(ThyBlackMan.com) As I prepare to address students at Grambling University about the importance of giving back and having the courage to fight for social justice, my mind is drawn to the words of our predecessors who paved the way for all of us to have the freedoms that we enjoy to this day. At the top of the list is the legendary entertainer, Harry Belafonte.
This week, Harry Belafonte laid down the gauntlet for black entertainers, some of whom have become ecstatic about selling their souls to the highest bidder (or the lowest common denominator). Belafonte, saying things that probably make half of the entertainment industry wish he’d been killed with Dr. King, stated that the indifference of celebrities to black suffering is “unconscionable.”
This is the second time that Harry has said something to undermine his love within the black entertainment establishment by actually asking entertainers to be accountable to something other than buying bottles at the club. Just a few weeks ago, Harry asked Beyonce and Jay-Z (aka the royal family) to do something for the black community that didn’t including blogging about Blue Ivy’s new line of baby sneakers or tweeting pictures of themselves on vacation. This is a tough task for people who’ve been led to believe that the world is their oyster, and that poor black people simply don’t exist.
Harry Belafonte is in an uphill battle, especially when it comes to the likes of Jay-Z and Beyonce, who’ve become the prototype of the new “Greed is Good” philosophy that has taken over black entertainment. Jay-Z, the man who attacked the Occupy Wall Street movement even as he tried to make money from it, was raised with the mindset of a hardened New York crack dealer who doesn’t seem to have learned the value of caring about anyone other than himself. Jay-Z still sees himself as a product of his environment, rather than a man who can control his environment, like a 7-foot giant with the mind of a four year old victim of child abuse.
Beyonce, on the other hand, was raised in a suburban, affluent community in Texas, where poor people are simply the ones that you manipulate for your own economic gain, not those for whom you make significant sacrifices. The psychological slavery of some black folks in the deep south can be so frighteningly insidious that you want to send out emails announcing that slavery ended nearly 150 years ago. Rocking the boat is the last thing you’ll ever see out of many black Texans, especially those who’ve been accepted by white people.
But the fact is that, in spite of the resistance he is sure to receive, Harry Belafonte is nothing less than entirely heroic for doing what he is doing right now. As an 85-year old man, Harry Belafonte shows more courage for the black community in one week than most celebrities show in an entire lifetime. Most members of the black entertainment industry just don’t get it, and the truth is that many of them never will. In their minds, making money makes you into a decent and relevant human-being, nothing else seems to matter beyond that.
When Harry Belafonte says, “I need you to help alleviate black suffering,” he’s speaking about the trauma being experienced by millions of black youth due to urban violence, the prison industrial complex, black unemployment and unequal educational systems. But when he makes his critique, people from Beyonce’s camp might reply with, “But we DID help with Michelle Obama’s anti-obesity initiative and we also supported gay marriage, so take THAT!”
Celebrities don’t understand that cute, polite and uncontroversial forms of activism, like anti-obesity initiatives (you know, things that are designed to keep white people from getting upset with you), are not even in the same ballpark when it comes to the type of empowered activism being requested by men like Harry Belafonte. That’s like someone saying, “Our nation needs a stronger military,” and another person replying with, “Well, we just bought 400 water balloons and a sling shot and we’re training all of our soldiers to prepare for massive pillow fights.”
Harry is talking about saving that illiterate teenager in South Central Los Angeles who is worried about being shot on the way to school, who comes home to an empty refrigerator after seeing her father sent to prison for 150 years for drug distribution. The last thing this kid needs is to have Beyonce and Michelle Obama show up to tell her to eat her vegetables. This reminds me of missionaries that go to starving villages in Africa with a stack of bibles and no food or medicine. Perhaps the next time Beyonce rubs elbows with the Obamas, she can ask them to use the power of the presidential pardon to send that little girl’s daddy back home so she can have her father in her life again, or to change the gun laws so that teenagers can’t buy AK-47s and blow each other’s heads off before their 16th birthday.
