Dear God, Please help my black people
God, my black
people are very angry, and this anger which comes from many years of pain by
this world; has led us to view each other as enemies. We kill each other, steal from each other; and
the one that I detest the most, we envy each other. I cannot seem to understand
why as black people, we can never be happy for each other. It seems to be easy
for us to condone corruptness and taking the easy route. But in all this, we
can never stand side by side and honestly help each other. We will watch from
afar as another race takes charge and helps our own brothers and sisters. Then
we will go on Facebook and Twitter, and talk about how our black folks are
still poor… Well they are still poor
because you, my black friend, refuse to help lift them up.
When a white
person gives a black person food, a black person continues to have this mentality
that a white person will come back again
and give him more food. But when a black person gives another black person
food, it is more than just food, it is a message that says you can do it too.
Imagine God, if
one black person helps another, and the one that was helped, helps another; we
will have a big circle of black people helping each other, and ultimately
uniting. Wouldn’t that be a beautiful reality?
<Sigh>
Unfortunately,
this reality will be hard to come by. My black people suffer from this huge
jealousy syndrome that somehow feeds their pride. They just will never ask for
help.
They will not
ask for help from a black person who is doing well, instead they will have
these ideas that this black person who has made it is full themselves. Black people will refuse to ask someone for
help because they are afraid of humiliation or seeming weak and broken.
God, if I could
talk to my black people, I would ask them this:
Why is it so easy for some of our black
sisters to show off their pregnant bellies? Even take Selfies? But difficult to ask a fellow black
sister to hook you up with a bursary or a job?
Why is it so easy for some of our black
brothers to say ‘let’s go to a tavern’? But a huge laughing stock when a brother prefers to spend
his Saturday night at a library?
All these
things God, falling pregnant as a teenager (and being proud) or crime, or
partying, and envy, are things that we, black people, are not born with. It is not who we are,
it is what we choose to do.
But maybe, I am
prying and asking for too much.
Though God, I
have taken my first step into helping my black brother and sister:
I have taught
my black little sister that she should never stop loving herself.
I have taught
my black little sister that it is okay to feel fear, it is not weakness it is strength.
I have taught
my black little sister that a girl who dresses differently from you, or treats
herself differently is not a bitch just because a man deems her as such.
I have taught
my black little sister that rejection at school or work, does not mean she is
not good at something.
I have taught
my black little sister that, if a man promises her jewelry, gold and money, she
should always ask ‘where does love fit into all this’.
I have taught
my black little sister that she should not feel pressured by people, especially
when it comes to sex or drugs. People who pressure her, do not have her best
interest at heart.
I have taught
my black little sister that there is value in education and knowledge, she
should never be afraid to voice her opinions and views.
I have taught
my black little sister that beauty fades and eventually becomes null and void,
while brains become more attractive with time.
I have taught
my black little sister that babies will never make a man stay, if anything it
will only encourage him to seek for something more and challenging out there.
She should take
the time to love herself, know what she wants and then find someone who will
match her values.
I have taught
my black young brother that it is not power that makes a man, it is respect for
himself, and most importantly respect for others.
I have taught
my black young brother that he will knock on a lot of doors, many of them will
say no, but that is no reason to settle for crime. Keep knocking, eventually
one door will have a yes.
I have taught
my black young brother that he should never harm a woman, not by fist or even by
dishonest intentions.
I have taught
my black young brother that rejection by one girl does not mean every other
girl will reject him; and when she does reject you refrain from calling her a bitch.
I have taught
my black young brother that there is nothing wrong with a suit and tie, as well
as eloquence.
I have taught my black young brother that Hip
Hop is cool, but there is nothing better than having an empire beyond Hip Hop.
I have taught
my black little sister and young brother that, I come from a time where a black
person helped me up and told me that I can be anything I want to be. But I
cannot be afraid to ask for help, because I will never get to where I want to
be by myself. There is nothing wrong with asking for help. Just as there is
nothing wrong with giving people a helping hand.
Always open
your hand to the weak, the disadvantaged and the voiceless.
<Smiles>
There is still
so much I want to ask you God. But I do not want to burden you. There is one
last BIG important thing that I ask for you to provide my black people. Just
PEACE!
JUST PEACE OF
Mind.
We have
struggled for too long. We can no longer look for answers or payback from
others. It is time for my black people to unite.
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