Thursday, January 10, 2019

"Being Beast"? The GODS must be Joking!

Dear Posterity, this is my gift to you so that you may better choices in the future and avoid our mistakes. : )

Diary of a Mad, but still New Age Woman in the United States of Trump-Monstrosity -  Part II


One day late November 2018 (Not sure because everything has become a blur.)



 There's a series called the "Walking Dead".  I don't watch it because I get enough brainless zombie material every day on the news.  Don't you?  Thanks to the American Senate and Republicans.  


I had to take some time out of working on my usual projects, one being a very important book. I am writing to you from the newest Banana Republic of nightmares on a planet called Earth. From the country called the United States where a small group of AmeriKKKaaner wannabees have taken over (probably one of the least racist countries on earth in comparison to other countries due to our diversity)  under some kind of trickster vibration, which I can only assume is ultimately meant to bring out the better angels of us and help us develop some empathy as global citizens.

The United States is probably one of the least racist countries on earth in comparison to other countries due to our diversity. If you try living as a minority in any other large country you may face a lot worse. Yet, Trump has been trying to make this country like other countries with the support of a few radio hosts, Russian hackers and extreme racial-oriented nationalists.  Hopefully other countries can learn from what's happening here.  

Th country hasn't been this was riled up not since our Civil War.  Fortunately, Good always wins out in the end. : )

Whatever racial problems that have been here have been aggravated usually when Republicans have taken over, but this year has been something extra special, due to the want of many in the so-called media to pretend urban problems are caused by outside forces.  This has created some tensions, but other than that it has mainly been the Trump administration's race rhetoric and dog-whistling from media of various sorts that has created most of the imagined chaos.
      From what I can tell most Americans just want to be left alone and to let others live, thus are getting along better then you would expect under such duress.  This is never more clear when the majority of the electorate in a tidal wave came out and elected many liberal and progressive candidates all set to do Trump in.  
     As for what's been in the news and the policies Trump has been secretly changing, well that's what's been a comedy of horrors and nightmare over the past couple years for most US citizens, and those of us not-so-legals here in the US.  It's been one long roller coaster ride or Ferris Wheel that we can't get off from during which we haven't known whether to laugh, scream or cry and some of us have done it at the same time.
      For a while it was turning into something like a 4th Reich, and the past two years have seen avowed racists on all sides coming out of the woodwork, non-numerous though they may be, and hate crimes as a result have been at an all time high. Aside from this, the gun lobby has stopped the installation of laws that would make owners of guns safer and thus we've witnessed an unending train of mass murders in new places - news rooms, schools, churches, gurdwaras,  synagogues, nightclubs and even bowling alleys, spurred on by the beast in the White House.
     But at least its all come out now. 
     I'm personally pretty sure I have never witnessed a time when TV news anchors so regularly broke down on national TV - seriously, or people attack them so vociferously for it.  This era has exposed a lot of heartlessness especially in the American heartland where a lot people think religious hypocrisy is a moral imperative, aside thinking this land was made for them alone.

Trump the scam artist had his father get him into a university, never learned to read  and then starts a fake "university".


      It also doesn't speak very well for Americans that this trickster – this horrific Thing in power. And may perhaps be explained by the fact the country is somewhere below 40th in educational attainment among the countries of the world. 

     Almost a third of the people of the electorate supported the man even knowing how he was, although it is probably a little less than that now. Unfortunately, there are really no words to express the current freak show happening in the highest echelons of government where we have someone barely human and frankly borderline diabolical - an ex-game show host needing attention, accustomed to conning people out of their money and pretending to run the country. Its been a roller coaster ride, during which many of us haven't known whether to laugh, scream or cry, and some of us have done it at the same time – for days and for weeks.

      A number of us Americans have actually started researching or looking into new places to live outside of the country and have adopted new pseudo-nationalities. We've even looked into promoting new leaders of the free world – if there is one any more. (Personally, I believe Angela Merkel fits the bill, although that may change after January of 2019.)
      This freakish show in our nation's capitol and in the once half-dignified White House (yes, it was built by slaves, but that era is long gone) has nearly come to an end. 




I'm supposing this is what Christmas might look like in Transylvania.  Or perhaps in the castle in the Van Helsing movie in the day time. Whatever it is, it seems cold as h_ll. Maybe like the cells they like to throw refugee children into after they've walked a thousand miles to freedom. 


     However, I've come to the conclusion perhaps just for my own sanity, this period was obviously meant to get the more humane of us thinking more globally and spiritually and empathetically - and about others. For everybody has been threatened or has suffered under the small stubby hands of this  maniac and his minions - which are hypocritical religious fanatics, neo-Nazi nationalists, murderous thugs in power worldwide or corrupt KGB.

However, its the opportunity now to turn the tide and really create the world many of us have been longing for. That's the only way to explain why there is what one can honestly say without an ounce of exaggeration – a two-faced conman, criminal, philandering, cheating business failure, incessant liar, master of hypocrisy and projection, a thief, brutal bully, childish, vindictive, sleezy, silly, greedy, ignorant ignoramous; rude, crude, embarrassingly incompetent, graceless, unappreciative,  bragadocious idiot, lunatic and coward,  i.e., dangerous, diabolical, low life – is occupying our White House.


                  Speaking of low-lifes. Two kindred spirits that can't stop congratulating each other for
                 some reason and better hope there's not a God, or an after-life. So perfect together. ; ) 

And if I said anything untoward or inaccurate I would love to hear how.  Until I have evidence otherwise, I will have to agree to disagree. Truly the joker is wild, so-to-speak, and the joke has been on us, which has been a threat to world peace. Although, thankfully the worst part is over.
Certainly this unending nightmarish merry-go-round has let many of us know how much we loved our country, or at least what it was supposed to stand for - probably one of the bigger surprises out of all of this mess for many of us. 

 This reign of the dictator wannabe has also exposed the underbelly of a Beast – the parts and beliefs that are ugliest of Americans in the United States, - the defects and consequences of corporate greed, and militarism spread globally, our internal tribal thinking and bigotries, and on the other hand dogmatic religiosity gone astray. This awareness, is perhaps one of the brightest or most positive things to have come out of all of this. (Even the monstrosity-in-charge mentioned “America has done a lot of “bad” things - probably the only time he said something worthwhile that wasn't a lie.)

