What Kwanzaa means for Black Americans

On Dec. 26, millions throughout the world’s African community will start weeklong celebrations of Kwanzaa.
There will be daily ceremonies with food, decorations and other
cultural objects, such as the kinara, which holds seven candles. At many
Kwanzaa ceremonies, there is also African drumming and dancing.

It is a time of communal self-affirmation – when famous Black heroes
and heroines, as well as late family members – are celebrated.

As a scholar who has written about racially motivated violence
against Blacks, directed Black cultural centers on college campuses and
sponsored numerous Kwanzaa celebrations, I understand the importance of
this holiday.

For the African-American community, Kwanzaa is not just any “Black
holiday.” It is a recognition that knowledge of Black history is
worthwhile.

History of Kwanzaa

Maulana Karenga, a noted Black American scholar and activist created Kwanzaa in 1966. Its name is derived from the phrase “matunda ya kwanza”
which means “first fruits” in Swahili, the most widely spoken African
language. However, Kwanzaa, the holiday, did not exist in Africa.

Each day of Kwanzaa is devoted to celebrating the seven basic values
of African culture or the “Nguzo Saba” which in Swahili means the seven
principles. Translated these are: unity, self-determination, collective
work and responsibility, cooperative economics (building Black
businesses), purpose, creativity and faith. A candle is lit on each day
to celebrate each one of these principles. On the last day, a black
candle is lit and gifts are shared.

Today, Kwanzaa is quite popular. It is celebrated widely on college campuses, the U.S. Postal Service issues Kwanzaa stamps, there is at least one municipal park named for it, and there are special Kwanzaa greeting cards.

Kwanzaa’s meaning for black community

Kwanzaa was created by Karenga out of the turbulent times of the 1960’s in Los Angeles, following the 1965 Watts riots, when a young African-American was pulled over on suspicions of drunk driving, resulting in an outbreak of violence.

Subsequently, Karenga founded an organization called Us – meaning,
black people – which promoted black culture. The purpose of the
organization was to provide a platform, which would help to rebuild the
Watts neighborhood through a strong organization rooted in African culture.

Karenga called its creation an act of cultural discovery, which simply meant that he wished to point African-Americans to greater knowledge of their African heritage and past.

Rooted in the struggles and the gains of the civil rights and black
power movements of the 1950s and 1960s, it was a way of defining a
unique black American identity. As Keith A. Mayes, a scholar of African-American history, notes in his book,

“For Black power activists, Kwanzaa was just as important as the
Civil Rights Act of 1964. Kwanzaa was their answer to what they
understood as the ubiquity of white cultural practices that oppressed
them as thoroughly as had Jim Crow laws.”

Overturning white definitions

Today, the holiday has come to occupy a central role, not only in the U.S. but also in the global African diaspora.

A 2008 documentary, “The Black Candle”
that filmed Kwanzaa observances in the United States and Europe, shows
children not only in the United States, but as far away as France,
reciting the principles of the Nguzo Saba.

It brings together the Black community not on the basis of their religious faith, but a shared cultural heritage. Explaining the importance of the holiday for African-Americans today, writer Amiri Baraka, says during an interview in the documentary,

“We looked at Kwanzaa as part of the struggle to overturn white definitions for our lives.”

Indeed, since the early years of the holiday, until today, Kwanzaa has provided many black families with tools for instructing their children about their African heritage.

Current activism and Kwanzaa

This spirit of activism and pride in the African heritage is evident
on college campus Kwanzaa celebrations – one of which I recently
attended. (It was done a few days early so that students going on break
could participate.)

The speaker, a veteran of the Nashville civil rights movement, spoke
about Kwanzaa as a time of memory and celebration. Wearing an African
dashiki, he led those in attendance – blacks and whites and those of
other ethnicities – in Kwanzaa songs and recitations. On a table
decorated in kente cloth, a traditional African fabric, was a kinara,
which contains seven holes, to correspond to the Seven Principles of
Kwanzaa. There were three red candles on the left side of the kinara,
and three green candles on the right side of the kinara. The center
candle was black. The colors of the candles represent the red, black and
green of the African Liberation flag.

The auditorium was packed. Those in attendance, young and old, black
and white, held hands and chanted slogans celebrating black heroes and
heroines, as diverse as the civil rights icons, Rosa Parks and Rev.
Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Jamaican musician Bob Marley.

It was a cultural observance that acknowledged solidarity with the
struggles of the past and with one another. Like the black power
movements, such as today’s Black Lives Matter movement,
it is an affirmation of “Black folks’ humanity,” their “contributions
to this society” and “resilience in the face of deadly oppression.”

Karenga wanted to “reaffirm the bonds between us” (Black people) and to counter the damage done by the “holocaust of slavery.” Kwanzaa celebrations are a moment of this awareness and reflection.