Quit Frontin on Kwanzaa

“Pro-Black like Craig Hodges but my dashiki’s in the cleaners.” – Common

kwanza

Being Pan-African is a weird thing. To many folks it means wearing dashikis, avoiding swine, and shouting ase at every opportunity. I, however, realize that you aren’t going to do that. For most Black folks, the holiday of Kwanzaa is one tied to Pan-Africanism and thus gets mentioned more in their living rooms on TV commercials than at family gatherings. I’ve decided we’ve been frontin’ on Kwanzaa for no real good reason.  So here are some pre-emptive responses to questions and concerns.

Yo, did you know Kwanzaa isn’t even real?

Okay, unicorns, not real.

Leprechauns, not real.

Kwanzaa = real. Kwanzaa, like all holidays was created and is celebrated for a reason. Dr. Maulana Karenga created it in 1966 and it’s not a secret. In fact, it is supposed to reaffirm the ability of African peoples to create meaningful cultural celebrations.

I can’t remember the words?

Dude, this is not a recitation competition, if you can’t remember the Kiswahili words you have a friend called the internet or books. Look them up! No one is challenging your Blackness, just trying to honor the spirit of the celebration.

But why should I even remember the words?

Doing extra work to think about the words in Kiswahili tends to make me actively think about the principle. We use words everyday and seldom think about their meaning. Using the Kiswahili words and the English words creates an opportunity to start to actively think about what they mean. For example: Umoja- Unity … what does unity mean? What is community? Who is in? who is out? How do we bond it or break it? See, that was easy right.

But I’m Christian, so I celebrate Christmas.

Glad to hear it, what’s that got to do with celebrating Kwanzaa. Kwanzaa isn’t “the Black Christmas”, nor is it anti-Jesus. In fact, you know all that commercialism that you complain about surrounding baby Jesus’ birth, yeah Kwanzaa is trying to fight it. Look you have an ally! Oh and fyi, you do realize Jesus wasn’t really born in December, right?

But I don’t have a dashiki, I only have a kente cloth bow tie that I got in the 90s.

Please don’t dust off that Kente cloth bow tie or that dashiki. The point is not about what you wear, but what you reflect on. People have asked me, “You’re all Pro-Black and Afrikan, why don’t you wear African clothes?” To which I respond, “Anything I put on is African clothing.” See there, I’ve given you permission, tell them Dumi said you don’t need to get your Baduizm on to participate.

Kwanzaa is a holiday that is designed to get Black folks, African-Americans, Colored, Negro, New Afrikans, etc (pick your favorite or least favorite monikers) to reflect on who we are as a community, a family and a global nation. Kwanzaa is about taking explicit steps to live by principles, not just for 7 days, but for 365 of them. For those who look at Kwanzaa as a fad or trite, that is because they’ve forgotten this important part. If you just reflect on these principles once a year, you will never see the fruit of your labor.

So the greeting for the celebration is “habari gani” which means, “what’s the news?”. Man, that’s so 60s/70s I love it! But you respond with the name of the principle to keep it on your lips and in your mind.

The seven principles, known as the Nguzo Saba, are:

Day 1: Umoja- Unity

Day 2: Kujichagulia – Self-Determination

Day 3: Ujima – Collective work and Responsibility

Day 4: Ujamaa- Cooperative Economics

Day 5: Nia- Purpose

Day 6- Kuumba- Creativity

Day 7: Imani- Faith

I think now, more than ever, we run the risk of being allured by an Obama presidency into thinking we have arrived at the promised land. Look around your family, your neighborhood, your nation, and tell me if we can afford to continue to not be self-reflective and work towards a better community? If you cannot take seven days to redefine you relationship to the people who live with you, love you, and look like you, what kind of change are you really invested in?

p.s. I hope you noticed Kwanzaa was spelled with one “a” in the picture. I’m pretty sure it’s from Futurama.

p.p.s I do recognize Dr. Karenga’s heinous actions towards sisters Deborah Jones and Gail Davis, which I do not ignore nor endorse! However, I do think holiday is important form of healing and re-centering in our community. This is an endorsement of the larger African spirit than an individuals actions.

