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TARIQ TOURÉ
  • HOME
  • ABOUT
  • THE INTERCESSION
  • BOOKS
    • BLACK SEEDS
    • 2 PARTS OXYGEN
    • DAVIDSDOLLAR
  • GREATER THAN THE SWORD
  • WRITING
    • ARTICLES/ESSAYS
    • POETRY
    • RUN 4 FREEDOM
  • VIDEO
  • FEATURES
    • FEATURES IN PRINT
    • PHOTOGRAPHY FEATURES
  • CONTACT
    • LECTURES/PERFORMANCES
    • PRESSKIT

Dear Black Millennials: It's going to be ok...

July 25, 2015

Journalist Tanehisi Coates is to young black writers what Steph Curry is to teenage point-guards. Only he uses none of his 6’4” limber frame to drill fade-aways in mere mortals faces. Not one bit of his stature appears threatening, that is, until he opens his mouth, or when his thumb clicks the ballpoint to the tip of his pen. His record of exposing the fractures in race issues in his column with Atlantic Magazine is conflated with ghetto legend and Greek mythology. As a writer myself, who is feeling his own way around the gauntlets of the literary world, Coates is a North Star. He’s proven that young folks like me aren’t crazy, and that America still has the body of racism rotting in it’s closet.


Thursday July 15, 2015 he released his second book, “Between The World and Me”, an extended open letter to his son about maturating through this complex society as a Black boy. The venue was Union Baptist Church and the building was packed like a library the day before midterms, but with less chatter, and ten times more anticipation. If you’re a student of literary art, you knew that in this moment lay something special for the cul-de-sacs of history. Books trap eternal memories and seething truths of civilizations. His reputation forced everyone to see that this particular book would be one that pushed boundaries.  So anybody who knew better made sure to be present, to witness the unveiling of a literary Van Gogh. That day, Coates spoke to an audience full of intoxicated admirers.

Every label has been spitballed at the current times: turning point, watershed moment, juncture in the fate of humanity, and many more gasp worthy one liners. After inhaling “Between The World and Me” certain concepts began to reverberate in my mind. What I have come to understand is that Black Millennials now rest in a purgatory of sorts. The future is some what uncertain. Prioritizing these days can get muddy. Like, we see the blatant police executions and brutality meted out everyday via instantaneous communication, but what does the constant flood of horror mean? We’re witnessing a wealth gap that may leave tons of us clinging to a side of the cliff in the money canyon. Private prisons are a 401k stuffer mostly fueled by our bodies, and lastly, college degrees we bartered for transcendence into higher social classes are turning into tissue paper. The statistic that every white family has 85 cents compared to Blacks 5 cents is far too ugly for any of us to look at. Thus, we have been cornered into doing what we always have done since the first slave was was given a stock number aboard merchant ships, resist. I’m not sure what Fannie Lou Hamer or Bob Marley would think about social media and it’s impact on the fight for black dignity in the American republic. Marley may have thought that we bathe too much in the pain. Every retweet of a shooting, non-conviction, live-streamed town-hall panel to discuss our problems keeps us in the know, but also reminds Black Millennials that they’re in an uphill battle. But our moment, now, is absolutely too brief to not struggle earnestly, despite how many fires we have to put out in a generation. We have light-years more ground to make up, but look how far we’ve come.

Between 1963 and 1971 Black leaders Medgar Evers, Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, Fred Hampton, and many others were all murdered in cold blood. All were accepted as a “Black Messiah” and were crucified for exhibiting maximum masculinity. With each of their murders fear hardened the hearts of many parents and the will to fight no longer swept over the masses. Roughly 50 years have passed since the aforementioned tragedies, and today #BlackLivesMatter has put the defibrillators directly to the hearts of Black America again. Only this generation is “Messiahless”, armed with nothing but revolutionary spirit and staggering technology. We don’t believe in any mass centralization of leadership, and refuse to busy ourselves with intellectual gladiator matches. And maybe this is what Coates means when he puts his unwavering faith in the inevitability of struggle, that is the mechanisms being an ever-changing thing. Hope, for him is too abstract. Daily toil with the American state and all its ugliness is the best dish we can feast upon. Black Millennials ought to revel in this sobering reality as I forced myself to. 