But, most distressingly many of us have been forced all year to helplessly watch toddlers and other young children being emotionally and physically tortured and traumatized, thrown into ice-cold cells without their mothers or guardians where some have even faced neglect and abuse. 

Many of us who look at the world as our home - and I have learned that many don't - are also more than tired of hearing of peoples in desperate need of asylum being tear-gassed, and threatened at our borders, having fled for their lives and desperate for their families' welfare. Those of us with sense have realized how fortunate we are to live here, and have said silently to ourselves “there before the Grace of God go I”.

Its also been torturous hearing of hundreds of children and teenagers being slaughtered in their school classrooms because gun lobbyists don't want to accept any sane gun laws. And learning of the Monstrosity's support of other monstrous leaders around the world with military weaponry they are using to commit mass slaughter in places like Yemen and Syria and the haphazard dropping of drones and bombs on countless innocent people in such places trying to live already impoverished lives. Truly a horror of biblical proportions.

Reinstituting traumatizing policies recalling the slave era.  He probably would have tried to  separate thousands of children from their parents for good had not the American people stepped in. 



Most of us really can't take much more of his unabashed supporting of racists and haters of all kinds, dehumanizing minorities and every country in the world; his enhancing of the politics of conflict in the Middle East. Praise of so many murderous leaders - like MaBuS and Russian KGB. If you tried to make a movie about this period of the Monstrosity-in-charge no one would believe it. First of all you literally can not fit into one book the lies this man has told and which the press over here likes to act astonished about.

Guess this is what was meant in the good book by “father of lies”?!

He must be the least dignified and crudest human to ever disGrace the White House! 

A smug barbarian cuts off a 90 year old woman who believes in tradition - a metaphor for what he has done to the United States constitution. 


 He's gotten accustomed to promoting hatred and aggression even at his campaign rallies; advocated for police officers to be rougher than they are. He constantly attacks verbally noteworthy professional people that he feels intimidated by. Calls news people and Congresswomen idiots and brainless, "low IQ people" - as if he wasn't half-autistic himself - or half -demented (who knows which).

Then there is the bragging about grabbing women's private parts, forgetting his wife's not on the airplane yet, paying other women off after sleeping with them while his wife is pregnant.
I say again, you can not make this stuff up! Truly not something we are used to at least not out in the open.   

"Be Best" is not the best English. I'm guessing it may be a form of East Europeanic? No wonder she had to copy Michelle Obama's speeches.



    The list goes on and on. He makes excuses for every possible deleterious action committed by himself, or his administration and family. Has pretended to be  millions or even billions of dollars richer than he actually is. He loves taking credit for his predecessor Obama's economic legacy, which is more than maddening. He likes pretending to be more American than most so-called minorities, i.e. people of color, with his own foreign grandparents straight of the boat – one of them a pimp.
      Oh you didn't know about that?!
    His father, a former Klansman associate too - and he's unashamedly supportive of neo-Nazi ideology here and around the world.
      Worse are his attempt to change laws in order to take away protections for the environment, people on health care with pre-existing and other conditions, food for the poor, safety for fleeing refugees, early childhood programs, certain human rights and animal rights, students in their classrooms.
         He's even trying to make faculty members carry guns in schools. What more can one ask from an absolute callous, worthless, unevolved and just barely human being whose true purpose on the earth plane here has been to snap most of us all back to our moral senses. (I do realize some people are lost where the latter are concerned.) 
      Lets continue a little with the list of greatest Hits. His idea of America first is preventing Muslim and South American or other colorful ( I like that word better than "colored") refugees, some fleeing for their lives from violence, poverty and danger, coming into the country, just because they are Muslim and South American and non-European, and then having the audacity to let his parents-in-law in here from Eastern Europe?!
     I'm not going to get started with his criminal enterprises and relations with corrupt Russian officials and KGB for which he will probably be going down. Nor, the sheister, B-grade conmen he surrounds himself with. : )
      I almost forgot about him attempting to get some young black men into electric chairs even though even after they were proven innocent through dna, and his preventing “the blacks” from getting good jobs in his casino, which of course, went bankrupt, because contrary to his lies, he's never had a thriving successful business enterprise that didn't involved corruption, laundering money or conning people out of it. His book the Art of the Deal had a ghostwriter. 
     Oh you didn't know Trump can barely read?!

     Then he has the audacity to have no-nothing Kanye - a young black equally bragodacious, performance artist (not having taken his medication) in the oval office praising him and his red hat. He thinks nothing of making anti-semitic, anti African, anti black, anti Mexican, anti- French, anti-Canadian, anti-British remarks. Anti Merkel, Macron, etc. only some of the latter have had the good sense not to let him back into their countries.


      He is a Godless hypocrite supported by Godless hypocrites, unable to quote a single bible passage when asked, and yet pretending to be a somewhat religious person. Having a son-in-law whose base of operations was 666 and a comforter of a murderous Sultan named MaBuS apparently straight out of the King of Terror passages of Nostradamus prophecies. 
      King of nepotism, with a daughter who uses his her position to sell her luxurious goods. (Oh yeah – the whole family does that.)
       Put Revelations and Nostradamus together and certainly the Gods must be joking, if not crazy, but if some what a sick joke and the Devil himself is having the last good laugh. So many of us have become exhausted of trying to find out what it all means. But its safe to say most of us have learned our lesson, We get it and we want to apologize, and swear we will go forth from now on to do our best (because “Be Best” isn't English as far as I'm know : ) to become a beacon of light and assistance to those around us and to the world - because certainly being Beastial is not what American idealists and global citizens strive for. 
     Sigh.



Now, I will make like Dorothy in the "Wizard of Oz" and say with great sincerity. There's no place like home, there's no place like home, there's no place like home,... because I need to get out of this matrix, or at least wake up some time in the future when this monster isn't in office.






