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Hip Hop - Turning Outrage Into Power
t: {Disarmed} [tupocc] Fwd: Hip Hop - Turning Outrage Into Power
 
 Pretty cool article for those of you who love hip hop as a political tool.
 
 
 Turning Outrage Into Power
 
 By Malik Cooper, WireTap
 
 Alternet -- August 16, 2006
 
 http://www.alternet.org/story/40441/
 
 Saying hip-hop is global now isn't telling you
 something you don't already know, unless you have been
 living under a rock since Planet Rock first dropped.
 But using the art form for political gains is something
 new, and spearheading this movement is the National Hip
 Hop Political Convention (NHHPC).
 
 The 2006 NHHPC in Chicago -- the second biennial
 convention -- opened on July 20 and over the course of
 three days engaged over 1,000 participants in the
 debates over issues like misogyny in hip-hop, media
 justice, the aftermath of Katrina, grassroots activism,
 organizational leadership and electoral politics. The
 convention closed with a concert on Saturday featuring
 Dead Prez, Chicago Poets and Boots Riley among many
 other artists.
 
 NHHPC was founded in late 2002 when some elders pulled
 organizers from all over the country for the first
 national convention in New Jersey that aimed at
 creating a political agenda for the hip-hop community.
 I first got involved at this time, as we worked at
 finding the issues of our community. Born and raised in
 California's Bay Area, I had been speaking publicly
 since a young age, but became really active when I
 finished filming MTV's Real World series. After the
 show I traveled as a motivational speaker to colleges
 and got involved with youth organizations committed to
 the fight against Big Tobacco. Through a good friend I
 got invited to the Bay Area's Local Organizing
 Committee (Bay-LOC) meeting, and began to get involved
 in hip-hop politics.
 
 Like other local organizers around the country, we went
 around our community with issue sheets for people to
 fill out, which we used to create a state agenda.
 During the state convention individuals from over 30
 states and Puerto Rico came together and created a
 national agenda. By February 2005, a group of different
 LOC members had a retreat in Atlanta and formed a
 national body with a steering committee whose goals
 were to help bring local groups together and facilitate
 any national work that needed to be done.
 
 After Bay-LOC returned to California, we began to
 organize a local Hip Hop Summit at Laney College in
 Oakland in September 2005. One day of workshops and a
 concert, which included performances from Dead Prez and
 E40, attracted thousands. We had support and speeches
 from Rep. Barbara Lee and Bay-LOC's own Dereca
 Blackman, and handed out voter guides, which we rewrote
 in new language that identified with the hip-hop
 generation.
 
 Around the same time, the Chicago-LOC began working as
 a host committee for the next convention. It was up to
 them to handle the event program, and the event's
 success can only be attributed to their hard work.
 
 The convention itself started with a dialogue between
 organizers of past movements like Civil Rights and
 Black Power, including Fred Hampton Jr. (Prisoners Of
 Conscience Committee), Cliff Kelley (WVON Radio Host),
 Angela Woodson (Federation of Democratic Women), and
 writer and activist Amina Norman-Hawkins. Organizers
 both young and old felt this was needed, since many
 believed the torch was never passed on to the new
 generation.
 
 Hip-hop politics today -- as I see it -- identifies
 strongly with the Black Power movement; the lyrics in
 conscious rap resonate with ideals of Malcolm X and
 self-determination. The Bay Area especially identifies
 with the Black Panthers since its roots are found here.
 But all over the globe -- and even in early days of
 hip- hop, when most music came from New York -- lyrics
 focus on the social ills and mistreatment of people of
 color in this country. The same "fuck the system"
 attitude gave birth to gangsta rap. And although the
 majority of it now focuses on the material and the
 misogynistic, early pioneers of the art form told the
 world what was going on or was absent in their
 neighborhoods. In other countries like Brazil,
 Venezuela, Cuba -- today more than ever -- hip-hop
 serves this same purpose.
 