Filed under: Ancestors, Celebration, Food for Thought, Race

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  • http://blackinternetmarketingforum.com Iceman Baldy

    Great post. So many are misinformed about the meaning of Kwanzaa or why and how it's celebrated. Your post is a nice balance between informative and entertaining.

  • dumilewis

    “Approve”

  • http://blackinternetmarketingforum.com Iceman Baldy

    Great post. So many are misinformed about the meaning of Kwanzaa or why and how it’s celebrated. Your post is a nice balance between informative and entertaining.

  • neena

    I'm against holidays

  • neena

    I'm against holidays

  • neena

    I’m against holidays

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  • Osizwe

    This is great Dumi! I also appreciate the “p.p.s” comment. This is a reoccurring concern that some intellectuals and thorough researchers have. As someone who meaningfully celebrated Kwanzaa since childhood, as a family and community institution, I think its value and impact far outweigh the failings and actions of its founder. When I became a student of African American Studies I struggled with this information. Then the spiritual clarity came to me that my community had not been “hoodwinked”. They simple surpassed the limitations of the messenger by sincerely practicing the principles of Kwanzaa.

  • Osizwe

    This is great Dumi! I also appreciate the “p.p.s” comment. This is a reoccurring concern that some intellectuals and thorough researchers have. As someone who meaningfully celebrated Kwanzaa since childhood, as a family and community institution, I think its value and impact far outweigh the failings and actions of its founder. When I became a student of African American Studies I struggled with this information. Then the spiritual clarity came to me that my community had not been “hoodwinked”. They simple surpassed the limitations of the messenger by sincerely practicing the principles of Kwanzaa.

  • Osizwe

    This is great Dumi! I also appreciate the “p.p.s” comment. This is a reoccurring concern that some intellectuals and thorough researchers have. As someone who meaningfully celebrated Kwanzaa since childhood, as a family and community institution, I think its value and impact far outweigh the failings and actions of its founder. When I became a student of African American Studies I struggled with this information. Then the spiritual clarity came to me that my community had not been “hoodwinked”. They simple surpassed the limitations of the messenger by sincerely practicing the principles of Kwanzaa.

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  • stargoddess

    As I prepare to promote and reaffirm these universal values…I find this blog to be right on point. My Kwanzaa CD can be purchased at http://www.venusjones.com It is filled with poetic affirmations and melodic mantras set to meditative sounds that will help raise vibrations and realign one’s chakras, bringing healing energy and peace to one’s self, home, community and the world.

  • stargoddess

    As I prepare to promote and reaffirm these universal values…I find this blog to be right on point. My Kwanzaa CD can be purchased at http://www.venusjones.com It is filled with poetic affirmations and melodic mantras set to meditative sounds that will help raise vibrations and realign one’s chakras, bringing healing energy and peace to one’s self, home, community and the world.

  • http://twitter.com/OnlyLaila Laila

    Timely!

    I was just talking to a friend about how I’ve never celebrated Kwanzaa or heard it discussed growing up or in college. Mind you I have a B.A. in African & Black Diaspora Studies and we never talked about this in any of my courses. I do think it’s an important celebration and reflective moment for our community. Folks I’ve talked to about it say they don’t celebrate because it falls on the heel of Christmas. *shrug* As a parent I’ve tried to find books to share with my son and struggle to find anything written in the last 5 years…hmmm…

  • http://twitter.com/OnlyLaila Laila

    Timely!

    I was just talking to a friend about how I’ve never celebrated Kwanzaa or heard it discussed growing up or in college. Mind you I have a B.A. in African & Black Diaspora Studies and we never talked about this in any of my courses. I do think it’s an important celebration and reflective moment for our community. Folks I’ve talked to about it say they don’t celebrate because it falls on the heel of Christmas. *shrug* As a parent I’ve tried to find books to share with my son and struggle to find anything written in the last 5 years…hmmm…

  • Laila

    Timely!

    I was just talking to a friend about how I’ve never celebrated Kwanzaa or heard it discussed growing up or in college. Mind you I have a B.A. in African & Black Diaspora Studies and we never talked about this in any of my courses. I do think it’s an important celebration and reflective moment for our community. Folks I’ve talked to about it say they don’t celebrate because it falls on the heel of Christmas. *shrug* As a parent I’ve tried to find books to share with my son and struggle to find anything written in the last 5 years…hmmm…

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