Groping to Find a Voice for a Lost Generation
Of late, no matter where author Bakari Kitwana lands, everybody wants to hang--”See a show. Check out some rap,” he says, laughing his big laugh as we roll through sluggish midday traffic in search of a solid vegetarian meal--a feat, even in this land of fitness and health, that’s a bit more challenging than happening on a good party. “I don’t really hang out much,” he continues, “I mean, I’m 35. Married. Have a 4 year-old son. I have a lot more concerns than hangin’.”
Which is the axis upon which Kitwana’s new book turns. “The Hip Hop Generation: Young Blacks and the Crisis in African-American Culture” (Basic Civitas Books) isn’t about music, in the sense that it isn’t a critique or exploration of what’s charting or in heavy rotation underground. Instead, it tracks the subculture of African American youths who have been marked indelibly by a fast-moving, “goin’ for mine” global economy that inspired the music, and the music that has inspired the thriving multivoiced subculture.
Their concerns, the crisis of Kitwana’s subtitle, have long been broadcast in rap lyrics: street violence, high incarceration rates, tension between the sexes, lags in education, generational rifts. And they have become the defining issues confronting a post-civil rights generation of blacks who were supposed to inherit much more.
“This Republican I know would say: ‘Man, that struggle is over. Over,’ ” Kitwana says. “And I thought: Over? I was interested in where we fit. What we could do. And the older generation has not been training us for when they’re gone to a different plane. “
Kitwana’s “we”--the hip-hop nation, African American youths born between 1965 and 1984--doesn’t fit with Gen-Xers shaped by grunge and the tech bubble’s boom and bust. Nor does this group see its immediate cultural touchstones as Martin and Malcolm--who some seem to know best through samples sprinkled into conscious (political/message music) rap. “Most know [the civil rights movement] as integrationist or nationalist. Either Martin or Malcolm. But there is so much more. A lot of the book is my personal journey and how we--this generation--define the struggle,” he explains. “Part of the power of hip-hop is that the average kid feels his voice matters. You don’t need an instrument. Or fancy clothes. But you get heard.”
No National Organization
Touching down in L.A. for a few days on his grass-roots, spread-the-word tour, Kitwana has been sussing out collectives and activists around the country who are pressing for change from the ground up. “People don’t know what’s all happening because we don’t have a national organization to help take it to the next level.”
Kitwana, who was born on the early end of the hip-hop generation, grew up in Long Island during an era when hip-hop didn’t have a name. “It was just the music that was played at a party. And the rapper, well, he was the DJ’s boy who was carryin’ in the [record] crates.”
Kitwana was moved as much by party culture as he was by the need to rally against antigang legislation and racial profiling. And, by the time he’d enrolled at the University of Rochester (N.Y.), where he moved from mechanical engineering to English and education--he had become a committed student activist seeking models, in the streets and on the page, that might provide some solutions.
Ultimately, activism led him to a job as editor at Third World Press, where he worked for its founder, Haki Madhubuti, poet, essayist and publisher, a major influence in the Black Arts Movement of the late ‘60s and ‘70s. That put him in conversations with the elders--Sonia Sanchez, Gwendolyn Brooks and Kalamu ya Salaam--whose books he was reading, or who gathered in the offices. He was immersed in the history of the black-power movement, and the idea of building a committed political and social base. Self-reliance and self-sufficiency were key themes--but weren’t often discussed outside the context of the civil-rights or black-power eras.
“I was working on important books. I was engaged in this community in Chicago,” Kitwana says. “But I could see that our generation wasn’t involved. And I knew that we weren’t reading those books.”
He wanted to organize his peers, and he realized that to do it, he’d need a platform besides traditional publishing. His 1994 book “The Rap on Gangsta Rap” (Third World Press) had opened a door to a different audience, so he tugged at his connections. And after a major reshuffling at the Source magazine--envisioned as hip-hop’s one-stop for the 411 on music and culture--he ended up first as editorial director and eventually national affairs editor. Plain and simple, “I wanted to bring politics to the Source.”
