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W. Kabaila
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Welcome to the NATIONAL AFRICAN AMERICAN CONGRESS

Profile Information

About Me:
AM CONCEPT DEVELOPER AND ORGANIZER FOR NATIONAL AFRICAN AMERICAN CONGRESS. Also served as former Vice Chair of Us Organization (1979-85), which is founding organization of the African American holiday, Kwanzaa; currently am member of California African American Political and Economic Institute (A Black Think Tank; www.caapei.org)See website. Also am member of the Nationalist Black Leadership Coalition (BBB/NBLC), Association for the Study of Classical African Civilization (ASCAC). The Congress of African People - Founder/Chair

My formal training:
USC - Public Administration - B.S. Degree; Cum Laude
UCLA - Political Science - Doctoral studies/specialization in So. African politics
W. LA Law School - 1 1/2 yrs.

Am LECTURER on Community and Organizational Development, Kwanzaa, Black Cultural Nationalism and Revolution, and on building The National African American Congress.
Contact info is below.

Los Angeles County Juvenile Probation Officer, Ret. - 25 yrs.
sikivu@aol.com
310 908 6139
Website:
http://naacforum.ning.com
Your country of Residence?
New Africa
Your State/City of Residence?
California
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curious

TOWARD BUILDING A NATIONAL AFRICAN AMERICAN CONGRESS: A PROPOSAL

TOWARDS BUILDING A NATIONAL AFRICAN-AMERICAN CONGRESS: A PROPOSAL
ORGANIZING FOR POLITICAL, ECONOMIC EMPOWERMENT, AND CULTURAL UPLIFTMENT


The African American Convention Movement has it’s origin in 1830 with the advent of the National Negro Convention held at the historic, Bethel AME Church in Philadelphia, Pa. Bishop Richard Allen emerged as the leader of the American Society of Free Persons of Color. This monumental meeting was the first of its kind to defend the collective interests and harness the energies of the African American community towards the goal of controlling our destiny and daily lives as a national community.
In a cursory look at the history of Black Conventions in the U.S. we find that many of the most prominent and influential were motivated and led by religious, labor, political and economic leaders seeking to define, defend and develop the interests of black masses in an effort to push forward our struggle for freedom and liberation. All of these efforts deserve our applause and honor for their accomplishments in their time and context. However, the challenges and requirements of today’s struggle demand of necessity, new and fresh approaches.
The Civil Rights Movement correctly sought to throw off the chains of legal and defacto segregation, Jim Crow and the commensurate political, economic, social and physical lynching of African Americans. At the same time, this movement sought and succeeded in fundamental ways to expand and extend the rights guaranteed in the Constitution, to all Americans, pursuant to our social justice tradition as a people. In its shadow and on the heels of the Civil Rights Movement, the Black Power and Black Arts Movements ushered in a period of political and cultural empowerment, unsurpassed in African American history.
The resultant marches, protests, freedom rides, demonstrations and legal challenges opened up unbounded educational opportunities for African american and other Third World students. African american students took the lead in demanding more relevant, responsive and uplifting curriculum, policies and administrators at the middle-school thru university levels. Nationwide these educational opportunities greatly expanded for black students. The term “Black Middle Class” began to take on new meaning and its numbers grew exponentially. With this expansion of the Black Middle Class comes an awesome responsibility to not only protect the gains of the above mentioned movements, but to use it’s possibilities and potential to extend the realm of freedom to the Black masses and beyond.
This proposal is also inspired by the program formulated by Malcolm X for the “Organization of Afro-American Unity” (OAAU) on the date of his sacrifice. Though he never got the opportunity to present it, the OAAU document talked about “launching a cultural revolution” in which we “restore our identity…….., and welcome persons of African origin to come together and dedicate their ideas, skills, and lives” to our struggle for national liberation. Bro. Malcolm stated the need to create a “grand alliance” regardless of “ideology” that took “into consideration national, regional and local conditions”. The following proposal seeks to link the requirements for struggle in this generation with those that have marked our history as a national community. A LUTA CONTINUA!!!!!

Given this, there are several factors that will distinguish this conference.
1. The scope and character of this conference shall be NATIONAL in focus, with emphasis on developing COMPREHENSIVE and MULTI-DISCIPLINARY approaches to the multi-faceted issues that affect African americans. We shall call on Black Professional and Community-based organizations and associates to have their best minds ascertain and develop positions, analysis, proposals, programs, strategies and tactics; and to present them in the following areas:

A. History
1) Writing corrective history of African americans and developing historiography. This is important because history is a record (written
and oral) of our peoples achievements, contributions and role in human progress.
2) Corrected history of African peoples provides critique, models, images, and paradigms of what we have done and can do to rescue and reconstruct our communities locally and with a national scope.

