Muzi.com News Gallery Library Forum Celebrity Movies Chinastar Regions Channels
Set Home|Subscribe|Premium Home|MyMuzi

Home | Most-viewed Story | Most-viewed Coverage | Region | People | Time | Events | Business | Sports | Showbiz | IT | Politics | Military | Society | Education | Life | Health
  Muzi.com : Muzi (English) : News
  NAACP tries to woo the hip-hop generation
Last updated: 2009-07-19


NAACP tries to woo the hip-hop generation
2009-07-19

Category
NAACP
Youth
Nations
U.S.
City
New York City
States
New York
Illinois
Category
Regions
County
Manhattan
Company
American Express Co
Source
(Christian Science Monitor)

New York - The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, America's largest and oldest civil rights organization, is now trying to appeal to the so-called hip-hop generation.

About 1,000 young African-Americans converged on midtown Manhattan this week to help celebrate the NAACP's centennial. That number of young people is the largest in convention history, event organizers say.

Since the meeting began this past Saturday, an oft-repeated mantra among the mainly gray-haired delegates has been to make way for the young and able. And on Thursday night, the NAACP hopes to get a further boost when President Obama speaks to the organization.

But can the aging organization capitalize on Mr. Obama's appeal and draw the post-civil rights generations into its fold?

Bridging the generational divide is key for the NAACP as it fights modern incarnations of age-old racial inequities. This generational divide became more apparent during last year's presidential election, when distinctions were made between "traditional" black politicians and up-and-comers crafted in the Obama mold.

Some young convention participants, while eager to take part in the centennial, had a few reservations about the coming years for NAACP. Take Brooke Baldwin, president of the black student union at the College of Lake County in northeastern Illinois.

"I'm grateful for the past," she says, "but we need to fix the future. No one's trying to say [the civil rights generation] didn't do nothing. They did a lot. But what's going on now?"

Her voice rises as she lists issues besetting her community: teen dropout rates, pregnancy rates, gun violence, education, HIV/AIDS.

Like Ms. Baldwin, other young people here have some understanding that their social concerns have a connection to racism and discrimination. But they also find it difficult to explain why, even after the work of the civil rights movement and the election of Obama, those racially based disparities still exist.

The NAACP is trying to help them find their way.

Last year, in a controversial election, the organization chose their youngest president ever, a 30-something Rhodes scholar named Benjamin Todd Jealous who fits more readily into the Obama mold.

In a nearly hour-long speech to 5,000 delegates on Monday, Mr. Jealous referenced young people and the generational shift no fewer than 20 times.

To be sure, many young blacks have showed great enthusiasm in attending such a large NAACP event. In order to get here, some, like Demar Lamont Roberts from South Carolina, put aside college graduation money. When that amount proved too little, he charged the rest to his American Express card, which will soon be discovered by his unsuspecting father, who pays the bill.

Others carpooled, up to 24 hours in at least one case, and some groups squeezed six bodies into $240-a-night Times Square hotel rooms meant to sleep three.

Yet back home, youth members say, both membership and interest in the NAACP fall off after age 25. That's when people are supposed to transition from local youth chapters to their area's adult branch.

"You could be running to be president against a 60-year-old who's been there for 18 years," Mr. Roberts says.

Bryan Pope, who traveled to the convention with Baldwin and a college adviser, reflects on what for him was an introductory week to the NAACP.

"I don't want to be affiliated with [the NAACP] just because of the history," he says. "I don't really know what they can do in our community."

Mr. Pope, who aspires to teach African-American studies to inner-city high school students, came to the convention looking for concrete answers that he can take home.

"Give me some solutions to my problems. Don't just get me stirred up," he says.

-----

Follow us on Twitter.

 Youth   American Express Co 
  Profile News83GalleryLinks  
  Young voters who helped elect Obama stayed home (2009-11-04)
  NAACP tries to woo the hip-hop generation (2009-07-19)
  Will things get better for next generation? (2009-02-17)
  Future of abstinence-only funding is in limbo (2009-01-18)
  Texas to reconsider $6M steriod testing in schools (2009-01-10)
  Japan auto sales plunge as young lose interest (2008-12-30)
  Many Teens Don't Keep Virginity Pledges (2008-12-29)
  Study: Family behavior key to health of gay youth (2008-12-29)
  Greek-inspired protests spread across Europe (2008-12-11)
  1 in 5 young adults has personality disorder (2008-12-01)
  Swiss stub out cannabis decriminalisation bid (2008-11-30)
  How to Hire the Net Generation (2008-11-27)
  Kin outraged, distraught over teen's cyber suicide (2008-11-22)
  Young voters have some clout, and they used it (2008-11-09)
  Young voters help put Obama over the top (2008-11-05)
  Report: Kids less likely to graduate than parents (2008-10-23)
  Chinese youth conflicted about sex, survey finds (2008-10-15)
  Generation Y's Bad Rap (2008-09-17)
  Pope leads 250,000 for open-air Paris mass (2008-09-13)
  Pope in Paris condemns love of money, power (2008-09-13)
  Group dangles $50K for Jews who move to Ala. town (2008-09-08)
  Pope urges Australian youths to spurn materialism (2008-07-20)
  Young Catholics gather for opening Mass in Sydney (2008-07-15)
  HPV Vaccine for Boys? It Just Might Happen (2008-06-14)
  McCain's Young Backers Push Elders to Embrace Obama Web Tactics (2008-06-12)
Related Events
  • 2005 Hurricane Katrina

  • Stories Coverages

    NewsGuide EventCityPeopleShowCompany 
     ENTSportsBIZEDULifeMilitaryPoliticsSocietyHealth 


    [2009 US Health Reform]: Senate OKs health care measure, reaching milestone (10:47 12/24)


    [111th Congress]: Senate OKs health care measure, reaching milestone (10:47 12/24)


    [Vietnam War]: Fannie and Freddie CEOs to get up to $6M in pay (09:47 12/24)


    [2009 Boy in Balloon Hoax]: Balloon Boy parents face sentencing in Colorado (08:56 12/23)


    [2009 Geely Bidding Volvo]: Ford confirms deal in Volvo sale to China's Geely (03:56 12/23)

    [Global Financial Crisis]: Greek parliament to adopt 2010 crisis budget (08:56 12/23)


    [Michael Jackson Molestation]: Terrorist attack feared after Jackson arrest (08:56 12/23)

    [2008 U.S. Recession]: Incomes and spending post solid gains in November (08:56 12/23)

    [Second Gulf War]: U.S. military: no change to Iraq pregnancy policy (08:56 12/23)


    [2008 U.S. Layoff Crisis]: Geithner: Job growth should resume by springtime (08:56 12/23)



    Muzi.com

    Muzi.com : About | Sitemap | Ads | Contact
    All Rights Reserved 1994-2006 - All rights reserved.