We Must Go Back
For quite some time now, I have often wondered just what exactly happened to the wonderful town where I grew up. I have
also lamented about the local legends and heroes whose community contributions and positive attitudes influenced me so
much as I grew to understand what it really meant to be independent, responsible, yet humbly patient, productive, creative
and fiercely respectful of myself and others.
Omaha, Nebraska, more specifically, North Omaha, was once a thriving and diverse community. There were once Black and
White owned businesses up and down 24th street, the main thoroughfare that separated North Omaha from South Omaha.
Automotive repair shops, doctors, nurses, dentist, lawyers, community based organizations for adults and youth, grocery/
variety stores, night clubs, social clubs, barbershops, beauty salons, bars, record shops, restaurants, theaters, hotels,
pharmacies, and wonderful public schools and churches of all denominations, populated the area. Over the years much of
what was once an influential, positive and certainly thriving community has given way to apathy, fear and mediocrity.
North Omaha today has become much like the war in Afghanistan and Iraq. The senseless youth sectarian –like violence, the
failure of the community leaders and City, State and Federal officials to (1) see, (2) recognize (3) address, their issues and
needs and/or (4) come to a timely consensus on solutions that fix the problems, all remind me of the same fractional
discourse that is part and partial the problem in both Afghanistan and Iraq today. That sense of family, that sense of
community and that sense of respect are all attributes that appear, somehow, and for some reason, to have given way to
selflessness, greed and ambivalence. Although it would be easy for me to continue to state the obvious with regard to the
current conditions in North Omaha; I would be remiss in not suggesting a historical solution.
Our Children are Dying for a Reason to Live…..
If we do not teach our children by example, then we only have ourselves to blame for who they become. The veracity of
those individuals, who dare stand before you and state if we just continue to wait everything will be just fine or claim that all is
well, when it is not, is simply unfathomable. Lack of or lost family values, direction and /or community support, inadequate
health care, illiteracy, poor high school and grade school test scores, youth violence, and adult/ youth unemployment, alcohol/
substance abuse, youth incarceration and peer pressure are but a few areas that should be of the highest priority among
those who seem to do more talking about the problems than implementing solutions.
The Color of Murder Should Not Be Black…..
It has become abundantly clear and painfully obvious to me that the problems in North Omaha are not just unique to North
Omaha. These problems exist in predominately Black neighborhoods thru out this country. The reasons for the proliferation of
many of these problems lie with you and me. Local and national crime statistics indicate that the murder of Black people by
other Black people is extremely alarming and inexplicably disproportionate when compared to murders within any other non-
Black group. If a Black person is murdered by a non-Black person, the Black community will demand immediate redress from
those deemed responsible. However, Black on Black murders within the Black community appear to have become so
common place, as if to say it is acceptable if we murder one another but you as a non-Black person cannot murder a Black
person. Murder IS Murder.
While erecting statues, renaming buildings, and/or naming streets and parks after some of our deceased local community
leaders out of respect for their individual accomplishments are great, it is simply not enough.
The legacies of our local legends, heroes and 'sheroes', to be politically correct, have not been emphasized in our homes,
local radio and television stations and/or specifically taught in our local public schools, churches or presented prominently in
the local public Libraries. Our children are out of balance. They are devoid of the historical facts and knowledge of their local
community forefathers. We need to give them more options to choose from, to correct that existing imbalance and insist these
changes be immediately implemented. We have an obligation, if not a duty, to keep our children out of harm’s way.
A Time for Change….
Curricula will need to change in our local grade and local high schools to include the legacies of positive local heroes/ role
models, some of whom are still with us. Those who have passed on, but left a lasting legacy of their historical
accomplishments should be constantly and consistently highlighted. Attitudes will need to change. There was a time when
being the good guy was ‘cool’. However, the youth of today are being bombarded with the message “it is cool to be bad.” The
anger, confusion and frustration are all evident in the behavior of our children. If you put today’s child in a room by himself or
herself an argument will breakout. This would help explain the propensity towards youth violence at most Rap concerts. The
Rap music industry including the local radio, national cable radio, cable television and local television stations do little if
anything to balance their programming with realistic messages educating, emphasizing and defining positive local heroes.
Although the Federal Communication Commission (FCC) mandates that a dedicated cable access channel be made available
in most local communities, demographics suggest those ‘at risk and targeted’ youth do not listen to nor watch cable access
channels except to give rise to their own self created, and in most cases, unrealistic and imaginary, Rap music careers. Any
positive messages that need to reach the youth should purposely target at risk youth. They should be embedded and
delivered through the more prominent, popular and appropriate local radio and television channels, locally as well as
nationally. Unless and until we, as a community, understand the historical value, relevance and significant influence, of the
local hero, North Omaha’s most precious commodity, our children, their fate and their future, specifically the young Black
men, will remain in the hands of unscrupulous rap music producers/ distributors and City and State law enforcement officials
and last but not least, the local Coroner.
Feeding the Content of our Children’s Character….
We must go back, but not as far back as segregation; but far enough to re-establish, re-affirm and re-adjust our own positive
value system in our own historical foundation that has been long ignored or torn asunder. We need to remind those who have
either honestly forgotten to remember, purposely choose to forget or that never really knew that as a practical matter… ‘Our
children will have no idea whose shoulders they stand upon without us informing them about the heritage of their forefathers.’
Were it not for God’s Grace and Mercy, and our intervention, that light at the end of the tunnel, for a great number our
children, would appear to be an on-coming train and not that light of hope that signals a brighter tomorrow.
In August of 2005 the Omaha Black Music Hall of Fame (OBMHOF) was establish to recognize and honor the careers of
many great musicians and singers whose musical roots began in Omaha, Nebraska. Some 40 musicians and singers from
the 1930’s (some posthumously) were honored at an event held at Harrah’s Casino Council Bluffs, Iowa. A scholarship
program has been established in the names of those who were inducted into this inaugural event. This historical event will
continue in August, 2007 at the Qwest Center, Omaha but will expand to include Gospel and inspirational community leaders
whose contributions to the local community have largely been forgotten or ignored. It is my belief that our children especially
those ‘at risk’ youth can and will relate to those local heroes from their community who look like them. A change will come if
we get involved.
Janelle Mullen, Curriculum and Learning Coordinator for the Omaha Public Schools (OPS) has agreed to support the efforts
of the OBMHOF by creating programs in the Omaha Public School system that will recognize and teach about those inducted
and agreeing to use the historical facts produced by and for the Omaha Black Music Hall of Fame in that process.
Rivkah Sass, Executive Director, for the Omaha Public Library, has also agreed to support our efforts by helping us create
programs in the Omaha Public Library system that will recognize and honor those local heroes inducted into the Omaha Black
Music Hall of Fame. Your endorsement and support of this project is needed to insure implementation and continued
success.
WELCOME HOME NATIVE OMAHANS