Trials of a Hip Hop Educator: 'Taking
Something Out of Nothing and Making It Big!' A Sign of What We Can Accomplish Collectively
My Reflections of the Born In The Bronx Hip Hop Conference at Cornell University
By Tony Muhammad
Hiphopeducator19@gmail. com
www. myspace.
com/tonymuhammad
From October 31st through November 1st I had the pleasure and honor of attending Born
In The Bronx, A Conference Celebrating Hip Hop at Cornell University in Ithaca,
(upstate) New York. A very interesting thing I learned about Ithaca and the towns that surround it
before attending the conference is the painful and haunting reminders of racism and genocide found
throughout in the form of signs, stressing that it was through the destruction of Native American
communities that paved the way for their development. Also, Cornell University itself was one of
various schools in the country that experienced protests in the late 1960s on the part of Black students in
response to their mistreatment on campus, leading to the creation of a well developed Africana Studies
program at the university. And now, well after 30 years after the birth of Hip Hop, a culture that has played a
significant role in influencing the election of this country's first Black president, its pioneers
and their rich early history are celebrated and honored at this Ivy League school. This I interpreted as
being a sign of change; a breaking away from intellectual elitism and the beginning stages of embracing "the
strength of street knowledge.
"
In self-reflecting, I was very inspired by this event because for the six and a half years that I was in higher
education I was made to feel like I had to put "a silly thing" known as Hip Hop in the closet and now embrace
academia in its place. Mind you, I had always been moved to increase my knowledge base but not at the expense of
abandoning a strong part of what I consider to be my culture, what has played a strong role in making me into the man
that I am today. Truly, in my schooling there was an attempt by academic forces to carve a void into my very soul.
What these forces never understood back then (and still to a good degree even today) is that when I was searching
for answers to world problems as a youth, I didn't tune into CNN to get the perspective of
"experts.
" When the Rodney King Riots broke out in 1992 I tuned into Yo! MTV Raps the Saturday after
they took place in which Fab 5 Freddy was interviewing artists and getting their
perspectives of what was really "going down.
" To myself, the most memorable voice of reason out of that experience was from KRS-One who
commented in response to the rioting, "This is not the way … What we need to do is organize, mobilize and handle this
intelligence." To me, these statements made perfect sense and drove me to feel that I should get
involved in some kind of way.
Also, the fact that Islam was embedded in the language of the music for a period of over 15 years inspired me to
study and question my own identity as a "Latino" growing up in South Florida. In 1996 I came to accept
Islam as my way of life.
In 2000 I joined the Nation of Islam with the focus and aim of working to improve the conditions of my
community and my people.
In 2001 I became part of a team of ex-college students that were fed up with the low state of Hip Hop of the time and the
damaging effect it was having on the youth, which resul
My Refle
By Tony Muham
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