Most of America was curious as to what our purpose would be. What contributions, if any, would we make? How could the crack, mass incarceration and snapchat cohort put a dent in the American state? It’s simple. The narratives, no matter how bleak they may be, lay in our palms. The history resides at our fingertips. The treachery is looped over and over by the second. And it is with these digital footprints, for better or worse, that we leave children for ages to come, innumerable bytes of pictures, stories, video, audio, tweets, etc. that express the significance of this chapter. 
The “Dream” as Coates puts it, I believe, is backed the ability to control who gets to omit what they want out of history. Current battles over what the confederate flag and the true reason for the Civil War expose the cemented miseducation of innocent American children. Should white America continue to believe in its fireside fallacies, of a “Birthed Nation” through grit and thrift, this passage through time will show their inability to obtain the information that stood the chance of freeing them from their prisons of ignorance. Unless the internet completely wipes itself, we will have left the most complete archive of struggle our people have ever inherited on this continent, and it will be those who come after, who will never again be able to be wholesaled lies. Maybe that is the reason for this generations existence, to struggle, but more importantly to use the available advances in evolution to document it, like never before. This is why we are going to be ok.


Farrakhan: Attempting to Cash Martin's Check and Paint Malcolm's Picture

June 25, 2015

A red-faced, ex-convict stood fearlessly before a curious crowd of mostly caucasian academics at Oxford University in December of 1964, and said the following, “My reason for believing in extremism, intelligently directed extremism, extremism in defense of liberty, extremism in quest of justice, is because I firmly believe in my heart, that the day that the black man takes an uncompromising step, and realizes that he’s within his rights, when his own freedom is being jeopardized, to use any means necessary to bring about his freedom, or put a halt to that injustice, I don’t think he’ll be by himself. I live in America where there are only 22 million blacks against probably 160 million whites. One of the reasons that I am in no way reluctant or hesitant to do whatever is necessary to see that black people do something to protect themselves, I honestly believe that the day that they do, many whites will have more respect for them, and there’ll be more whites on their side than there are now on their side with these little wishy-washy “love thy enemy” approach that they have been using up until now. And if I am wrong than you are racialist.” El-Hajj Malik Shabazz formerly known as Malcolm X, formerly known as Malcolm Little served the Western World mouthfuls of dicing truth in a debate that will never be forgotten. The world is still pulsing from the ripple effect of X’s life, and people like me, still believe in his philosophies. Moments like Oxford were a norm for the man who once preyed on human beings in the criminal world. 

The Breakfast Club talk show on Power 105.1 in New York is a one-stop shop for late breaking news in hip hop culture. June 9th 2015, the longtime protege of Malcolm X, Louis Farrakhan, strategically used this platform that reaches the hearts and minds of young Black America to deliver the following excerpt, “Our young people represent the strongest and the best generation that we ever had.  They’re not the wisest, but they are the best because they are fearless.  When you see fearless young men and women, that’s the generation that God’s Hand is on because that’s the generation that will fulfill the promise of the ancestors who died struggling for true freedom, justice and liberation. The young are the generation that will deliver on that promise—with the right leadership.” Minister Louis Farrakhan held a bustling crowd of young and old in sheer suspense the same way June 24th at Metropolitan AME Church. He, like Malcolm, delivered the pure unadulterated truth to Blacks and Whites in America. After the media hailstorms surrounding police brutality and lethal force, black millennials were crying out for uncompromising leadership. His message rang clear. 


