Reprinted from Caribbean Net News
caribbeannetnews.com
Happy Kwanzaa!
Friday, December 29, 2006
by: Anthony L Hall
It is a curious thing that so many black Americans – who insist on calling themselves African Americans – know so little about their American heritage, and even less about their African ancestry. Alas, blacks throughout the Caribbean - who share this ancestry - are just as ignorant.
I am acutely aware, however, that “black pride” is as ethereal and subjective as religious faith; and that it has its reasons which reason cannot understand. But, just as Martin Luther King Jr. taught us the objective value of judging people not by the colour of their skin but by the content of their character, I humbly suggest that pride should be based not on faith but on substance. And, it is in this spirit of racial enlightenment that I celebrate Kwanzaa (December 26 to January 1).

Anthony L. Hall is a descendant
of the Turks & Caicos Islands,
international lawyer and political
consultant - headquartered in
Washington DC - who publishes
his own Internet Weblog at
www.theipinionsjournal.com
offering commentaries on current
events from a Caribbean
perspective
I honour the Afrocentric Dr Maulana Kerenga who founded this annual observance in 1966 “not to substitute for Christmas” but to reaffirm what it is to be black. Because if we endeavour to live according to the seven guiding principles (Nguzo Saba) of Kwanzaa, then having black pride will entail more than expressing faith in things not seen:
Given these guiding principles, I think all blacks, not only in America but also throughout Africa and the Caribbean, would do well to embrace and celebrate Kwanzaa…the way Jews observe Chanukah!
Copyright© 2007 Caribbean Net News at www.caribbeannetnews.com All Rights Reserved
License is granted for free print and distribution.