The Value of Kwanzaa
The Value of Kwanzaa
Junious Ricardo Stanton
From
December 26th to January 1, millions of people around the world
participate and experience Kwanzaa, a celebration based upon African and
indigenous people’s values and traditions. Kwanzaa was created in 1966 by Dr. Maulana
Karenga at a time when Diasporan Africans were reasserting our self-identity
and self-determination and breaking from an oppressive Eurocentric imperialist worldview
and culture. It was designed to create and build an appreciation for unity,
traditional African values, empowerment and community.
Since its
creation in the US ,
Kwanzaa has spread around the world and is now accepted and celebrated as an
established holiday. Over the years the celebration has had its detractors.
Some opposed it because they thought it threatened or competed with Christmas.
Some said it was a “made up holiday”, some said or implied it was too Black, that
it was African while others resisted learning about it, learning the words or
they poo-pooed the principles behind it.
There were others who embraced the
concept and keep the Kwanzaa traditional despite its detractors. Kwanzaa has
value regardless of its detractors. First, all holidays are “made up”! Each and
every holiday in existence, is the creation of the ethnic groups, institutions
and culture who invented them for their own particular reasons to meet their
specific needs. Christmas or the Christ Mass is a made up holiday. It was
invented by the founders of the Catholic Church to reinforce their story about
the birth of Jesus. The “Church Fathers” decreed that Jesus’ birth was on
December 25th. The fact that
December 25th coincides with the Winter Solstice which was also the
stated time of the births of other avatars and savior gods which predated
Christianity is no coincidence.
Every holiday we celebrate in this country is
made up. The Fourth of July is a made up holiday as are: Hanukkah, Easter,
Labor Day, Veterans Day, Carnival, Bastille Day, Mardi Gras and Juneteenth. Yet
we don’t question them or their significance do we? No. Many are based upon myths or other people’s
culture yet we still celebrate them without question.
Kwanzaa was
created and based upon African and indigenous traditions. It has no religious
significance whatsoever, it is not a religious holiday, nor was it designed to
compete with Hanukkah or Christmas. Yes Kwanzaa is African inspired and Black,
so what? It was created at a time when
conscious liberation minded Blacks were attempting to assert our agency, encourage
empowerment, and establish an identity free from the disrespect white America
heaped upon us and our own internalized self-hatred. What’s wrong with focusing on Blackness, Black
empowerment, family, community and unity? What’s inappropriate about wanting a
wholesome community, togetherness, cohesion and prosperity?
Kwanzaa
is not a threat to your pastor, or your religious doctrines and dogma if you
are a Christian. Kwanzaa is no threat to your Imam or Koran’s teachings if you
are a Muslim or any other religion for that matter.
As far as learning new words is
concerned, we do it all the time! Black people are always making up slang words
and phrases or changing the meaning of English words, its part of our rhythm,
creative swag and hipness. Our slang almost always becomes part of the American
vocabulary and lexicon.
We should be open minded and
willing to learn about our past, synthesize what we’ve learned and apply it for
the betterment of our lives. This is the essence of wisdom, what our African
ancestors called Sankofa; which is an
Akan word which means to go back and fetch. Dr. Karenga was encouraging us to
look back, to learn about our history, our greatness and apply it to our daily
lives.
Kwanzaa is a celebration based upon
ancient traditions. The word Kwanzaa means “first fruits” harkening to a time
when African people were close to the land, planting, harvesting, raising
animals and being thankful for nature’s bounty. But most of us are urban
dwellers in a post industrial society today, we don’t know much about
agriculture or the deep significance of living and working close to nature.
Nevertheless, we need to learn about nature,
the cycles of the sun, moon and stars because they are part of our legacy and
traditions.
Another good thing about Kwanzaa is,
it’s not a materialistic celebration; you won’t go into debt celebrating
Kwanzaa. Kuumba is one of the seven
principles which mean creativity; we are encouraged to use our imaginations to
make gifts rather than going to the store and buying. Kwanzaa tasks us to envision a better reality
for ourselves as a people.
We are becoming too materialistic,
too obsessed with gizmos and gadgets to our own detriment. We are becoming too
detached from ourselves and our families. Technology is minimizing face to face,
soul to soul interaction to the point we think pushing a button to like
something means we’ve taken concrete action. We think joining a social network
means we have friends but the fact of the matter is, we don’t interact with
these people on meaningful levels.
Kwanzaa is about gathering together,
it encourages being socially engaged and interactive with family, friends and
the community, sharing common values (the seven principles) and a vision for us
and our community. This alone should make it more attractive and valuable.
Happy Kwanzaa!
-30-
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