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Learn the Meaning of Kwanzaa
By Bishop E. Bernard Jordan
Kwanzaa was first celebrated
in 1966 and it was a series of principles that bring about
awareness to mankind about unity and cooperative living.
This was primarily created for African American to come
into a consciousness, which reaffirms and restore African
American Culture and to introduce values for living.
When we look at society as a whole, values are the things
that govern the life of a community. Laws are based more
on morals and belief so here we are going to look at some
principles that seem to be an exodus out of a dilemma for
a community, which appears to be in crises.
Kwanzaa introduce seven basic principles, which are
1. Umoja
2. Kujichagulia
3. Ujima
4. Ujama
5. Nia
6. Kuumba
7. Imani
Ujoma means to strive and maintain unity in the family community
and race. When you have a community that does not have unity
you will find that there is no community. For the word community
should represent Common – Unity. Looking at the community
it is important to understand what builds a community. You
see a Strong Man produces a Strong Family, a Strong Family
produces a Strong Church and a Strong Church will build
a Strong Community and finally a Strong Community will build
a Strong Nation. A nation is only as strong as its weakest
community.
Kujichagulia means self-determination. This is a principle
that helps one to define
oneself. If you cannot name yourself then you are still
a child, which means you are given an allowance instead
of determining your income. You still don't have the ability
to create for yourself and speak for yourself. Until you
come of age mentally to speak for yourself other people
are defining you and this will always keep you as a victim
in life.
Ujima means collective work and responsibility. This principle
helps you to build and maintain community together. Here
is where you make your brothers and sisters problems our
problems and together solve them. This is where you work
as a team. This word T– E- A- M: could be looked at
as an acronym Together Each Achieving Mastery.
Ujamaa means cooperative economic. Without economics you
are a slave. You cannot have liberation without wealth.
Some would say money is not everything but we know that
freedom is everything and money buys you freedom. Cooperative
Economics is a principle needed in a community so one can
maintain stores, shops, other businesses and profit from
them together.
Nia means purpose. A person without a purpose is lost in
life. Here is where you make a collective vocation of building
and developing community. When you are not in the center
of your purpose you will find that you are now centered
in weakness. Understanding this we discover that weak people
make you weak. When you find your purpose you will restore
our people to their traditional greatness.
Kuumba means creativity. Either you are a creator or a creature.
Creators think creatures move by instinct. In community
there must be a body of thinkers that can come up with ideas
to make something or someone more beautiful and beneficial
than the way you have inherited it.
Imani means faith. This is where we understand that we become
aware of our teachers, leaders, parents the very root of
our existence. The very principles that are taught by our
mentor are designed to bring us from struggle into victory.
Faith is the substance of things hoped for and the evidence
of things not seen.
Kwanzaa is the first fruit. Its focus is on traditional
African values of family, community, responsibility, commerce
and self-improvement. It is not political nor is it religious.
It is created as a ritual for the harvest time. All early
civilization recognized a higher power for the harvest,
which was given to them for the year. It would be the harvest,
which would particularly sustain them for the winter season.
Kwanzaa created the last week of the year from December
26 - January 1. It does not in any way take anything away
from Christmas, which is the birth of Christ. If anything
it highlights the principles that Jesus teaches us. He shares
you shall know the truth and truth shall make you free.
You are only as free as the truth that you know and understand.
The Kwanzaa celebration is a time when they light a series
of candles. The candles are red, black and green. The seven
candles symbolize the seven basic values of African-American
life. Part of the holiday is spent in teaching children
about their heritage and paying tribute to the past.
When individuals start to discover what makes wealth they
will remain enslaved to systems of ignorance that exist
in their own minds. I believe the principles of unity plus
economics will bring liberation to mankind.
By author of Cosmic Economics
Contact: Imal Wagner at imal@comcast.net
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