Monday, February 16, 2009

Beautifully Spoken

I went to church on Sunday and my overall standpoint was confusion. After studying and hearing many lectures on the black church last semester, I went with a new outlook and understanding. The black church was created during the era of slavery as a way to spread culture and social understanding throughout the enslaved Africans and the so-called new Americans. It was in these initial groups that blacks became socially and politically conscious. As time continued, the social gatherings became more than sneaking out at night to meet with others and developed into a more organized structure in which religion was practiced. As I sat in church, I could see how the origins of the black church are still practiced in the black church today. All types of black folk gathered in this church house to fellowship and share cultural and political ideas with one another. From talks to how to make cornbread fluffier to heated arguments about individual’s political fundamentals, I was amused and elated to see that in this structural compound our ancestors’ effort were not lost. Beautiful music was played as people rejoiced and praised the God they worshiped with no fear of prosecution or social judgment. The tears nearly came to my eyes when I realized that the ones that came before me were, at one point, happy because in this place, this house of worship, blacks could be themselves.

But on this Sunday, I heard a sermon that bothered me. The minister preached and made a point stating that blacks should change their language patterns in order to be more successful in the modern world. To me, this is a message of assimilation. Since I claim to be a free thinker, I sat down and thought about the minister’s point. In this world there are things that are socially acceptable and culturally acceptable. On the other side, there are things that are socially unacceptable and culturally unacceptable. All this meaning that there are certain things one can do it their culture that are not socially acceptable and there are things one can do in society and are not culturally acceptable. When pertaining to blacks, there are some things that blacks do within their culture that are not acceptable to American society's culture and there are things blacks can do in American society and is not accepted in their culture. One of those things is the use of broken English, slang, or Ebonics. According to society, by using this broken English you are lowering your standards and your social status. In essence, society's impression of you is low. This minster says blacks should change their culture from speaking broken English to speaking perfect English in order to fit in with the rest of society and be socially acceptable.

As my mother taught me a long time ago, in many situations, there is a time and a place for everything. When one wants to sound intelligent one speaks intelligently. Does this mean your English must be perfect? In my opinion, no. As a black, you have to know to play the game. The black culture does not hold the majority in American social culture. Therefore, we can not expect everyone to understand the English language we have adapted. When we go into different situations, we speak different ways. This does not mean we discard that part of ourselves entirety in order to fit in with he American society culture. This minister bothered me because he argued that in order for blacks to come off as intelligent to the majority, whites, we must change our language and assimilate it with the majority. The way blacks speak is full of passion and emotion and while it may not be textbook, it is beautiful. Take into consideration I am not talking about all blacks. I am merely speaking to the ones who defy society and choose to embrace ebony phonics.

In an intuition in which blacks, historically, can be themselves this minister tells me I should not. He tells me to conform and forget a part of who I am. He oughta be shamed of himself.

4 comments:

Morgan Kay said...

sounding a lot like booker t. (the pastor)

Al Wu said...

i can agree in part. but the thing is, too many of us don't know when it's time to "code switch". the ability to speak to the masses and to one's own cultural group is paramount to black success. which you did state. but for real, I cannot stand poor english when you don't know any better. ignorance has never been attractive. and to say this is the language of my people is a cop out. it's cool when you're with your fam or other non-formal settings but if slang is how you live, that is not what's hot.

BeMoBrown said...

there is a difference between knowing the code switch and deleting the code. to me, broken english is as intelligent as so-called perfect english because of the teachers of broken english. These broken english educators were never blessed the education needed to pass down to other generations societies' perfection. I can agree that ignorance is never a good thing and in that respect, if one does not know, one needs to learn. but to disregard it as a part of who you are and label it an excuse is as shameful as deleting that code. As blacks with a distinct heritage and unique culture, we must embrace all aspects of our history whether they be socially acceptable or socially unacceptable.

Al Wu said...

by no means am i saying that you cannot be highly intelligent and use broken english. but how much even of this broken english is really "our english" to begin with. when africans were brought to this country, who did they learn english from? themselves? of course not. they learned it from the trifflin ass white people who brought us here. it was their broken english that got us started. those low life white americans weren't speaking the king's english and taught us incorrectly. now, we did take some of what we learned and changed it (as many linguists have said that ebonics syntax shares similarities with some african languages). i guess i can see a certain beauty in wanting to have a language that is spoken most exclusively by black americans to give us a sense of cultural connection since so many of our cultural and ethic ties were broken but i've heard too many country white people using "ebonics" as to where i question if that is even "ours" or a reflection of socio-economic status. and black does not equal broke or at least it shouldn't in the american mind, black or white. feel me?