 Not everyone at the convention represented a LOC, and
 with the alliance building that had been taking place
 since the NHHPC's inception, I saw other hip-hop groups
 like the Hip Hop Congress represented there in full
 force, leading workshops and hosting the concert piece.
 The League of Young Voters had a huge presence, and not
 only helped raise money for the convention but also
 taught workshops on branding the hip-hop political
 movement, lobbying, base building and electoral
 politics.
 
 The first day's workshops seemed geared at creating
 better methods of organizing the organizers. Panels and
 workshops focused on alliance building, using art for
 activism, political prisoners, organizing against war
 and occupation, hip-hop and gender politics,
 nonviolence strategies, and the use of electoral
 politics.
 
 On that Friday afternoon, a jam-packed room of folks
 from all over the country listened to Kali Acunu
 (Jericho Amnesty Movement), Troy Nkrumah, (chair of the
 NHHPC steering committee), and chairman Fred Hampton
 Jr. (Prisoners Of Conscience Committee) talk about the
 many political prisoners that are currently
 incarcerated. Harman Bell, Kamau Sadiki, Zolo Azania
 Ojora Lutalo, Rodney Coronado, and Veronza Bowers were
 a few of the names mentioned. Rapper Immortal Technique
 event came in and voiced his support on the issue, and
 it definitely was one of the most informative panels.
 
 Saturday, July 21, seemed to begin with many issue-
 based workshops and panels on education, criminal
 justice, health and wellness, Katrina, immigration,
 gender rights, white privilege in hip-hop, and media
 justice. The media justice panel included Lisa Fager
 (Industry Ears) and Davey D (Hardknock Radio/Breakdown
 FM), who talked about a variety of subjects like the
 media's control over hip-hop and net neutrality. The
 immigration and gender rights were two new issues added
 to the 2006 agenda. I led the panel on gender rights,
 whose purpose was to expose some of the misogynistic
 rap lyrics in a social context, allowing participants
 to better understand why the popular rap pushed by
 record executives and radio stations seem so focused on
 portraying negative images.
 
 After the panels were over, a concert was thrown with a
 battle between local folks. Using all the elements of
 hip-hop, from rapping, break dancing, DJ-ing and
 graffiti, crews took to the stage to compete for a
 $1,000 prize. Afterward, local conscious artists like
 Akbar, and national artists like Dead Prez and Immortal
 Technique gave amazing performances. Even Chicago's
 rain and thunder could not clear the crowd formed at
 Mandrake Park.
 
 Sunday was a day for the national steering committee to
 hear the voices of participants. Delegates representing
 different LOCs, artists and organizers for different
 groups were allowed to change the agenda and recommend
 action steps that the LOCs can take home and start
 implementing. The location for the next convention will
 be announced soon. Will it be back East in New York,
 down South in Atlanta, out West in the Bay Area, or
 will newly formed but highly active Las Vegas LOC take
 the 2008 to its Red State? We shall have to wait and
 see.
 
 The organization as a whole has a talent at balancing
 the varied political views of its members, some of
 which seek to fight for social justice through
 electoral politics, while others seemed more determined
 to fight through grassroots activism. The way these
 varied ideologies have still found a way to work
 together for a common goal is why the NHHPC is still
 going and growing strong. The structure with no leader
 but still led strong through the local organizing
 committee gives this organization a type of strength
 that I have not seen in many other organizations that
 function more top-down. I believe this unique model
 will help keep their work relevant, and the
 organization intact.
 
 ===
 For more information about the NHHPC, or to learn how
 to start a LOC (Local Organizing Committee) in your
 area, go to HipHopConvention.org.
 
 [Malik Cooper is the national spokesperson for the
 NHHPC, as well as a Bay-LOC member. He also owns a
 silk- screening and embroidery shop called People's
 Choice Printing.]
 
 © 2006 Independent Media Institute. All rights
 reserved.
 
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