     

Sunday, June 8, 2014

Interview with Dr. Vijay Prashad: Some Thoughts on "Black" and  South Asian Connections in the United States



      People of Asian descent and black Americans of colonial ancestry would seem to have the least in common academically and economically-speaking. Asian Americans have been typecast as the "model minorities" while Black Americans of U. S. origin, among other things,  "have been the lowest performing ethnic group in the area of mathematics across all grade levels, and among various levels of mathematics achievement."
      The drop-out rate is 20 to 25% higher than their white American counterparts, and at the 2004 reunion of Harvard’s black alumni, Henry Louis Gates and Lani Guinier pointed out that while Harvard’s undergraduates were 8% black, the majority of them were West Indian and African immigrants or their children (Sara Rimer and Karen W. Arenson, New York Times, 2004 article "Top Colleges Take More Blacks, But Which Ones").
       In fact, African-born immigrants in the United States tend to have the highest performance levels academically-speaking, both here in the United States and other Western countries. According to one source, "African-born U.S. residents are more likely than foreign-born U.S. residents from all other areas of the globe to hold graduate degrees." Apparently a Rice University census also found that in the United States, "Nigerian immigrants have the highest levels of education" in the country "surpassing whites and Asians."  
      Such information is in part also reflective of  the nature of the cultural expectations divide that factor in and influence the human and social connections - or lack of it - where many African or Asian immigrants and black Americans in the United States are concerned. Africans in many regions lay strong emphasis on mandatory education and some have a long tradition of valuing literacy, whereas recently in American black communities probably in all economic levels there has been a tendency to emphasize diametrically opposing values, for reasons that are not probably not always clearly excusable as progressives in the U.S. claim them to be.
       Nevertheless, so many times so-called long-established U.S.  "minorities" - black Americans of U.S. colonial ancestry in particular, have had to put up with seemingly graceless and ungrateful commentary from 2nd and 3rd generation immigrants of various ethnic groups, including other ethnic groups, about the state of black and urban America.
     People of Native American background - a virtually invisible minority in most parts of the country - are simply ignored or don't figuremuch  in the conversation. And, "Hispanics" are often regarded as a monolith of new or relatively recent arrivals.
     Often popular discussion presented through national media about urban America is comprised of  rather simplistic explanations about how one's own immigrant ancestors came to succeed in America, "uneducated" - and as the story usually goes, "with little money in their pockets, proceeded to work their way up the economic ladder through sheer personal ambition, smarts and hard work."
      Rarely have such commentaries included discussion of the fact that America's economic growth has to a certain extent taken place at the expense of other people of color, who - when they weren't being exterminated or slaughtered, lynched or dying by the thousands from mining accidents and so forth  - were otherwise being deliberately exterminated, violently disenfranchised or otherwise deprived of a d excluded from the American educational, economic, and social landscape of opportunities, by both established Americans and later immigrants alike.
      Of course, even prior to and since the Frenchman de Tocqueville's visit to America, there have always been rational - if not always objective, observers of what has gone on in American society with black Americans -  individuals who've seen the folly of a simplistic analysis of the social problems facing the black population in America.                        

Dr. Vijay Prashad

      In modern times we have the likes of Dr. Vijay Prashad who uses a kind of class analysis to assess the ways both useful coalitions and a clash of cultures have emerged in United States, particularly between South Asians and black Americans. Dr. Prashad at the time of this interview headed the department of South Asian History as Chair at Trinity College in Hartford Connecticut, and was also a professor of International Studies there.
      An excellent example of a rational view which takes social history and political developments into account is found in his book, the Karma of Brown Folk. It gives a clue as to some of the pertinent, persistent challenges or obstacles affecting and often constraining the social-political relationships and exchanges between peoples of East Indian and African descent in the Americas in our contemporary times.
       First it should be noted that South Asians have been coming to North America since the 1600s. According to one researcher on the subject there are more South Asians or East Indians mentioned in American colonial newspapers and court records than there were Native American "Indians". They often bore the typically British surnames such as Miller, Fisher, Dunn, Williams. Johnson, Greenwich and the like.  These groups were early on absorbed into the African populations in the colonial Virginia and Maryland regions.
       According to a researcher on the subject of East Indians in colonial America, Frances Assisi, "'East Indians outnumber 'Indians' in the extant colonial records'". In other words there were more peoples in the colonial records from the sub-continent of  India than there were native American indigenes.
     Specialist on free blacks in early America, Paul Heinegg, discovered a number of news articles and court documents speaking of East Indians as indentured servants and runaway slaves. These eastern Indians as in the rest of Britain, were often seen or classified as another form of "black" or "Negro" and treated accordingly.  As intermingling of "colored" and "white" was forbidden for the most part, the majority of early South Asians were absorbed into the African Americans in the colonial population after some time. As with their African ancestors, very  few modern black American familial descendants of these earlier groups retain traditions or knowledge of a possible East Indian ancestry.
     Some East Indians in Early Records of North Carolina, Maryland Virginia
     According to Assisi, "as these south Asians melded into the population, they would be identified variously as 'Mullato', 'Negro,' and 'colored' in the ethnic cauldron that was evolving in America, thus losing much of their racial distinctiveness with each passing generation, merging into African-American community, largely unaware of their Indian roots."
        Later on came a wave of males from India in the early 1900s that also ultimately ended in marriages to women of mainly black American descent.  However, the evolution of social relations that occurred between Africans and peoples from the Indian sub-continent back in the colonial period has evolved and changed to something that would would have been improbable in the past.
         Unlike in the past, many Asians in the U.S. today are viewed as "honorary whites", who have professional and academic achievement levels that are often higher than that of  mainstream "whites" or "Euro-Americans" whose ancestors have arrived here many generations ago.  In more recent times the immigrant East Indian or South Asian communities have in fact tended toward more insularity, more likely to intermarry among themselves, or else into the white community. In some regions,  there has not infrequently been outright avoidance of black America, the latter perceived as having low status.
         