Rap Raises Issues
Piece by piece, brick by brick, Kitwana was able to take on the issues that rap so visibly raised: high suicide rates, police brutality, censorship, self-hatred packaged as platinum hits. Recording artists had been long been broadcasting first-person reports from their streets on the crack wars, gangsta life and their “creative” options for gettin’ paid. Kitwana wanted to send reporters out to fill in the picture and provide analysis--and look at the problems nationwide and on a political level.
But for him, ultimately, a larger more comprehensive look--a book--seemed imperative, “A lot of the book is my personal journey,” he admits, pausing over a plate of Salisbury seitan--a “Southern-influenced” dish of wheat meat cutlets drizzled with gravy--a nod to and compromise with his vegetarian lifestyle and his Southern perch in Atlanta. What’s pivotal to him, he says, is “how we define the struggle in our own terms.” While Kitwana makes clear arguments about what has affected black youths over the last 20 years, from lockups to loitering laws, he doesn’t simply enumerate the issues on a continuous loop, he looks toward solutions.
In the Political Arena
Later in the evening, a small group, mostly men, gathers at EsoWon Books not just to hear Kitwana discuss his book, but to talk about their sons and daughters, their relationships with their brothers and sisters. They’re in dress shirts and ties or cargo pants and T-shirts, divided evenly between hip-hop and civil rights generations.
Kitwana, who will catch a red-eye in a few hours, tells them of what he’s seen nationwide. Networks of youths working on issues from education, employment and business development to health care and prisons--all gathered in the name of hip-hop.”
But “we need a national organization with a national agenda,” he tells the group. “Oftentimes parents don’t listen. The older generations either didn’t take us seriously or figured we were apolitical. But part of the problem is you can’t find us in any major organization on a serious level--the NAACP, the Urban League--they all have youth groups, but they are not seriously bringing us in. But a lot of people aren’t waiting for that,” he assures the gathering, unleashing that big laugh. “If you don’t bring us to the table, well, we might just take it.”
While Def Jam founder and rap mogul Russell Simmons and minister Benjamin Muhammad (formerly the Rev. Ben Chavis, head of the NAACP), have been making the news with the Hip Hop Summit Action Network, rallying around education and censorship and bringing high-profile rap into a political arena, Kitwana says, that’s just a first step. But, he notes, “Russell’s 44 and Chavis is in his 60s. We still need something that is ours.”
A new generation means a new way of doing things. And though traditional resources might not be at hand, there are other ways to become a lobbying force, dramatically influence elections and become the urgent sound-bite on the evening news, he believes.
“Hip-hop has created an infrastructure. The music itself won’t provide the revolutionary message. I used to want all the artists to be like [conscious rapper] KRS-One, but I don’t think that any more. The artists themselves have become influential enough [in raw numbers] to get people behind a campaign. We need to be looking at those connected and tuned in enough to support our issues.”
He’s looking not just at the Jay-Zs or Mos Defs, but at hip-hop generation politicians like activist and educator Ras Baraka (who ran for an at-large city council seat in Newark, N.J., in May but lost) and Jesse Jackson Jr. (D-Ill.) Or the athletes--”The [Allen] Iversons and [Shaquille] O’Neals instead of the [Michael] Jordans. And as activism becomes more fashionable,” Kitwana says, “the hip-hop generation will be less dismissive of politics or the ... elders.”
For all the dispiriting statistics spelling out the fate of his generation, Kitwana remains optimistic. “I believe in the capacity of people,” he says. “I got into a big argument with one of the Little Rock Nine [the first group of African Americans to integrate Central High School in 1957] about this. I said, if those who came of age in the ‘60s can imagine a day when they can vote, we can certainly imagine a day when we won’t fill the prison system or get a better education.”
Otherwise, Kitwana says, “I know our kids will be looking at us and wondering: Why didn’t we get it together?”
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