Saturday, December 27, 2025

Annual Founder’s Kwanzaa Message: Practicing the Seven Principles in Dimly-Lit Times

Practicing the Seven Principles in Dimly-Lit Times:

Lifting up the Light, Hurrying the Dawn

By Dr. Maulana Karenga

 

This year, as always, we wish for Africans everywhere throughout the world African community, “Heri za Kwanzaa. Happy Kwanzaa”. And we bring and send greetings of celebration, solidarity and continued struggle for an inclusive and shared good in the world. Moreover, we wish, especially for our people and all other oppressed and struggling peoples of the world, the shared and indivisible goods of freedom, justice and peace, achieved and enjoyed and passed on to future generations. Also, in the Kawaida Ma’atian harvest celebration tradition of our honored ancestors, we wish for African peoples and all the peoples of the world, all the good that heaven grants, the earth produces and the waters bring forth from their depths. Hotep. Ase. Heri.

This year’s Annual Kwanzaa Theme is: “Practicing the Seven Principles in Dimly-Lit Times: Lifting Up the Light, Hurrying the Dawn”. To speak of dimly-lit times is to talk of the thick fog of falsehood, fear, chaos, confusion and uncertainty that has emerged in this historical moment and settled heavily over the land. Indeed, it is to speak of the rise of authoritarian and antidemocratic governments and practices, and increased levels of mean spiritedness, human alienation from others and official and unofficial violence of varied kinds, including live-streamed genocide.

And it is to speak too of the dimming of the light and life of the heart and mind. That is to say, the cultivation of the narrow and uncritical mind and the constricted heart which embrace illusions as real life and have a diminished capacity to fight through the fog, to rightfully reason and consciously demonstrate moral sensitivity for others, especially those different and vulnerable. And to speak of hurrying the dawn is to stress Nana Dr. Martin King’s assertion that “We are confronted with the fierce urgency of now”. And this calls, not for delay or indecision, but rather for immediate and sustained “vigorous and positive action.”

Yes, we are living and celebrating Kwanzaa this year again in difficult, dangerous, demanding and dimly-lit times. But as the sun sets, it also rises, drives away the shadows, dimness and darkness and lights up the world. And the best of our culture tells and teaches us that we must be the light that drives away the shadows, dimness and darkness and opens the way to the good world we all want and deserve. Indeed, the lessons of our history and our sense of our own humanity tell us we must defy the darkness and darkness makers that seek to dispirit and diminish us and demonstrate a radical refusal to be defeated or dispirited in any way. Following in the footsteps of our honored ancestors, we must, in the midst of the deepest darkness hanging over us, lift up the light and dare to hurry the dawn, only achieved in righteous and relentless struggle for an inclusive and shared good in the world.

Indeed, the sacred teachings of our ancestors tell us in the Husia that “it is wrong to walk upside down in darkness and we must come forth today and bring forth the Ma’at, (the light of truth, justice, righteousness and good) within us. For surely it is within us”. And this teaching of the light and good within us finds its voice and practice in every place and period of our history. Thus, Nana W.E.B. DuBois relates in the sacred narrative of our people, that even during the Holocaust of enslavement, in the darkest of days, nights and centuries, they “sang to sunshine”. They embraced and evidenced a radical refusal to be dispirited or defeated. Indeed, they became the sunshine they sang to each day, regardless of the weather and the evil and inhuman ways of their oppressors. They sensed and saw a great light lifted up within them and they lifted it up and called it freedom. They taught their children to remember, reimagine and cherish  freedom, and together they moved and marched irresistibly and irreversibly towards it.

And if we are to honor our tradition as a living, uplifting and liberating tradition, then we too must “sing to sunshine” irregardless. Indeed, we too must embody and be the sunshine that calls forth the day and hurries the dawn, a new dawn and day of inclusive freedom, justice and other shared human goods through our continuing and expanded work, our service and sacrifice and our righteous and relentless struggle.

Also clearly, during the Black Freedom Movement, our people dared to drive away the darkness and darkness makers and lift up the light. This is overwhelmingly evident in the life and struggle history of Nana Fannie Lou Hamer and her co-combatants in our liberation struggle. One of her favorite songs was “This Little Light of Mine”. And she sang to sunshine and for freedom, singing, “This little light of mine. I’m gonna let it shine. I’ve got the light of freedom. I’m gonna to let it shine. Everywhere I go”. This was a resilient and audacious defiance of the darkness and the darkness makers, singing and being sunshine in the midst of the darkness around them, and audaciously bearing witness to their steadfast faith, undiminishing hope and relentless resistance to evil, injustice and oppression.