B. Spirituality/Religion/Ethics
1) Developing organizational structures and institutional capacity to
promote ethics, values, morality and a spirituality that are people-centered and socially-based within an ecumenical spirit and framework. Promote study of Maat as classical African ethics.
2)Researching, documenting, gaining understanding and teaching the role and history of the black church and other spiritual institutions in our struggle for national liberation and continuing our social justice tradition of making America realize its goal of Freedom and Justice for all.
3) Developing ways and means of networking with those in the other six areas, to ensure that the spiritual dimension of our lives is always represented and actualized in all that we do, in keeping with African and African american tradition.
4) Black churches can serve as institutional conduits to building regional unity. These opportunities should be explored by community organizers and activists.

C. Social Organization
1) Education
Public, Private (Church, etc.), Alternative (African centered), Charter schools, Pre-school, Historical Black Colleges (HBC) program and curriculum emphasis.
Support structures for black student enrolled at Universities and in Graduate Schools
Support structures and systems for Black Studies Programs and Curriculum
Ways and means of supporting and organizing advocacy groups for education of black students developing a system of communication and disseminating information on progress, models and issues as they arise. Encouraging Black students to go into areas of study that pursue our interests as a community of people and that allow us to occupy key areas of social space, i.e. – Law, Science, Medicine, Trade, Cultural Transformation.
2) Health
Expose’ of the status and critique of, and correctives for health in the black community.
Establishing and submitting agreed upon proposals for Universal Health Care in America.
Commission to study and report on universal health care and delivery systems in other countries (China, Cuba, Europe, Canada)
Research and Advocacy for Wholistic and people centered (as opposed to profit oriented) medicine and encouraging regular conferences and national formations for support.
3) Family
History and current status of the Black family – African enslavement , post slavery, current; DNA testing
Research and Study of new family and community forms adapted to an industrialized, urban and technological society (Rebuilding the Village).
4) Council of Elders
Definition, Role and Relevance
5) Rites of Passage as means of addressing Children and Gang issues by insisting that children rise up to definable community standards and rewarded (or sanctioned) by family and community rituals.
6) Criminal Justice
Research, debate and implementation of nationally accepted standards for equal administration of justice.
Strategies for prevention and re-socialization after imprisonment
Abolition of 3 strikes
Education and Job development for bro’s and sisters returning to community from incarceration.
7) Diasporan Relations
Building stronger social, spiritual, economic and cultural relationships between and among African Americans, Continental and Diasporan Africans. Promote the building of Universities on each continent that study our respective histories and struggles as African people.

D.Political Organization
1) Electoral Politics
Designing local, national and international strategies to develop, promote and pursue black interests; Use to mobilize the masses, to access resources and organize around definable and relevant issues.
2) Extra-Parliamentary Politics
This involves strategies and tactics of mobilizing and organizing at local, regional, national and Pan-african levels in order to affect, influence, and challenge policies, programs and issues from without the ordinary channels of power, when expedient to do so, in order to get intended results.
Also to research, design and propose other national and Pan-african formations that can pursue and agitate for a National Agenda for Black Americans and progressive policies towards Diasporan peoples.
3) National Black Agenda
Formulating, Proposing and devising strategies and tactics of implementing policies, programs and projects that define, develop and defend the collective interests of people of African descent. To be made up of a consortium of Black Professionals, Community activists, and Union organizers.
4) National African American Congress
An issue defining, policy formulating, program implementing alliance, made up of delegates to be chosen from their respective regions of the country;areasof emphasis will include, Political, Economic, Spiritual/Religious, Artistic(creative), Communications, Social (Education, Health, Psychology) Community defense and development. This body is charged with initiating and implementing a multi-disciplinary approach that institutes a comprehensive National Black Agenda.
5) Building the Organizational and Institutional capacity to engage
in Pan-African and Diasporan relations
a) Participation in the African Union (AU)
b) development of people to people trade
c) Cultural Exchange and development
d) Continuing the Pan African Congresses and State of the Black World Conferences.
6) Council of Elders
To be made up of men/women of stature, experience, knowledge and commitment to community interests, whose role shall be defined by their respective communities, but inclusive of conflict resolution, advise and (in some cases) consent of means and ways to implement policy, programs and projects for community betterment.
7) Community Defense and Development
Development of New African Scouts, Simba Wachanga or New Black Panther formations that are conscious, committed and capable of developing and defending black community interests and who are accountable to the Council of Elders and National African American Congress.
8) Building a New Black Political Culture and new paradigms for
Black political action, leadership and community organization.
a) Of greatest import here is develop new paradigms of Black Leadership and ways and means of providing training for emergent leadership who show initiative, innovation and insight in meeting the challenges that our communities face.
9. National Intelligence Force
10. Support and promote the building of an Inter-dependent Woman's Movement that has the capacity to address Women's issues in our struggle for National Liberation.
11. Formulate, Promote and Develop a Diplomatic and Ambassador Corps to represent our interests in Diaspora and Internationally.

