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Racial Chauvinism

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Ms. Njeri strikes the nail squarely on the head when she dares to write, “Too much of Afrocentrism reflects a dangerously romantic nationalism.” I’m black, but take no particular pride in being black as I don’t consider my blackness a personal accomplishment of any note; it’s merely genetic coding for which I have no understanding or responsibility.

It’s academic to me who reared the pyramids, black men or white men. I don’t need to embrace the “Eve theory” or the argument that Cleopatra was black in order to feel valid. Fact is, this black man is from Upstate New York--about as far from Africa as Mongolia. My ethics, politics and aesthetic are fundamentally the same as every other American’s, born of and shaped by a synthesis of myriad influences: Plato and King; Christ and Freud; suffragists and Freedom Riders; Praxiteles and Picasso; Ellington and Scarlatti.

Racial chauvinism ultimately leads to a dead end. The hope of all the peoples of America, indeed, all the peoples of the Earth, lies in the meld.

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And could anyone, please, definitively explain to me what is an African-American? When and whence sprang this new being? Is there a creation mythology to accompany the spontaneous generation of this new being--for instance, was he shaped from the Earth, formed of the rib of man, or is he, perhaps, some higher metamorphosis of what were formerly “Negroes”?

RICHARD BOYCE

Los Angeles

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