U.S. newspaper advertisement from colonial Virginia

       Prashad explains most "desis" or recent immigrants from India to the U.S. in the late 20th century, like other immigrant ethnic groups, were not aware of the extent to which discrimination had impinged on the civil rights of black Americans when they began to arrive in a new wave during the 1960s. On pages 171-172 of Karma of Brown Folk, he discusses to some extent anti-black racism in the Indian community.
       These newer Indian immigrants he points out, "had not participated in the freedom struggle against the British, so they did not feel the fist of white supremacy, nor had they experienced the vitality of freedom through struggle. They came as techno-professionals to a land that emancipated its state from direct racism, transferred antiblack racism to civil society, and used them as a weapon to demonstrate U.S. blacks inability to rise of their own volition. Racism, in this form, is not simply about culture; it implies biology as well. The 1990 U.S. Census, for instance, reports that African-born immigrants enter the United states with the highest rate of education 
     These Africans are not presented as a model minority, an indication perhaps of the resilience of biologistic thinking among the media and the general population in the formulation of antiblack racism. Where these Africans are discussed, they are used in a manner similar to the Asians, again without any consideration of the INS filtering that only allows techno-professionals to enter the United States."
      In the Karma of Brown Folk (p.171),  Prashad surprisingly and without reservation points out,  "The lack of connection between desi advancement on the backs of blacks and of the use of desis in a war against black Americans comes at the expense of a tradition of solidarity and fellowship that began at least a hundred years ago. The legacy of links between desis and Africans, whether in the Caribbean, in Africa or indeed in the United States needs to be revisited."
     Of course India has had its own problem with caste and color consciousness which has evolved and expressed itself naïvely, yet dramatically through Indian exports such as Bollywood and the prevalent use of skin crème lighteners in that sub-continent. (This is also not infrequently used in parts of the Caribbean and Africa as well.) To a certain extent both the color problem in the U.S., and India's own caste and color problems, has added to the rather unfortunate disconnect between Asian Indians and black Americans in the United States in recent years. It is safe to say such things as the customary tolerance of skin lighteners and seeming obsession with fairness has been probably one of the hardest cultural norms for many Americans - especially black Americans - to fathom or appreciate.
      In another of his many books, Everybody was Kung Fu Fighting: Afro-Asian Connections and the Myth of Cultural Purity, author Prashad delves again into the nature of black American and Asian relations. The book has been called "a revolutionary reappraisal of Afro-Asian relations". He takes a look at several centuries of cultural and political interaction between peoples of African and Asian descent around the world. He discusses Afro-Asian links or connections throughout history that are not usually dealt with in literature.
      Prashad's own parents are from Punjab and Burma. He studied for his doctorate amongst the Daalit community (formerly known as untouchables) in Punjab. An admitted Marxist historian, Prashad takes note of and makes distinctions between the roots and character of modern racism in the U.S. and that of caste oppression in India, "The character of American and Indian discrimination is different. American racism was grounded on ideas that people can be chattel or property, and that body and imagination should fully be controlled. What developed over time around issues of so-called caste or Jati were not over ideas of chattel, but over distinction that you must stay separate from us. That means you can own cattle but you must not cross my path. It's a different form of oppression... So in that sense I won't say people are discriminated against in the same way."
      Although certain of India's Hindu texts seem to suggest "varna" or caste was once based as much on color as tribal distinctions,  Prashad also believes European ideas and the language of racial distinction in India come in only later adding fuel to the fire. "I think what's important to see is that what happens in the late 18th and 19th century is that European ideas of racial distinction enter India. They intersect with ideas of caste oppression."
      One of his biggest mentors was Bhagwan Das, a research assistant for Dr. Bhimrau R. Ambedkar, India's first law minister who was himself a Daalit - of the so-called "untouchable" castes. (B.R. Ambedkar was born into abject poverty and later earned became a lawyer and earned doctoral degrees, including a degree from Columbia University in New York. He rose in India's government and was the writer of its constitution, as well as the leader of the Daalit movement.)
      He makes a distinction between racism and caste oppression. "In what way are they similar? Across the planet there are going to be kinds of hierarchies that develop over time."  In South Asia, says Prashad, social hierarchy "centered around what the Portuguese called caste and those hierarchies have a very different kind of heritage or lineage. Initially the hierarchy was around who one gets to eat with, who one gets to marry with, you know, that classic distinction problem of all human history..."
     Delving into the greater history of India and the evolution of its society, Prashad adds, "The major element of hierarchy that hit South Asia is initially not around what the Portuguese called caste, but around the people who are civilized and non-civilized. That's the distinction that today we have between tribals and non-tribals. Most of Indian literature, as in the Ramayana or Mahabharat, they are wars against the tribals and conquering their territories."
      This word "tribals", however, is rather similar in connotation to the word primitives, and refers to the indigenous or autochthonous and usually darkest-skinned peoples of India, and it is without doubt many of such 'tribals" that came to comprise India's outcaste or lower-caste peoples.
     I am also not sure if many of the Daalits would agree with other statements Dr. Prashad makes about the nature of oppression in India, particularly in its rural areas. He stated the following,
"Yes, people are deeply discriminated against and deeply oppressed certainly but the oppression is basically on grounds of things like intermarriage, social interaction and certainly entry into education. India is very interesting and this is what Martin Luther King, Jr. was quite amazed by when he visited. The law, the consitution that was written by the Daalit Ambedkar has given a policy called 'compensentory discrimination'.  So half the seats in the University are reserved for backward castes."
     Prashad's comments made clear there is still a great deal of sensitivity over caste origins in India today among India's middle classes.  He states, " people have altered their names. For instance in Delhi, people from the Daalit caste who become middle class, change their names. You might speak to somebody on the train. Some Brahmin will ask you 'where are you from'. They are actually saying when are you going home' (Prashad laughs). 'How is your family?' You know, they are trying to figure out maybe where you are from. Maybe its just common human curiosity, maybe its not - you understand."
     He admits that in India some times on the train, he likes to tease people to see their reactions and if they are caste conscious - doing things like offering a water bottle. "Part of it is nobody can tell anymore. So on the train, I offer somebody water to drink - sometimes just to tease people. If you are an open minded person you will take it and drink it. Some caste-conscious person will be like 'no-no I understand drinking water in India you can get sick very quickly, so its dangerous to drink from anybody's water bottle'".
     Although Prashad likes to joke around with the stuffy upper castes that can afford train travel, the fact is the problem of caste in India today is really no joke, especially in very rural parts of the country. There are still over 200 million Daalits, many of which inhabit very traditional  and rural areas, have no political or economic power whatsoever, and face the most horrific forms of discrimination and oppression - sometimes life-threatening, and all based on traditions of segregation that are thousands of years old.
       In any case, it certainly doesn't appear to be all a problem of who can marry who or who can drink from who's cup. Furthermore, Dr. Prashad may or not know there are not infrequently complaints in the United States about how Indians of supposed higher caste treat or exclude those perceived to be lower in caste.
      As for interaction between peoples of African descent and those post - '60s immigrants of South Asian descent in the United States, Dr. Prashad sees some reason for optimism. "Interaction takes place in the world of art politics and college life. If you are looking in colleges, you'll find a lot more interaction and in the world of art and politics. I am very hopeful that the future generations coming up are much more able to break out of the cocoon of the first generation of migrants."


