Urban League conference: Blacks must have a vision

(Akiit.com) The spotlight was on politics at the National Urban League conference in St.

Louis last week, but the agenda was all about expanding opportunity for black

Americans.

From pundits to preachers and from executives to teachers, three ideas echoed —

lifting up the poor, answering the call to lead and achieving independence

through financial success. The theme of the four-day convention that ended

Saturday was equally to the point: “You, Your Money, Your Future.”

If the NAACP is known for advocacy in the courtroom and through protest, the

emphasis of the more button-down Urban League leans toward economic policy and

individual empowerment. Consider two of Friday’s workshops: “Entrepreneurship

201, Putting a Real Deal Together,” and “Six-figure Careers You Never Thought

About.”

Our goal is economic parity,” said James Buford, longtime president of the

hosting Urban League of Metropolitan St. Louis. “We still have too many

African-American people who are disenfranchised. As we help motivate more into

the middle class, they become independent and viable citizens. They spend money

in the community and motivate the next generation.



That’s economic empowerment for the future.”

At every turn, the messages were forceful, often passionate:

— The Rev. Jesse Jackson spoke in his vintage preacher’s cadence of the powers

of racism during a discussion on the “Crisis of the Black Male.” Others gave

stirring pleas for blacks to take more responsibility for themselves and their

communities. Both sentiments won loud approval from the audience.

— A professor at Princeton University warned young black professionals against

a “narcissistic” temptation to seek personal wealth without concern for the

less fortunate. He chided the “post-Soul” generation for having a “vision

deficit
.”

— Panels of successful businessmen and women offered advice on moving up in the

corporate world. Their audiences peppered them with earnest questions about

taking those first steps up the corporate ladder.

During the meeting that attracted roughly 10,000 people, the Urban League

released a 10-point “Opportunity Compact” that combines many longtime goals:

mandatory pre-school education, tax-free savings accounts for home down

payments, expanded education for ex-offenders and alliances between big

corporations and minority-owned businesses. In theory, the presidential

candidates were supposed to use the compact as a checklist for their own policy

pronouncements.

After the political speeches and award events, the biggest draw was the panel

on the black male crisis. A standing-room-only crowd heard Jackson and nine

other speakers discuss the issues raised this year by the Urban League, among

them: Black men, when compared to white men, are twice as likely to be

unemployed and earn 74 percent the pay. Black men also are seven times more

likely to be in jail or prison, nine times more likely to be killed by firearms

and eight times more likely to die of AIDS.

Jackson discussed the inequities of urban life.

“Urban America is like a donut, and the people on the ring have summer school

and jobs and camping and horseback riding,” Jackson said. “The people in the

hole don’t, and it’s obvious what the result will be.”

Other speakers focused on aspiration and hard work. Jeff Johnson, a host on the

BET television network, even scolded some at the conference “for spending more

time on lunch and concerts than on dealing with issues.” He called upon all

blacks to become more involved in their schools.

“I am not mad at integrated schools. I’m mad at integrated schools with no

black parents at PTA meetings,” Johnson said. “If our homes don’t do their

jobs, the police will. If our schools don’t do their jobs, the jails will.”

Jeff Henderson, an author and master chef in Las Vegas, said that was his rocky

path. The audience was silent as he recounted his prison time for drug offenses

and his struggle to succeed. Henderson said while he was head chef at two

casinos, he hired other ex-offenders.

He said he bluntly tells young black men who want work: “‘Pull your pants up,

get a belt. Most people in (human resources) are from the middle class. You

have to make some changes to get a job.'”

During another session, Eddie Glaude Jr., a professor of religion at Princeton

University, told a room filled with young professionals that their generation

needs to step into community leadership. Glaude said the tactics of the civil

rights era of the 1950s and ’60s may not work today but warned, “Today, it

seems we have a vision deficit.

“Have we become narcissistic, self-aggrandizing Negroes waiting to get a place

at the table so we can turn out backs on those in need?” he asked. “Many of us

have access that black America never had before. Yet we still see so much

suffering. …

“What are you going to do, young folks?” Glaude said.

Befitting the Urban League’s themes, a highlight was the granting of its

Business Pioneer Award to David L. Stewart, chairman of World Wide Technology

Inc. of Maryland Heights. Stewart, a native of Clinton, Mo., said he arrived in

St. Louis in 1973 with “a big Afro,” a duffel bag, bell-bottom jeans and

Converse sneakers.

As you can tell, I needed a lot of help,” he said. Stewart said the Urban

League got him a job with the Boy Scouts of Greater St. Louis.

He founded his company in 1990. Last year, it had $2 billion in sales.

By Tim O’Neil