The Soultown! Volume III: Issue 7 JULY 2019 | Page 31
THE SANKOFA VOW
The view of the youth engaged in the 2019 Summer Classic Upward Bound Spoken Word class.
greater independence and self-advocacy. This
was day one to defining themselves, naming
themselves, creating for themselves and speaking
for themselves.
Our class met every other day for 4 weeks.
Setting personal goals and deadlines is an
essential need to become self-determined, along
with solving problems or barriers to achieving
these goals. The perfect exercise to assist was
defining a time limit for the creation of the mid-
term and final spoken word projects -- minimum
60 seconds, maximum 120 seconds. Karma, one
of the female students stated, “It was cool to be
able to open up, speak and be heard. I learned a
lot about my peers.”
Making appropriate choices based on personal
preferences and interests is also necessary. The
themes for the poems were Introduce Yourself
and Where You’re From. I needed the youth to
participate in the decision about what to write, as
well as owning their words. This required a video
recording of the student poet reciting the poem by
memory in class.
The last part was to submit 5 digital journal entries
-- via goggledoc -- and reading the novel, the
Bronz Masquerade, by Nikki Grimes. By taking an
Courtesy Photo
intriguing look into the life of eighteen urban teens,
Grimes uses the structure of a poetry slam to pay
homage to spoken-word poetry. I knew the Bronx
Masquerade would help teach them the impact of
advocating for themselves. The goal was to have
all of the [students], black, Latino, Asian, Bosnian,
white, male, and female, talk about the raw,
unedited experiences as teenagers, and share in
their uncensored, uncut, faultless voices. Emma
shared, “This was one of my favorite classes and
experiences. Robert Frost is my favorite poet.”
I was impressed with the originality of the
scholars. I was even more pleased with the group
for accepting this challenge and the challenge of
Classic Upward Bound. Avery did not enjoy the
class. He is not a fan of rapping or rhyming. He
said, “I did learn how to include myself in a poem.
It was very hard and I am not comfortable being
vulnerable and sharing my thoughts.” I thanked
Avery for his honesty and quoted Mickye,
“If we do not continue to develop our
program, it will not continue to shine.
It is about
exposure
a n d
education.”
Every year, the scholars receive a t-shirt with an
image and quote to remind them of their summer
journey. “Education is the passport to the future,
for tomorrow belongs to those who prepare for it
today,” Malcolm X.
Congratulations to the students that are starting,
continuing and completing the Classic Upward
Bound Program and congratulations to Mickye
and the CUB team! We are the ish!
Kujichagulia is the 2nd Kwanzaa principle
defined as self-determination in Swahili -- to define
ourselves, name ourselves, create for ourselves
and speak for ourselves. Kujichagulia is for keeps!
The Sankofa Vow is my promise to my ancestors
to return to the Motherland and retrieve what
has been stolen from my ancestry via the trans-
Atlantic slave trade. My forefathers intended
to leave seeds for us to return to gather, plant,
cultivate and grow. These seeds can be reclaimed
and retained by reading, watching, and discussing
with our elders and also by traveling to our native
continent of Africa, the Motherland.
The spirit of Kujichagulia lives through my work
with the youth and I am committed to keeping The
Sankofa Vow.
I am Chillin’, Innovative Extraordinaire for
The Soultown International Magazine. I’d like
to thank Mickye Johnson and the entire Classic
Upward Bound team for having SOUL! ,
Learn more about the Sankofa Vow at
http://www.thesoultown.com/sankofa-vow.html
Email Chillin: [email protected]
July 2019 • The Soultown International Magazine • Celebrating 2 years • Connecting Our Cultures to Our Cyber & Conscious Communities • thesoultown.com
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