Dr.Vijay Prashad is author of - The Darker Nations: A People's History of the Third World, The New Press, (2007); Everybody Was Kung Fu Fighting: Afro-Asian Connections and the Myth of Cultural Purity, Beacon Press (2002); Untouchable Freedom: A Social History of a Dalit Community, Oxford University Press, (2002) and The Karma of Brown Folk, University of Minnesota Press, (2000).

Thursday, November 15, 2012


In Pursuit of an African Classics: The Life Work of Dr. Graham Campbell-Dunn

          Interview by Dana


Dr. Graham Campbell-Dunn
"There are very few scholars doing serious work on Linear A. They have not solved the problem themselves so think it is insoluble, and they are not receptive to unknowns such as myself. The attitude to me seems to be 'Lets ignore him and hope he goes away'". 

So writes Graham Campbell-Dunn, one of the many pioneers in the study of African influences in early historic cultures of the Aegean and early Eurasia. He claims not to be a "controversialist" yet one would never know it by some of the statements one can find in his books. In one of his latest publications, Who were the Minoans: An African Answer, he writes, "The Minoans as we shall see spoke an African language".
Minoan fresco

Representation of a Minoan female

Elsewhere in the book we read, "Africans colonised Sumeria at an early date, as place names show" and also, "The Etruscans we now know were African"! As if the title of his book werent provocative enough, Dr. Dunn posits throughout his text (and in his other books) theorizes that only the most thoroughly versed in the areas of both African and Mediterranean archeology, anthropology and linguistics would ever take seriously. In fact, judging by Western academias aversion to Martin Bernals theories in his Black Athena volumes, scholars who are focused mainly on the linguistics and history of early classical and ancient civilizations would likely have a very difficult time considering many assertions in Dunns books as anything but outlandish.

For one thing, they run counter to the pervasive anti-diffusionist theory and independent development streams of thought that have come to flood anthropological schools of thinking. Furthermore, they upset the status quo and are opposed by those who think Africans contributed little to culture north of the Sahara, but were rather, essentially peoples influenced by older and more complex civilizations of non-African origin and/or European affiliation.

It may be that some of the criticism and a small amount of peer review that Dunns work has received in the past decades is deserved. Dunn admits that some of what he has written is rather outdated. However, to play devils advocate, certain of the theories and assertions presented in his books - apparently meant mostly for laymen - are not always well-supported within the text, although they are so, presumably, outside of them. For example, stating the Philistines came from Egypt based on Biblical text and then moving to the notion that scribes and Pharisees mentioned with them in the Bible must therefore be Niger-Congo scribes and the Barisi tribe is probably more than pushing the limit of whats acceptable in academia. There probably are far too many statements of this sort in the books Dr. Dunn has authored, even if they were meant for the layman. 

If Hellanicus links the Philistines with the Phoenicians as Dunn states on p. 8 of his book, this would imply an Afro-Asiatic connection of the Pelasgians rather than a Niger-Congo one. The place names Larissa and Dodona, he states, "look African" as in Niger-Congo African.

The name "Larissa", for example, Dunn would make a relative of the word "Lari" meaning "the old ones" in the Congo dialect. However, other classical or Middle Eastern scholars, including Bernal, connect the name Larissa to the semitic El Arish, while the name Dodona is oft connected by ancient writers with that of Rhoda and the Rhodones, which would also link it to the name of the Afro-Asiatic (Afro-Arabian or semitic), Ruda. 

Nevertheless, there are other connections made in Graham Campbell-Dunn's books that frequently offset the more suspect declarations - those that would be regarded by most Western academics as incredulous. Similarities in burial and tomb types as existed between Philistines and Minoans may be evidence that Philistines were among the early "Pelasgian" or proto-Hellenic groups of the Aegean. Apparently they both used partial golden face masks and made use of Mycenaean type Tholoi or beehive shaped tombs typical of Afro-Asiatics (kushitic/semitic-speakers) in Africa and Arabia.

As one somewhat erudite critic of Dunn's work on Amazon.com has recently pointed out, although some claims are thought not worthy of consideration, "much harder to ignore is his comparison of the Vai script with Linear A, and his identification of linear A symbols with concepts (compared with Egyptian hieroglyphics) and reconstructed monsyllabic words of Proto-Niger-Congo."

Vai is a Mande language and the Vai syllabary which is actually said to have been invented in the 19th century, never-the-less uses intrinsically African symbols, including "figure of eight" shields, also linked to modern shields of cattle herders in Africa. Cretan palaces of the Minoan period were decorated with these figures of 8 shields.

Also, for any individual knowledgeable of the archeology of African burials in Nubia and North Africa, mention of the distinct similarities between Cretan and early Libyan/Sudanese (Fulani?) tomb types by Dunn and others is very potent evidence of African influence.

There is another important thing that can be said and that is, the Philistines, a people who appear in color wearing Aegean outfits on the temple of Medinet Habu walls, do otherwise seem to have a quite striking likeness to phenotypically to the lesser modified groups of Fulani, as seen in the Woodabe clan and other pastoralist Fulani in parts of the northern Sahel. The Philistines are depicted as not so much a dark red as a dark copper brown which in truth is a more accurate description of the Fulani people then "red". Viewed in this light, the linking of names and hairstyles can be seen as possibly other points of confirmation. 

The linking of the hairstyle of Philistines and Fulani would also not be the best indicator of Niger-Congo origins as several groups in Africa still wear the crest-like hairstyles including Rendili in the East and Tuareg also originally linked to the east African area. (Dunn incidently has said he thought the Minoans to be "red men" like a number of Fulani - themselves often called red in Africa" and certain East Africans.)
Nevertheless, such a hairdress probably does testify to African influence in the Mediterranean.

Philistine painted over 3,000 years ago on the Egyptian temple of Medinet-Habu. Philistines were originally semitic peoples who adopted the Aegean dialect and style of dress.



Dunn has also made the interesting point that "Minoan art, with its range of primary colours and decoration based on snakes and cut calabashes, uses numerous symbols of African subject matter." He notes connections between Minoan and African bull cults and jumping, and snake cults. Long ago Sir Arthur Evans noted connections between stone-age Crete and parts of Africa and thought Africans must have settled in southern Crete at one point. Like others he connected the name Pulasati with the Philistines or Pelishtim "the remnant of Kaphtor" and Pelasgians.