And let us remember the teachings of Nana Haji Malcolm X who emphasized the importance of the light of self-knowledge, knowledge of ourselves and each other as we also study and learn the ways and wisdom of the world. He tells and teaches us, “We need more light about each other. Light creates understanding, understanding creates love, love creates patience, and patience creates unity”, a unity we need to repair, renew and remake the world.

In the practice of Kwanzaa, in the candle lighting ceremony, then, we follow in the footsteps of our ancestors and we lift up the lasting light of the Nguzo Saba. Born in and out of the Black Freedom Movement, Kwanzaa stresses our ongoing struggle to be ourselves and free ourselves and achieve a shared African and human good and the well-being of the world and all in it. Therefore, in lighting each candle, we are committing to lifting up the light and hurrying the dawn by practicing the Nguzo Saba, as our freedom songs say, everywhere we are and everywhere we go and in liberating and uplifting ways. In this way, we honor the ancient African imperative to “bear witness to truth and set the scales of justice in their proper place, especially among the voiceless and vulnerable, the downtrodden, devalued and oppressed.

Our awesome task in the world changing assignment that Nana Dr. Mary Mcleod Bethune has given us “to remake the world” is to be a source of sunlight that gives the shared goodness of light, life and warmth in the world. And it calls for Umoja (Unity), the sacred togetherness of our people in the small and large circles of our lives, the solidarity of humanity and a profound sense of oneness with the world and all in it; Kujichagulia (Self-Determination), the right of every people to be free, control their destiny and daily lives and make their own unique contribution to history and humanity, whether in Haiti, Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Palestine, and anywhere else in the world; and Ujima (Collective Work and Responsibility), our self-conscious shared efforts and obligation to conceive, build and sustain  the good world we all want and deserve to live in.

And the task calls for and requires Ujamaa (Cooperative Economics), shared work and shared wealth based on kinship with and concern for the well-being of each other and the world, especially the most vulnerable and on our right to share equitably and responsibly in the natural and created good of the world; Nia (Purpose), the liberation and upliftment of our people and our shared fundamental meaning and mission of human life to create and increase good in the world and for the world and not let any good be lost; Kuumba (Creativity), our shared obligation to do all we can to constantly repair, renew and remake the world, making it more beautiful and beneficial than when we inherited it; and Imani (Faith), a shared belief and confidence in ourselves rooted in the sacred teachings of our honored ancestors Nanas Howard Thurman, Gwen Books and Nannie Burroughs that we are a people who “ride the storms and remain intact”, “conduct our blooming in the noise and whip of the whirlwind” and “specialize in the wholly impossible”.

Given this, what dark or dimly-lit times can truly dispirit us, what makers and demons of the dark can defeat us or divert us from our commitment if we continue the struggle, keep the faith and hold the line regardless and irreversibly?

Dr. Maulana Karenga, Professor and Chair of Africana Studies, California State University Long Beach; Executive Director, African American Cultural Center (Us); Creator of Kwanzaa; and author of Kwanzaa: A Celebration of Family, Community and Culture, The Message and Meaning of Kwanzaa: Bringing Good Into the World and Essays on Struggle: Position and Analysis, www.OfficialKwanzaaWebsite.org; www.MaulanaKarenga.orgwww.AfricanAmericanCulturalCenter-LA.org

Sunday, December 21, 2025

Congressional Black Caucus Urges Federal Reserve to Address Rise in Black Unemployment

Congressional Black Caucus Chair Yvette D. Clarke (NY-09) and members of the Congressional Black Caucus issued the following statement about the concerning rise in Black unemployment rates across the country:

“Black workers across our country are once again bearing the brunt of an uncertain economy. In recent months, unemployment among Black workers has risen sharply under the economic conditions shaped by policies of the Trump Administration. In November, Black unemployment reached 8.3 percent—the highest level we have seen since the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. Behind this number are families struggling to make ends meet and communities facing unbearable economic hardship.

“The Congressional Black Caucus believes this moment demands urgent action. To better understand how the Federal Reserve is responding to this crisis, we request a briefing for Members of the Congressional Black Caucus. The Federal Reserve must step in to address this growing unemployment crisis and confront the deep-rooted inequities that continue to leave Black workers behind. Black workers earn about 20 percent less than white workers, a gap that has contributed to a stark racial wealth divide. Today, the median Black family holds just $24,520 in net worth, compared to $250,400 for the median white family. This inequality did not happen by accident and cannot be ignored.