Minister Farrakhan is doing what respectability politicians have shivered at the thought of, which is unapologetically declaring the facts of Black plight in the United States of America. After all he had to be there, in Metropolitan AME Church. The past Wednesday night June 17th, White Terrorist Dylan Roof would gun-down 9 Black women and men after spending one hour in the study of scripture with them in Charleston Carolina’s AME Church. A church founded by revolutionary Denmark Vesey. He first shot Senator Clementa Pinkney, who just weeks before, orated an impassioned argument for body cameras following the murder of Walter Scott. In the same manner that Tom Cruise obliterates his foes on movie screens, he reloaded more than 3 times in the process of shooting Cynthia Hurd (54), shooting Susie Jackson (87), shooting Ethel Lee Lance (70), shooting Depayne Middleton-Doctor (49), shooting Tywanza Sanders (26), shooting Daniel Simmons (74), shooting Sharonda Coleman-Singleton (45) and shooting Myra Thompson (59), dead. Farrakhan had already planned on holding a press conference for his October initiative “#JusticeOrElse”, unfortunately Roof’s terrorism set the stage. Youth leaders Tamika Mallory and Jamahl Bryant spoke before him with prophetic fire showing that the Minister is invested in who shall come next to confront this dark hour. 

Martin Luther King Jr. wrestled with this same reality as he neared the last days of his life. Terrorism by the Klu Klux Klan, state sanctioned murder, and being shutoff from the fountain of economic opportunity in America all haunted him. Like the battle-tested leader he was, he began altering course in philosophy and doctrine. I covered the history of how he lost popularity in this paradigm shift and realized this isn’t the Martin I was raised on. It was undoubtedly not the MLK my generation had been numbed with. We were only to know that he had a dream. And though that dream was to remain a lofty idea. So far, America has only used to Dr. King to cool the fevering hearts of America’s basement, no more than anesthesia. Farrakhan was deadly correct yesterday identifying the forgotten King, who said, “In a sense we’ve come to our nation’s capital to cash a check”, and “It is obvious today that America has defaulted on this promissory note insofar as her citizens of color are concerned”, and “Instead of honoring this sacred obligation, America has given the Negro people a bad check, a check which has come back marked ‘insufficient funds.” With these words he then announced another March on Washington to demand fiscal accountability on the part of federal and state government, for the repair of its descendants of bondage. 


There are many theories as to what America owes Blacks. What is for certain, is that the culture of America and the institutions continue to take black lives, black heritage, and black money, regardless of it’s debt. Today, the Black community is unable to hold a dollar bill longer than one hour among its neighborhoods while having a collective buying power nationally of 1.3 trillion dollars. Blacks are twice as likely to be unarmed when murdered by police and a white person with a criminal record is more likely to be employed than a black with a college degree. Few have called the U.S. into account as Farrakhan has lately. He likened the current leadership to shepherds who have let wolves run wild. And in the shadow of the aforementioned giants, he called for uniformity of purpose among all people. Malcolm would die preaching self-reliance and imagined a nation predicated on the uplift of those African still broken by injustice on this soil. Martin would perish organizing the largest congregation in history to demand recompense for America’s original sin. Though that sin pervades, Farrakhan has relit the torch and garnered the approval of the best and brightest. The youth are no longer blind and afraid. Classism is melting. Information is the order of the day. And we know we have been locked out of the golden room. Times are changing. October 10th 2015 marks the anniversary of the Million Man March. This time the battle cry is #JusticeOrElse. Farrakhan has invited all of America that believes the injustice has endured too long. Few can disagree and many have varying opinions of the Minister, but who has come forward besides him to cash Martin’s check, and paint Malcolm’s picture?


When Protest is not Enough

June 20, 2015

Sony ran the cheesiest ads known to man in 1991 to advertise its brand-new “hand cam”. It played out like an All-grown up special episode of full-house. A brunette in her early thirties finds the clunky camcorder hidden under a sheet and goes into a frenzy. At the end of the hallway is a white gentleman marketing all 32 of his teeth in approval of the gift he just surprised his girlfriend with. She gallops towards him and leaps in to his arms. Stevie Wonder’s ballad “Fun Day” completes the entire scene, and in 30 seconds you are indubitably sold on their future as a couple, Stevie’s music career, and the sales of the Hand-cam itself. Sony’s camera would capture American violence against the black body all too well that same year. And today, millions of smartphones capture state violence against black bodies with cameras the size of their hands, and it proves that we are at a crossroads.


