Hyphens, histories and the hypocrites

Each week, I receive at least one letter or e-mail from a white person asking me to explain why blacks hyphenate their identity, referring to themselves as African-Americans. And each week, I receive a least one correspondence admonishing blacks for bringing up the past. "I didn't own slaves, and I'm sick and tired of you people always whining about old history," one man wrote the other day. "We need to be one nation and one people."I never respond to these readers, even when I believe they are being sincere. Needless to say, since the "postracial" Barack Obama, as many swooning journalists call him, has done so well in his run for the presidency, the tone of the complaints I receive has become more strident, contemptuous and mocking.I have a long and personal history with the term African-American. When the Rev. Jesse Jackson first proposed, during the 1980s, that we adopt it as our official cultural and racial name, I was a reporter and columnist for the Fort Pierce (Fla.) News-Tribune. My editor asked me to write the newspaper's editorial opposing the use of the term.I wrote what I thought was a balanced piece that looked at both blacks' desire to capture their heritage by using the hyphen and the possible downside of blacks symbolically separating themselves from other Americans and thereby causing deep resentment.Over the years, I rarely have used the term African-American. For one, I see no evidence that it has changed how the rest of the nation views us or treats us. Second, my contrarian bent leads me to resist the name because its use has become de rigueur, and I try to steer clear of anything that is de rigueur. Third, using the hyphen has not stopped the tragedy of black-on-black crime that has paralyzed our neighborhoods with fear and suspicion.Many white people who complain about the use of the term are shameless hypocrites. Others are simply naive. Most of these same people did not have a problem with the nation's crush of hyphenated names until Jackson suggested that we place the hyphen between "African" and "American," when all hell broke loose.Until then, we accepted the use of names such as Jewish-American, Polish-American, Italian-American, Portuguese-American, Chinese-American, Japanese-American, German-American, Czechoslovakian-American, Cuban-American, Arab-American, Hispanic-American, Russian-American and Greek-American.The hypocrisy involving hyphenated names is often laughable. Several years ago, a man with an Italian surname attacked me for using the name African-American in the lead of a column. I learned a few weeks later that he was a longtime member of the Italian-American Club of Greater Clearwater, in Florida. When I confronted him, he grudgingly acknowledged his hypocrisy.In March of each year, millions of people nationwide wear something green, and bodies of water are dyed green. This event is St. Patrick's Day, when Irish-Americans celebrate the Irish side of their hyphenation. We also have the annual National Puerto Rican Day Parade in New York City that attracts more than 3 million spectators and 100,000 marchers. I was there last June, and all around I saw placards announcing "Puerto Rican pride" and "Puerto Rican-American pride." Singer Ricky Martin was the parade king, and many of New York's movers and shakers rode on floats, waving to the crowd, celebrating the culture of a hyphenated people.Black History Month, which many blacks now refer to as African-American Culture Month, has just ended. Predictably, I received a lot of unprintable complaints. Many of the writers, like others over the years, did not realize that they were practicing a double standard.The same double standard is at play when whites condemn blacks for bringing up the past. A man in Tuscaloosa, Ala., a member of the League of the South, challenged me, during a public forum at which I was the guest speaker, to explain why blacks "can't forget the past." Ironically, the League of the South's raison d'etre is to glorify the inhuman and racist legacies of the Confederacy and the Civil War.In short, white history still matters. But African-American history -- slavery, separate-but-equal schools, "colored" water fountains, poll taxes, redlining, salary differentials, lynching and the Tuskegee syphilis experiment -- is seen as being passe and should be forgotten.We are being asked to pretend that these events and unjust practices have no direct or residual influence on the current status of black life in the United States, especially since the black man running for president supposedly has "transcended race." I would try to forget the past if I thought history was irrelevant. But the past is relevant. It influences who we are now, and it will affect who we become. We cannot cherry-pick whose history is relevant and whose is not if we are earnestly seeking truth.All people's history, including black history -- or African-American history -- is relevant in the cultural mosaic that we call America.(Bill Maxwell is a columnist and editorial writer for the St. Petersburg Times. E-mail maxwell(at)sptimes.com.)(Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service, http://www.scrippsnews.com)

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Hyphenation

Do you not know the difference between Nationality and Race???? Do you further not know of Tribal Importances, which is in many areas far more important than Race or Nationality.And Clans in some areas trumps all.

Are you actually a Rwandan-American, or actually a Tutsi-American, which then might make you a Jewish-American.
http://www.kulanu.org/tutsi/jews-africa.html

But you have convinced me!!!
From hereon in, I will refer to myself as a White-American, not merely an American. :)

The Center for Community

The Center for Community Arts' African American History Tours bring to life the robust black community that once existed in Cape May. Hidden in plain sight among Cape May’s Victorian beauty are stories of Harriet Tubman and blacks-only beaches.
With materials from the John and Dolly Nash African American History Archives and the stories of area residents, guides help tour participants get a feel for Cape May in an earlier day.
The tour also reveals the significant contributions that the black community made to Cape May's economy, and explains some of the factors contributing to the community's decline.
Tours conclude at the Franklin Street School where participants can see first-hand the historic renovations which are turning the school into Cape May's community cultural center.
We invite you to join us for this fascinating look into Cape May’s past. New guides are always welcome.
Please contact the CCA office at 609- 884-7525 for more information about the tour or how to become involved as a guide. To find out more about the historic Franklin Street School, visit CenterforCommunityArts.org.
Tours are offered on Thursdays and Saturdays at 11 a.m. from now until Sept. 29. Prices are $10 for adults, $7 for children under 12. Reservations are not required.
Tours begin at the Franklin Center's office, 712 Lafayette Street, with a discussion of the Franklin Street School, once a segregated primary school.
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