we are going home. That wherever Spirit takes us is where we live.....Alice Walker, Absolute Trust in the Goodness of the Earth.


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