Dunn's linking of the name Philistine or Pulasati with that of the Fula or Fulani - also known as Peul, Fellata or Fulbe (who seem to have originally been mentioned as Fulitani in a Roman text in ancient Mauretania Caesaria) - may also have some basis, although it is also possible that the Philistines came directly from the Levant to Crete as semitic-speakers rather than directly from Africa. Keftiu is acknowledged by some scholars as having been at one time the name of the coastal area of the Aegean in general.

Artwork of the Minoans appears to depict more than one African type in Crete among an equally numerous European and long-haired mixed populations. When all points are considered it does seem plausible that one or more groups of Africans including Afro-Asiatics did settle in Crete and parts of the Aegean at one time, as did ancestral Europeans (a brachycephalic and mesocranic population). Judging from the heterogeneous skeletal evidence of the Minoans, the various pastoral African and African-Asiatic groups once present in coastal Syria, Egypt, and Libya appear to have greatly influenced the culture of Crete and the Aegean and contributed to the physical appearance of what look to have been a fundamentally "mulatto" or mixed Afro-European people.

Biases Challenging African Origin Studies?


A hindrance Dunn, himself, perceives as interfering with the resolution of certain linguistic questions of African influences is that "few classicists today know anything about linguistics and linguists have a low opinion of classicists." But he cites still another encumbrance saying, "There is also an anti-African prejudice embedded in the establishment. They do not want an African Classics."  This last suggestion may, nevertheless, very well be a simple and fairly understated way of thinking about the underlying bias extant in Western academics.

                                              

As with Martin Bernal, Dunn in fact surmises a black African substratum that could have carried early Eurasiatic dialects in general across the Mediterranean and feels the early Minoan dialects were just one of the remnants of this once major African presence carried forth in waves in the Aegean and Eurasiatic world. He writes at the end of his paper, Etruscan Decipherment, "Our work proves that Etruscan, like Linear A, is not a language isolate. It belongs to the Niger-Congo family of languages, and is remotely related to Bantu. It proves too that the substrate theorists were right. African substrate existed in the Aegean and Mediterranean from a very early date. This substrate population was known to the Greeks as the Pelasgians. We are now faced with interpreting the Etruscan texts in the light of this important discovery." (See the URL)
http://home.clear.net.nz/pages/gc_dunn/Etruscans.html)

In a 2004 paperback entitled, Comparative Linguistics Indo-European and Niger-Congo, Dunn points out evidence for a linguistic substratum connecting Niger-Congo African dialects with Indo -European, "particularly the Greek-Armenian-Indo-Iranian complex". He writes, "In our opinion this goes beyond mere influence from a conquered population. This is not confined to lexical borrowing, but involves the phonological system and the morphology."

Dunn's findings are in accord with the genetic evidence of the Mediterranean peoples. Unfortunately, the paper cites some rather controversial and questionable scholarship by Arnaiz -Villena, Gomez-Casado and Martinez-Laso (2002) as well as by others who probably would have best remained unmentioned due to their lack of credentials. The paper by Arnaiz-Villena et al. posits that, based on just HLA genetic alleles, Greeks are closer to Africans than to modern Europeans. The papers authors have suggested Greeks aside from not being closely related to Macedonians "shared an important part of their genetic pool with modern Ethiopians."

Although there is other evidence, aside from HLA traits, of a connection between Greeks and Africans such as the Benin sickle cell trait, the conclusions of the paper of Greeks being more related to Africans than other Europeans have been rejected by some geneticists on the basis of the study's usage of "a single marker". Obviously the phenotype of modern Greeks would also suggest closer relationship to Europeans.

In any case, there are certain other studies that have been done by Loring Brace and others employing analysis of traits proven to be genetic determinants, which purport to show that modern Mediterraneans of southern Europe and North Africa in general are not as closely related to ancient Neolithic and Early Bronze Age Mediterraneans as are modern sub-Saharan Africans and East Africans.  This would probably better explain some of the common genetic traits now shared between Greeks, Sicilians and Africans, etc.
 images/Etruscans-Baccanti Tomb

Ancient portrayal of men of the Etruscans

Dunn considers the evidence of the survival in antiquity of a Niger-Congo language on Lemnos that was closely related to Etruscan as more proof of the presence of people of Niger-Congo affiliation in the region. "The shores of the Aegean and Mediterranean therefore were originally occupied by Africans, and subsequently overlaid by Afro-Asiatic farmers. It follows that the Mediterranean was once, in the remote past, the home of African blacks".

A Classicist's Anthropological and Linguistic Explorations: Beginnings


Before his retirement Graham Campbell-Dunn had taught Minoan art and lectured extensively on the classical Greek and Latin languages for 20 years. He had always been fascinated with anthropology and interested in African art and ancient Egyptian culture. This interest began when he was a young child after his mother introduced him to books like, A Thousand Miles up the Nile by English journalist, adventurist, and travel writer Amelia Edwards.

Dunn attended undergraduate school in New Zealand and also obtained a masters degree in classics from Cambridge University. He then received his Ph.D. degree from Canterbury in New Zealand with a focus on Herodotus. He also engaged in post-doctoral studies at Cambridge and learned both Etruscan and African dialects.

Graham Dunn Family
A young Campbell-Dunn attends University in New Zealand
It was in the sixties, on a rainy afternoon, that his wife Atenasia showed him a Swahili grammar book her uncle had brought back from Africa, thus he began a rather extensive journey into East African/Bantu linguistics. Along the way he noticed what he and others have felt to be certain clear connections of African dialects with those from regions as geographically distant as Spain, Mesopotamia, Italy, Greece and Polynesia.

Through his studies he was able to work under John Chadwick, author of The Mycenaean World. And study with Robert Coleman. Dunn himself was an early follower of Diedrich Hermann Westermann, an Africanist and linguist, still highly regarded in the field of African linguistics in particular. He is also an admirer of some of the works of Catherine Acholonu-Olumba another fairly controversial researcher who also sees a lot of West African links to early civilizations. According to Dunn, although Westermann used a phonetics that would appear somewhat antiquated today, "he remains the only one that attempted to deal with Niger-Congo as a whole."

"His reputation is therefore still high" comments Dunn. "His work is widely read, in spite of its age. His work does have serious gaps, and does not take sufficient account of loanwords, but his unstarred reconstructions or Stammwrter" are close to real words from a remote period. He was followed by his student the more modern Mukarovsky, who excluded Mande from Niger-Congo, but used more up-to-date phonetics."
Over the years Graham Campbell-Dunn has developed his own answer to such enigmas as the "Sumerian Problem".