E. Economic Organization
1) properly addressing class relations in the Black community and the impact on community development
2) Definition, Role and Relevance of Black Middle Class
a) Building people to people trade relations with and between Continental Africans and Diasporan
b) Encouraging investment in and between black communities at home and in Diaspora
c) Encouraging and supporting Buy Black campaigns and culture
d) Formulating, analyzing and developing structures and systems that implement Ujamaa (Cooperative Economics) in our communities, e.g. Matah, 1IMall, Afrikan Business Development Fund(ABDF LTD.)
e) Ways and Means of supporting N’Cobra in the struggle for Reparations.
f) Strategies to get the business sector to support Black Ownership
g) develop strategies to engage in the Ecological Revolution
3) Instituting Maatian values in the application of Economic Affairs and Relations

F. Creative Production
1) The definition, role and relevance of the black creative experience in raising social and community consciousness.
Is there a Black Aesthetic? Defining the difference between popular art and culture and national art and culture.
2) Sponsoring seminars, forums and town halls on how values, ethics and morality are transmitted and transferred via various cultural expressions, i.e. Art, Music, Literature, Spoken Word (Poetry), Dance, Theater, Cinema, Sports, Comedy, Architecture and Technology and Fashion.
3)Developing Communications networks and outlets that respond to the need of our National Community to be informed and educated on issues, topics and current events in the context of our technological society. Promote the learning of African languages as well as French and Portuguese.
4) Development of community theater, exhibitions, concerts, art, dance and fashion shows (or some combination of all), that promote national culture and the values that flow from them.
5) Means and Ways of building and supporting institutuions that promote and project Black art and fashion. This would give jobs, create outlets and context for free and liberating expression for black artists.
6) Artist associations and leagues by which artists develop their crafts as well as creating ways of becoming and being more relevant to black community interests, growth and development.
7) Finding creative ways of making the point that technology should not define our social agenda, but rather, we must find ways of making technology serve our collective community agendas.

G) Ethos/Psychology
1) Developing a unifying and positive self conception as a person, people and national community with definable history, life circumstances, identity, and future.
2) Collective Identity
Defining, developing and educating our people on our collective identity and how it translates into a national one.
3) Strategies, methods and means of overcoming the effects of Post Traumatic Enslavement Syndrome
4) Defining and developing the relationship between our identity as African Americans,
Pan Africans and Humans and means and ways to institutionalize same.

2. Development of organizational frameworks and programmatic emphases that can be duplicated in localities nationwide.

3.This is a Self-Determination conference in scope and content, recognizing that Afro-Americans represent a national community in a multi-national, multi-cultural society, who have a common history, common life experiences, common culture and common destiny. Therefore, it is our assumption that African americans have a unique contribution to make to human progress, and in the ongoing project of America realizing its fullest potential to extend rights and possibilities to all of its citizens.

4. Development of National Black Agenda by experts and those with expertise in the above areas of emphasis. The National African American Congress will become the permanent institutional vehicle to implement the National Black Agenda, revising and reconstituting policy and programs when and where needed, according to Maat and its Constitution.

5. Inter-disciplinary networking in and among those working in the above areas of emphasis. This conference hopes to draw heavily from Black professional, labor and community activist organizations.
6. Building a permanent institutional structure where current and future leaders in the Afro-american community can receive training and learn to be accountable to the very people they claim to represent. Potential and actual leaders of the current generation engage in meaningful dialogue and interaction with veterans of past movements.
7. Building a movement based on paradigms and ideals from our African and African american past (such as the OAAU, UNIA) that are rationally applied to conform with existing needs and demands of today’s struggle for national liberation and a higher level of human life. As social engineers, the hope is to engage in cultural reconstruction and transformation of our communities locally and nationwide.