“We are calling on the Federal Reserve to address the crisis impacting Black workers and to develop a clear strategy to reverse these trends and ensure that Black workers and families are not left behind.”

Patricia Smith wins National Book Award for Poetry for ‘The Intentions of Thunder: New and Selected Poems’

Patricia Smith, a Princeton professor of creative writing in the Lewis Center for the Arts, has received a National Book Award, the 2025 award for poetry, for “The Intentions of Thunder: New and Selected Poems.”

The prestigious awards from the National Book Foundation celebrate the best literature published in the United States, with one award each for fiction, nonfiction, poetry, translated literature and young people’s literature. Two Princetonians were finalists for the 2025 nonfiction award: professor Yiyun Li, for her memoir “Things in Nature Merely Grow,” and Class of 2005 alumna Julia Ioffe, for “Motherland: A Feminist History of Modern Russia, from Revolution to Autocracy.”

Smith accepted the poetry award in front of a live audience at the 76th annual National Book Award ceremony, held Nov. 19 in New York City. In her speech, she thanked her family and then read a section from a piece about visiting her mother in her last days in a nursing home.

Woven throughout the work — which takes the reader vividly into the room as Smith sits before her mother, who does not recognize her — is the insistent, joyful refrain “What does this have to do with poetry you ask? I’ll tell you.”

The final passage captures her mother’s last moments, and the invitation to look down and see her daughter in this moment, accepting this award:

My mother, Annie Pearl Smith of Aliceville, Alabama, died on March 15, 2024, without saying another word beyond the two that she left me. But I can’t help but smile, thinking of her there in the great unknowable with Gwen and Audre and Wanda and Toni and June looking down and nudging her over and over: “Annie Pearl, Annie Pearl, that’s your baby girl standing there in front of all them folks? Chile, look at where she is!”

“The Intentions of Thunder” includes poems from Smith’s nine collections, as well as new and previously uncollected poems that traverse every facet of life, comfortable and uncomfortable, violent and courageous, quiet and rapturous, encompassing history, current events and the possibilities of the future. In addition to receiving the National Book Award, it was recently named to Publishers Weekly Best Books of 2025: Poetry.

In 2023, Smith was elected a Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets, and in 2021, she received the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize, an award for lifetime achievement from the Poetry Foundation. She is a recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship and a two-time winner of the Pushcart Prize, among many other awards and prizes.

Check out ‘The Intentions of Thunder: New and Selected Poems’ here: 'The Intentions of Thunder: New and Selected Poems’

Friday, December 19, 2025

Democrats statement on Kennedy Center board renaming Kennedy Center to Trump-Kennedy Center

The board for the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts announced that it would now be named the Trump-Kennedy Center.

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.), Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), Sens. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) and Mark Warner (D-Va.), and Rep. Rick Larsen (D-Wash.) — all ex officio members of the Kennedy Center board of trustees — issued a statement panning the move.

“At today’s meeting, a sitting Member of Congress was muted, and participants were prevented from speaking — actions that reflect a troubling lack of transparency and respect for the rule of law. This whole process displays the corruption that permeates the entire Trump Administration, and as ex-officio members of the Kennedy Center Board, we will be unwavering in our commitment to holding this Administration accountable,” it said.

Thursday, December 18, 2025

Congressional Black Caucus Statement Celebrating Barbara Rose Johns Statue

Congressional Black Caucus Chair Yvette D. Clarke (NY-09) and members of the Congressional Black Caucus issued the following statement on the unveiling of the Barbara Rose Johns statue in the U.S. Capital:

“For 111 years, the Commonwealth of Virginia was represented in the U.S. Capitol by Confederate General Robert E. Lee, who took up arms against the United States to preserve the brutal institution of slavery. Today, the Commonwealth, and the nation, is celebrating a new chapter in our history by honoring Barbara Rose Johns—a courageous young leader whose fight for educational equity helped pave the way for a more equitable nation.

“At just 16 years old, Barbara Rose Johns organized hundreds of students to walk out of Robert Russa Moton High School in Farmville to protest its substandard facilities compared to the neighboring white high school. Her movement ultimately gained the support of the NAACP and became part of the historic Brown v. Board of Education case, which led to the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that declared school segregation unconstitutional.

“The Congressional Black Caucus, led by the Dean of the Virginia State delegation and CBC member, Congressman Bobby Scott, was honored to celebrate the unveiling of Barbara Rose Johns’ statue — not just as Black history — but as American history. We must continue to honor our nation’s heroes and their contributions that made our country a more perfect union and that too often go unrecognized, unheard and overlooked.”