"I have looked at Sumerian and can explain all the Sumerian determinatives as Niger-Congo", asserts Dunn. Perhaps a bit naively, he also adds that people "don't seem interested" in his two books on Sumerian. His linguistic analysis and rather widely spread knowledge and interest in ancient archeology and African population movements may allow him to see Sumerian as a derivative of Niger- Congo where other Africanists, more specialized, can't or won't.

Dunn's theories have taken some shots from other up- and-comers. At least one recent and relatively young scholar, a Mark Dingemanse, specialist on Bantu dialects (including Siwu), commenting on a proposed Basque-African connection has referred to Dunn's methods as "crackpot" science, citing what he sees as tendency to "stipulate" without arguing in making his case.

According to Dingemanses critique, some of the invalid methods Dunn (he uses CD for Campbell-Dunn) has employed included, "taking some surface forms from various languages (sometimes even from hypothetic constructed states of protolanguages), and "linking these forms together by making some unqualified and unargued claims about various changes that are needed to link these surface forms visually"

He adds, "What one needs for positing a sound change is evidence from a large number of roots. Only after assembling large lists of potential cognates (a step wholly overlooked by CD there is only one list of 10 items on page 113) can one start to establish regular correspondence sets (another step skipped by CD)." (The parentheses were part of Dingemanses communication with another blogger).

Dr. Dunn in response to some of his critics has expressed the following: "Most of my work is based on root words from Niger-Congo. These are the core of the languages. What happens regarding prefixes, suffixes, etc. becomes irrelevant".

He also comments, "I take the view that Proto-Niger-Congo can be reduced to a list of monosyllabic roots - CV, or CVC. These can be found in a great range of languages by trimming off the prefix(es) or suffix(es). The actual languages are (a) mainly prefixing (b) mainly suffixing. Sumerian seems to undergo the most attrition, but still has the same roots. I am not in the business of combinations. The ideas expressed by the roots often derive from body parts, or actions of these body parts. It seems to me that some modern linguists have lost their way and have become obsessed with perfect proof. This may be achieved after eons of endeavour by millions of linguists. But it is not the world I live in."

Though Dingemanse may look at Dunn's methods as simplistic, Dunn is not the only one, nor anywhere near the first Western or European scholar to propose Sumerian and Elamite correspondences with dialects of the sub-Saharan Bantu. In fact, quite a few early observers would not have thought twice about it.

The First Theorists on a Bantu Substratum in Asia

A Willibald Wanger wrote a book published in 1935 entitled, Comparative Lexical Study of Sumerian and Ntu ( " Bantu " ): Sumerian, the " Sanscrit " of the African Ntu Languages. Dunn notes that Wanger "was trashed by a German reviewer", but believes him to have been on the right path. Also, in the early 1900s a J. Frederik van Oordt stated with some confidence in, The Origin of the Bantu: A Preliminary Study, the following:




I have in the first list given a considerable number of Sumerian words which seem to be immediately connected with Bantu expressions having the same meaning. In the comparative list of Bantu, Indian and Malacca languages, it will be, however, seen that the Sumerian, as an Ugro-Altaic language is derived from the same original stock as Bantu. But there are certain facts which show that the connection between Sumerian and Bantu must have been more close and more direct than would have been the case if only common influences were at work.  Van Oordt evidently conceived of a proto-Negroid or black African substratum stretching from the Malaccas to Africa, but with India as the starting point (an Indian origin of humanity being a not uncommon presumption in that era). In response to this supposition, a William Crabtree in 1918 offered some constructive criticism in a book called Bantu Speech a Philological Study, while at the same time claiming on the basis of his own findings that Bantu may reasonably be claimed to belong to the Ugro-Altaic group". One famed Harry H. Johnston a scientific raciologist, National Geographic contributor and author of the book, The Negro in the New World (a title which speaks for itself), considered Van Oordts proposition "wild theorizing" on the basis of what he claimed were the authors persistent "mixing up Bantu word roots and prefixes. He also thought it was unjustified simply because Bantu has so much in common with other African dialects.
 In more modern times, however, certain linguists of European, African and Dravidian birth have each pointed out what they see as undoubted links between African dialects as well as culture with not only Sumerian, but Elamite and Dravidian dialects.
A Koenraad Elst, in fact, wrote of the still suspected African links to early Dravidian peoples in his text, Update on the Aryan Invasion Debate (1999). Some of these correlations between African dialects and Dravidian are unquestionably strong and have been acknowledged not only in the linguistic arena, but in the areas of culture and osteology.

A passage from Elsts Update, for example, speaks of the conclusions of French historian Bernard Sergent, author of Genesis of India (1997). It reads, "Sergent offers the hypothesis that at the dawn of the Neolithic Revolution, some 10,000 years ago, the Dravidians left the Sudan, one band splitting off in Iran to head north to the Urals, the others entering India and moving south.Like others, Sergent suggests that the early Dravidians can be equated with the southern Neolithic of 2500-1600 BC. Their round huts with wooden framework are the direct precursors of contemporary rural Dravidian housing."
In fact physical anthropological evidence does link certain Africans, particularly along the pre-dynastic Nile, to Dravidic speakers and to populations settling in Mesopotamia, Elam and along the Indus as well. 

Sergent himself wrote, "Now, if we recall that the resemblances among Nubians, proto-dynastic Egyptians, Dravidians and what was formerly called Hamites appear henceforth through multivaried cranial measurements as being very evident, and that among the so-called Hamites, the Somalis and Galla are black-skinned, it is probable that the Dravidians have conserved their color on leaving Africa; their installation in the Indian tropical zone could have subsequently only confirmed and augmented this pigmentation." (Le Genese de lInde, 1997, p. 47)

Supporting this view, Elst states, " we have several separate studies by unrelated researchers, using different samples of languages in their observations, and that each of them lists large numbers of similarities, not just in vocabulary, but also in linguistic structure, even in its most intimate features" (Elst, 1999 ) (Some of these researchers in the past include Lilias Homburger, Tidiane Ndiaye and U.P. Upadhyaya and S.P. Upadhyaya).
Elst thought, "the case has been made in most detail for the Senegalo-Guinean languages such as Wolof," however a few other scholars have suggested the Afro-Asiatic linguistic group as a closely linked relative or possibly even linguistic originator of both Dravidian and Elamite. A Czechoslovakian specialist in Afro-Asiatic linguistics, Vaclav Blazek has written extensively about some of these strong lexical connections and has written "The new Dravidian-Afroasiatic lexical parallels in the book Nostratic, Sino- Caucasian, Austric and Amerind.