Topics like anti-obesity and gay marriage are perfect reflections of the Beyonce-Jay Z activism that has long been adopted by members of the entertainment industry. The goal is to be seen with the black elite and other members of the political aristocracy who gladly elevate themselves above the masses. The Carters love taking pictures with the Obamas and appearing at joint events with them, as the rest of us sit back and marvel, fantasizing about enjoying just a piece of the empty, materialistic life that most of us will never have. All the while, the willingness to engage in truly impactful sacrifices to slow the suffering of black people is virtually non-existent, for members of the black elite feel obligated to sacrifice for nothing other than the size of their bank accounts.
If scientists could invent a fountain of youth, they should give it to Harry Belafonte. He’s simply in a class by himself, and represents something that almost no entertainer could ever be. Harry’s mind is operating at the doctoral level, while many black celebrity brains refuse to leave the third grade. Harry is saying to all of us that many of those we profess to care about are struggling in ways that we simply can’t imagine, and that it is up to us to use our platforms to truly liberate the entire black community and not just rap about being a “Nigger in Paris.”
Maybe one day entertainers will get it. But even if they don’t, the rest of us should. Harry Belafonte is nothing short of extraordinary, and he won’t live forever. It’s up to those of us who respect him to relight and carry this torch forever.
Obama is a Celebrity who shoots the breeze with Pimp with a Limp, kicks it with Jay Z while unemployment in black and hispanic communities have increased. There is nothing to admire about this social predator.
I concur with this Article and most of the expressed views/comments. I am a “Brother” and I am very disappointed with with how we have conducted ourselves following the sacrifices of the ‘Civil Rights Movement’ of the 60s and 70s. We have become passive because a few of us have become wealthy through sports and entertainment. We have been neutered by the razor of anti-cooperative Rap music that only points to self gratification. Dito that with a world that is more obsessed with raw data/numbers than people value.
I am not a star yet but I am guilty! As usual, I find that we-as a Black Community-all know how to express what is wrong but have not got a clue how to initiate a change or correction. We do not have competitive media coverage at the news paper or TV level. [I suppose, most of use don’t like reading.] LOL. So, we do not have an opportunity to counter the negatives that is run against us in the mainstream media. So, we act-out as the welcoming institutionalization awaits with open arms!
We need to hold weekly workshops in schools, community centres and churches to discuss strategies to change. YES WE CAN!! YES WE MUST!!
God Bless us all.
I’m white and Native American, but being that I’m Indian I always look to the righteous black community like Harry Belafonte or Rasta Reggae to speak the truth forthose of us who are down trodden, and looking at all of the media and entertainment these days not just black is disgusting, where is God? Everything in this USA is against the true ways and virtues of loving god. I hate rap music, not only because I just don’t like the way it sounds, but for what it spreads to the youth, the values they recieve from this valueless artform. Harry Belafonte, Barack Obama, and ZIggy Marley seem to be the surviving few to stand up for rights these days!
I’m not an African-American but I grew up in an integrated neighborhood and I saw what celebrity greed did to the young kids in our neighborhood – black, white and latino alike. I think it’s sad that celebrities can become so detached from their own roots. They forget that young people admire and imitate them, and young people fail because they don’t model the behavior that actually matters. I wish we had more Harrys.
Elder Belafonte is truly a dying breed, but so is our community. We live in the age of me, me, me and the Black community has suffered for it. In every walk of life, not just the entertainment industry, but every industry, we as a people are not looking after our own. We now rely on the government to solve our problems when in fact, we are the problem.
When are we going to wake up from this nightmare that makes us think people outside our community care more about us than we should care about ourselves? There’s something wrong with this picture, but we can’t see it because we’ve been blinded by all the bling, bling, reality shows, negative music and the mis-education of our people.
How do we solve the problems in our community? By stop following people outside our community who are leading us to self destruction and start leading our people in the direction of building the strong Black community we once had. By that I mean doing for self, like we once did when we didn’t have a choice. Becoming owners of businesses instead of endorsers of them, educating our own children instead of sending them to inferior schools where the teachers could care less if they learned anything or not. We should be creators of jobs instead of beggars of them. If we are to be one of the largest consumers, let it be of products and services we produce. Until we break the mental chains of slavery that makes us give everything we have to people outside our community, we will never reach our full potential as a people.
Black Unity means financial independence and happiness