Humbly Submitted,
Wesley Kabaila
Member, California African American Political and Economic Institute (A Black Think Tank); National Black Leadership Coalition (NBLC/BBB)
California State University, Dominguez Hills
6709 La Tijera Blvd. #337
Los Angeles, California 90045
Sikivu@aol.com
Tel. # 310 908 6139

Comment Wall (12 comments)

At 11:37am on August 30, 2008,
West
W. Kabaila
said…
The Seven Areas of Black Social and Cultural Life as Liberated Zones

Posted by W. Kabaila on June 10, 2008 at 3:00am

This Black Paper intends to advance and promote two related concepts into Black Liberation jargon which will have serious implications on the strategies and tactics we choose in coming months, for mobilizing and organizing our National Community. In the coming months there will be many Unification models debated and discussed, as to which presents the best path to organizing the African American community. We have many to choose from. There is the UNIA, which sought to set up a full government apparatus with all of the social, political, and economic appendages that it would take to comprise a nation, though it never achieved state status. There is also, the Nation of Islam, whose concept of nation, mainly, was confined to adherents of their faith among the Black community, including the Diaspora. The Republic of New Africa advocated 5 states in the south, while Kawaida advocates argued that we are a cultural nation sharing African values, history and life experiences (close to the Jewish model).

Being a cultural nationalist all of my life, my bias has always been to view our national community as a cultural nation within a nation-state, i.e., the U.S. However, the cultural nationalist paradigm of Nation has, in the main, remained a theoretical construct with little practical formulation. It's basic premise formed a critique of those models, that required our people move in mass to five states, exodus to the Motherland, Africa; or that we form an alternative government that would challenge the state structure along with other allies, leading to a process that would re-formulate power relationships in the U.S. The purpose of this paper is not to go into an in-depth analysis or survey of these positions, but merely to mention them as a means to illuminate how we arrived at the following position. However, there is one concept that emerged from the cultural nationalist approach to revolution that this writer continues to find intriguing. It is the notion of "Social Space". It is this notion of "Social Space" that the Jewish community in the U.S. uses to wield political power and influence, in domestic and foreign affairs, far exceeding their numbers and percentage in the U.S. population.These key areas of "critical social space" are, Law, Medicine, Science, Technology,Culture,Finance and Communications.

While there are others,such as Manufacturing, Community Organization, Trade, Stocks, Precious Metals and Stones, Industry, Health, Electoral Politics, Diplomacy, Military and Agriculture, the above are the key areas. In 2006, two men, Dr. Jim Clingman and Baba Amefika Geuka, emerged from the Million Man March (MMM) and subsequent Matah movements to form the Bring Back Black (BBB) Movement. This movement sought to bring together the divergent interest groups within the Nationalist Community, in order to pursue practical solutions and agendas. Baba Geuka makes a clear distinction between cultural nationalism, which he views as being more theoretical and "practical" nationalism. Baba Geuka, greatly influenced by Marcus Garvey's style of nationalism advocates for a process by which the African American Nation establishes a "President of Black America" (POBA). Thus, it was the attempt to merge the theoretical with the practical, that the concept of "Liberated Zones" emerged as a strategy for revolutionary struggle given the objective conditions of contemporary American society. As America is in the middle of a presidential election, a war in the middle east, it's allies are looking askance around the world, the economy is failing, peak oil is driving prices up, criminal justice has become a business, corporate greed remains the order of the day, our children are being gunned down in the streets by criminals and cops, schools are baby sitters instead of institutions of learning,and government is corrupt and criminal from top to bottom, the Black community becomes further impoverished and forgotten.

The sixties' Black Power Movement resonated with demands for Community Control especially in urban areas which had predominate black populations. However, these demands lacked practical strategies of how to attain such control. Thus, the demands faded into the wind as Cointelpro blew in accross the country. The concept of liberated zones is not new to liberation or revolutionary struggles. The concept was incorporated by Mao, Castro, Che, Frelimo, PAIGC in Guinea-Bissau, MPLA, and the Sandinistas in Nicaragua. However, in all of these cases, the concept was based on taking over land, and setting up governing and administrative apparatus' that served as a state becoming. Thus, when state power was achieved, many of the institutional structures needed to function in a "free" society were already operational. While we respect our comrades who advocate land based struggle, it is our opinion that we have not reached that stage of struggle yet. Revolution, by nature is protracted struggle and if strategically planned, develops in stages of progression, and in many cases, can regress, only to advance again. While culture prepares a people on the conscious level, strategic planning demands which practical path to take at any given time, based on the objective conditions in any society. What we argue for here, is that the conditions are ripe for our people nationwide to begin mobilizing and organizing for Liberated Zones, though ours aren't land based. Our zones are based in the concept of "critical social space". Moreover, the social space of which we speak, are the Seven Areas of Culture, which are defined in Kawaida Theory, authored by Dr. M. Karenga. In order, they are:
1. History
2. Spirituality/Religion/Ethics
3. Social Organization
4. Political Organization
5. Economic Organization
6. Creative production - Art, Literature, Technology, Dance, Music, Spoken Word, Architecture and
Fashion
7. Ethos - Collective pschology