David MacAlpin wrote about the Elamite-Dravidian connection in articles like "Toward Proto-Elamo-Dravidian", in Language 50 (1) published in 1974 (and see also "Elamite and Dravidian, Further Evidence of Relationships", Current Anthropology 16 (1), published in 1975).

Dunn has seen the Bantu dialects of Niger-Congo as the most likely candidate for Sumerian, Elamite and Dravidian linguistic origins, like U. P. and S. P. Upadhyaya, authors of the seminal work, "Dravidian and Negro Africaine" published in the International Journal of Dravidian linguistics. The latter found a number of correlations between Bantu dialects and Dravidian.





A simple system of five basic vowels with an opposition short/long, vocalic harmony, absence of consonant clusters in initial position, abundance of geminated consonants, distinction between inclusive and exclusive pronoun in the first person plural, absence of the comparative degree in adjectives, absence of adjectives and adverbs acting as distinct morphological categories, alternation of consonants or augmentation of nouns noted among the nouns of different classes distinction between accomplished and unaccomplished action in the verbal paradigms as opposed to the distinction of time-specific tenses, separate sets of paradigms for the affirmative and negative forms of verbs, the use of reduplicated forms for the emphatic mode, etc. (Elst, p. 47).  The physical anthropological link that bridges these theories is, of course, the African one and it is bolstered by archeological and cultural connections which are, to be sure, too numerous and distinctive to be attributed to a series of population borrowings or commercial exchanges. 
Besides that, there are new theories that suggest a haplotype T in Ydna could be the missing genetic link between African Sahelians, Central East Africans and Dravidians. Buts thats the fodder for another posting.

In addition Mukarovsky, an early student of Westermanns originally proposed there could be a common older linguistic substratum to which both Basque and Hamito-Semitic or the Afro-Asiatic linguistic family had both some connection to. "Assuming genetic relationship between Basque and the Hamito-Semitic family does not however mean that Basque must be affiliated to it. 

Dr. Campbell-Dunn on the other hand takes the plausibility a little further, implying there was anciently a relationship between speakers of dialects in Bantu who may have colonized the Canary islands in ancient times and influenced the region.

Finally Dunn also finds much evidence of a connection to modern Polynesian dialects. He has boldly asserted, "We now have conclusive evidence (basic vocabulary, morphology, sound correspondences) that Maori and the other Malayo-Polynesian languages are African and are related to Bantu and the Niger-Congo group. Bantu kumi "ten", Maori kumi "ten fathoms", Bantu pa "fire", Maori ahi (Malay api) "fire", Bantu N "drink", Maori inu (drink). The Maori singular and plural articles and possessives match singular and plural prefixes (e.g. 5 & 6) in Bantu. Indeed most of the Bantu noun prefixes can be identified in Maori. The following investigation reveals a relationship that envelopes the entire grammatical systems of Maori and Niger-Congo. This cannot be due to chance."

Enter the Rhetoric of the Anti-diffusionist School

One of the drawbacks of current study that individuals such as Dunn and Bernal hold is that most classicists are not aware of the numerous and indubitable evidences linking late Holocene or early pre-Bronze age Eurasiatic populations to black Africans. The fact that most early Eurasiatics might have been a group of African-affiliated peoples present in Europe and Asia before the later spread of the direct ancestors of modern Europeans, has yet to be absorbed mentally by those dealing in subjects outside of the forensic study of ancient Europeans. Thus, the idea of a civilization of African origin that preceded classical civilization runs contrary to the tightly held theories of independent in situ evolution. Yet, it was something even the early physical anthropologists of the colonial period were aware of.

The rather kneejerk and apprehensive reaction to the scholarship of individuals like Dunn and Bernal has its roots in part in anticolonialist historical views. Many of the earliest colonialist historians had the mindset and touted the idea of a hierarchy of "races" and that everything civilized in the world came from Europeans, or else European-related peoples. This led to the emergence of an opposing view that indigenous people could invariably develop things on their own if confronted with similar environmental stimulii and quite similar cultural mores or forms werent necessarily a sign of contact with other groups, even if the cultural forms were identical.

Of course this was true to a certain extent. However, some of the cultural practices of early societies, for instance names in a pantheon of deities, specific burial practices rituals involving cattle, or megalithic construction sites in different parts of the world share similarities or congruences that can not always be easily explained away as parallel independent development a result of similar ecological or environmental stresses.
In the past, instead of acknowledging that people apart from the direct ancestors of Europeans could have built ancient stone age cultures of Europe or Eurasia, they gave anthropological names or typonyms to people associated with these cultures in Africa and Europe that were often euphemisms meant to hide the affiliation of these ancient folk with modern sub-Saharan Africans. The Australian anatomist Grafton Elliot Smith for example, chose the phrase "brown race" for the skeletons associated with megalithic culture in Europe claiming it represented by certain Cushitic types in the Horn and Nubia and separated from the so-called "black race". Guiseppe Sergi and others chose terms like "Eurafrican" or "Mediterranean" or Afro- Mediterranean or simply "hamite" and designated them "Caucasoids" so that anybody living between Tanzania and Scandinavia with a long head or narrow nose (relative to Central Africans could be classified under a single term.

More recently however a trend toward scholarship that is often either politically motivated or else rife with nationalistic biases has been the major impediment to objective scholarship and science which has found early cultures were in many cases not linked to populations that are present today in regions being studied. People have always generally believed themselves to be direct descendants of the lands they occupy. They rarely view themselves as descendants of immigrants, especially if they are in the far distant past.

It is, as usual, up to the more progressive scholar (as it always has been) to keep abreast of the new findings of geneticists and anthropologists who are uncovering once again the Africanness of the Mediterranean, Europe and Eurasia of the late Holocene and early historic periods.

Graham Campbell-Dunn is the author of the following texts:

The African Origins of Classical Civilization, 2008
 
Maori the African Evidence, 2007

Who were the Minoans: An African Answer, 2006

Comparative Linguistics Indo-European and Niger-Congo, 2006 

The African Origins of the Alphabet, 2004


The above can be purchased from his website at the url below:
  http://www.filedby.com/author/graham_campbell_dunn/2342637/works/