George Holliday must have been wooed by the Sony commercial that year as well, because on March 3, 1991, he used the recording device he bought to film the Rodney King melee. He had heard helicopters, sirens and what sounded like a man being beaten within an inch of his life and rushed to record. Luckily, the police didn’t notice him or maybe they were filled with too much happiness to pay attention to their surroundings. They proceeded taking turns with their nightsticks until he could barely lift his head off the ground. I think King’s mugshots were a good example of what Emmitt Till’s would have look like, if he survived his ordeal. LA burned for five agonizing days after April 30, 1992 when the officers were acquitted of all charges related to the torture of Rodney Glen King III. 

Baltimore adopted the ethos of the LA riots two months ago. A city segregated by fierce redlining policies, divestment, and Gestapo policing exploded for 3 days behind similar persecution. We coined it the Baltimore Uprising. But, I’m not sure the term fits comfortably between my teeth. Could it have been defined as an awakening? Tupac vibrated the ether concluding the latest album of rapper Kendrick Lamar saying, “I think niggas is tired of grabbin’ S%^t out the stores and next time it’s a riot there’s gonna be, like, uh, bloodshed for real. I don’t think America know that. I think America think we was just playing and it’s gonna be some more playing but it ain’t gonna be no playing. It’s gonna be murder, you know what I’m saying, it’s gonna be like Nat Turner, 1831, up in this m!#$^^a. You know what I’m saying it’s gonna happen.” I played the interview multiple times, with my hand placed on my face and pointer finger above my brow. Deep breaths couldn’t calm my rage nor could rational. 

In a country where death walks with black people like a cane walks with the elderly, these next few moments, months and years are all watersheds. They all brace the molten lava of a people who have torn all nails from the bed of their fingertips, trying to escape America’s casket. And the methods we have used thus far have only exhausted our limbs and peppered sweat on our sun lashed faces. Marches, Townhalls, Panels, and Social media sharing are all commendable actions to raise awareness. But, we have yet to ask a fundamental question in regards to the women and men who gave their souls for our progression. Is this where we they wanted us to be? And by “be”, I mean the  continued “vulnerability” of our people to ill-intended legislation, propaganda, and outright murder. We are 50 plus years past integration and the Civil Rights struggle which was supposed to guarantee equal opportunity. In these last 50 years we have seen every sophisticated means of subjugation carried out despite it. In summation, the children of slaves are not free in America, have never been free in America, and the spin cycle of marches and protest only proliferate our neo-slavery as clocks turn.

We are still as vulnerable as we were when unloaded from the ships touching the shores in the Caribbean and Americas named after patron saints. This frightens me. It haunts the crevices of my dreams. But I have never allowed fear to govern my behavior in crucial circumstances. I believe my generation identifies with this fear, and for the most part knows inherently what must done. We must fight. We must fight with every atom of our being or risk being shamed by our ancestors and detested by our children who will inherit this condition. 150 years have passed since we were “allowed” freedom. Today we seek no allowance, nor any permission to walk upon any parts of this Universe. Most won’t believe or agree with our generations convictions, but it is not our task to interpret our heartbreak to the worn and docile of our people. Their fear is embedded deep into their pores. If you are to love, love those who have cared for your well being unconditionally, no matter the creed or color. Many have worn these skin envelopes called the black body, and committed treason for small measures.  The indifferent are just as much as a threat as the purveyors of hate. They persist in an oblivious matrimony. To those who identify with our current struggle, I implore you to educate self, build self and do for self.

“When I am dead wrap the mantle of the Red, Black and Green around me, for in the new life I shall rise with God’s grace and blessing to lead the millions up the heights of triumph with the colors that you well know. Look for me in the whirlwind or the storm, look for me all around you, for, with God’s grace, I shall come and bring with me countless millions of black slaves who have died in America and the West Indies and the millions in Africa to aid you in the fight for Liberty, Freedom and Life.

The civilization of today is gone drunk and crazy with its power and by such it seeks through injustice, fraud and lies to crush the unfortunate. But if I am apparently crushed by the system of influence and misdirected power, my cause shall rise again to plague the conscience of the corrupt. For this I am satisfied, and for you, I repeat, I am glad to suffer and even die. Again, I say, cheer up, for better days are ahead. I shall write the history that will inspire the millions that are coming and leave the posterity of our enemies to reckon with the hosts for the deeds of their fathers.” - The Honorable Marcus Garvey

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