Thus, it is this writers opinion, that if we build the organizational capacity to begin the movement to form liberated zones in our communities across the country, that we can take advantage of the lingering sentiment in the Black Community for Community control, the momentum and movement begun by the Million Man March, Jena 6, Sean Bell, the Covenent and Katrina. Furthermore, we contend that the formation of the National African American Congress is the best organizational structure to begin the process of building towards the establishment of these "Liberated Zones" in order to occupy the "Critical Areas of Social Space" as defined above. In doing this, we lay the groundwork and formative ability to build more solidified Unification Structures. What the National African American Congress seeks to do is to begin the process of providing a forum for the diverse Nationalist movement to come together to;
1. Develop multi-disciplanary and comprehensive agenda for developing critical areas of social space building towards liberated zones wherever our people are.
2. Harnessing the wealth of talent, intellect, experience, knowledge, creativity and wisdom in the Nationalist community and direct all of these towards nation buillding projects.
3. Begin the processes of developing national policies, programs and projects that can serve as models and paradigms on the regional and local levels.
4. Begin to implement cooperative economic projects
5. Discuss how to formulate a National Youth Corps that can develop and defend our communities, internally and externally.
6. Support the building of a National Woman's Movement to deal with issues particular to our Queens.
7. Set up permanent structures to build and shape relations with Continental African and other Diasporans

(See the attached Proposal for further elaboration)

The Organizing Committee of the National African American Congress is in the process of requesting to be put on the Agenda of the State of the World Conference II, in New Orleans, this November 19-23. Over 1000 people from all over the globe will be there. We hope to see you there to participate in this historical occasion. This is where the practical work begins building on the spirit raised at the MMM over 12 years ago. We hope to see you there.
It's Nation Time!!!!!

Submitted by
Mwalimu Wesley Kabaila
member, Nationalist Black Leadership Coalition (NBLC/BBB)
founding member, Association for the Study of Classical Civilization (ASCAC)
member, California African American Political and Economic Institute (A Black think Tank)
Los Angeles, California
Sikivu@aol.com
310 908 6139
At 4:00pm on August 30, 2008,
South
Ms Loving
said…
No Brother I won't be there.. thanks for the invite. Wow .. love the information you have given below.. I will share it with my grandson.. thank you brother.. you are appreciated...
At 4:43pm on August 30, 2008,
West
JC Callaway
said…
Bro. Kabaila, You're a hard man to keep up with, but I'm sure I'll see on the mountain top. Or maybe in L.A. soon.
Hotep
JC
At 6:03pm on August 30, 2008,
NYMetro
KWASI Akyeampong
said…
Welcome home.
Thanks for being here.
I am looking forward to you sharing your experience and wisdom as you participate and contribute to our conversations.

Please invite your friends to join us.

For more about TheBlackList goto: http://theblacklistpub.ning.com/notes

Please spend some time browsing around to be familiar with the options and services available to you.

And, invite your friends!!!!

KWASI
Admin
At 11:25am on August 31, 2008,
South
Ms Loving
said…
no brother.. i ask that they delete my account on zen I was not active there..
At 3:30pm on September 1, 2008,
South
Maureen Guest
said…
Certainly. I would be interested in taking a look at the National African American Congress proposal.
At 8:15pm on September 1, 2008,
South
Hrh Iyaoloria Parapo Agbaiye
said…
Peace ,to you and thanks For welcoming me and i would love to keep in touch.
At 9:56am on September 2, 2008,
Caricom
Bongo Wisely Tafari
said…
Hotep my brother, nice to have de I onboard. looking forward to some help from de I in promoting kwanzza in St.Lucia where I now reside. give thanks always. Selah.
At 4:17pm on September 3, 2008,
Chicago-Midwest
Chari Houngbo
said…
Htp,

Strong and power-filled proposal. I agree !00%.

Shm htp,
At 4:11am on September 13, 2008,
West
RW
said…
Habari Gani ndugu, I hope all is well with you. Kabaila is one of the best soldiers that I know. He has the served the people with honor for many years. May you have many additional years witnessing the flowering what we wrought in our youth. May we be positive examples for those who are watching. May we learn from our mistakes. Remember the Ancestors.

Odabo, Akile

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