KWANZAA, the African-American cultural holiday conceived and developed by Dr. Maulana Ron Karenga, was first celebrated on December 26, 1966. Kwanzaa is traditionally celebrated from December 26 through January 1, with each day focused on Nguzo Saba, or the seven principles. Derived from the Swahili phrase "matunda ya kwanza" which means "first fruits", Kwanzaa is rooted in the first harvest celebrations practiced in various cultures in Africa. Kwanzaa seeks to enforce a connectedness to African cultural identity, provide a focal point for the gathering of African peoples, and to reflect upon the Nguzo Saba, or the seven principles, that have sustained Africans. Africans and African-Americans of all religious faiths and backgrounds practice Kwanzaa.

Kwanzaa was born out of the whirlwind of social and political changes of the sixties decade. The sixties represent one of many eras during which the African and African-American struggle for freedom and self-identity reached its historical peak, spawning multiple revolutionary movements.

By creating Kwanzaa, African-Americans sought to rectify the cultural and economic exploitation perpetrated against us during the months of October, November, and December (the Christmas season). During this season, corporate America typically ignored the quality of life concerns of African-Americans, yet encouraged participation in the commercialism of Christmas. Additionally, African-Americans did not observe a holiday that was specific to our needs. A review of the major holidays celebrated in the United States would reveal that not one related specifically to the growth and development of African-Americans. The development of Kwanzaa assumed a reassessment, reclaiming, recommitment, remembrance, retrieval, resumption, resurrection, and rejuvenation of the "Way of Life" principles recognized by African-Americans. These principles have strengthened African-Americans during our worldwide sojourn.

Today, Kwanzaa is recognized by millions throughout America and the world. It is celebrated often in community settings provided by homes, churches, mosques, temples, community centers, schools, and places of work. Kwanzaa allows us to celebrate the season without shame or fear of embracing our history, our culture, and ourselves.


Aisle 19 is one of the fastest growing social shopping networks on the web today! You can get a free account that lets you shop from over 600 stores you are already shopping from, get paid cash back and receive exclusive member's only discounts! Read More

Views: 0

Tags: africa, african, american, black, culture, kwanzaa

Comment

You need to be a member of Black Talk Radio Network™ to add comments!

Join Black Talk Radio Network™

Events

www.StatCounter.com/myspace/ - Free myspace Profile Counter



 

www.StatCounter.com/myspace/ - Free myspace Profile Counter

 

Your Banner Here!
225x600
$75 per month


Your Banner Here!
225x300
$55 per month

 

Your Banner Here!
225x200
$35 per month


Your Banner Here!
225x100
$15


Audio Spots Available, Contact Us...

Badge

Loading…

Find Us on...


Black Talk Radio Network


Twitter Icon

 

 


RSS Feed



Listener Supported Radio

Black Talk Radio News

Occupy Philly Activists Go to Trial, Maybe to Jail

By Michael Coard, 4/14/2012, news, opinion


On April 26, 2012, several defendants could be sent to prison for what they did outside a government facility on November 29th last year, prior to the police arriving and catching them in the act. Sounds like a gang of terrorists caught red-handed, doesn’t it? But words, like appearances, can be deceiving. These were no terrorists. And they weren’t gangsters either.…

NJ Weedman: “I refuse to be another John Ray Wilson”

Ed Forchion aka NJ Weedman, 4/25/2012, op-ed, news, politics

 

My Prosecution - On May 1st, 2012 I go on trial in Burlington County Superior Court before Judge Delehey. In most cases a defendant is told not to talk about the case, the facts and follow attorney advice to keep quiet. In my case I refuse to keep quiet, I’m telling the facts and I’m representing myself. While most defendants are afraid; I’m looking forward to…

Not Everyone With an Illegal Gun Deserves Jail Time

By Michael Coard, 4/14/2012, news, opinion

 

Most Philadelphians believe that violent crime is the city’s biggest problem. As a result, you might think severe punishment for anyone who illegally possesses a gun—regardless of whether the person committed a separate non-violent crime with it—is part of the solution. Mere unlawful possession, you’d argue, is enough to warrant mandatory imprisonment. No probation. No fine.…

Detroit’s top prosecutor Kym L. Worthy fails to turn over all recorded confessions in Sanford murder case

Black Talk Radio News, 4/13/2012, news,

 

In response to a FOIA request on the Devontae Sandford case by freedom activist Roberto Guzman, the Wayne Countyprosecutor’s office failed to turn over copies of all the taped confessions of then 14 yr-old Devontae Sanford. For now throw out the fact that Devontae had no legal counsel at the time the tapes were made.

 

Mr. Guzman who is also a para-legal and works on…

New book claims James Earl Ray assassinated Martin Luther King Jr. for $98,000 KKK Bounty

By, Scotty Reid, 4/12/2012, news, opinion

 

A new book is exploring allegations that James Earl Ray killed Martin Luther King Jr. to collect a bounty offered by the Mississippi KKK.

 

According to the UK’s Mail Onlinenews website,…

Your Advertisment

Your Banner Here!
225x600
$55 per month

 

Your Banner Here!
225x300
$35 per month

 

Your Banner Here!
225x200
$15 per month

 

Your Banner Here!
225x100
$10



Unlimited impressions, Audio Spots Available, Contact Us...

The Black Talk Radio Network™ is striving to be your #1 source of independent media geared towards the Global Black community.