Kwanzaa Creator Urges 'Do Good in the World'

Galloway, N.J. 鈥 Humans were chosen to bring good into the world, Dr. Mualana Karenga told an online audience at the 45th annual 番茄社区app Pre-Kwanzaa celebration Dec. 4.
鈥淯se your vocation to bring good into the world,鈥 said Karenga, the creator of Kwanzaa and its Seven Principles, and a professor and chair of the Department of Africana Studies at California State University-Long Beach.
He said Kwanzaa is a celebration of family, community and culture, and is especially
relevant during the current times of pandemic, social unrest, and global warming.
鈥淭here are two ways for us, the way of life, or of death. We must always choose life,鈥 Karenga said. 鈥淲e must get beyond the pandemic to address the other problems facing us.鈥
Karenga outlined the seven principles, - unity, self-determination, collective work and responsibility, cooperative economics, purpose, creativity and faith 鈥 and how they are reflected in personal actions and in the world. He advised viewers to remain strong in upholding them, even during difficult times.
鈥淟et it be said that we rode this storm and remained intact,鈥 Karenga said. 鈥淲e did not compromise our principles. Riding the storm and remaining intact is the lesson of history, the need of the present and the promise of our future.鈥
Donnetrice Allison, Director of Strategic Initiatives, coordinator of the Africana
Studies program and Professor of Africana Studies and Communication Studies, said
the program traditionally begins with a dance. The Kwanzaa programs were started
45 years ago by Dr. Patricia Reid Merritt, Distinguished Professor of Africana Studies
and Social Work, as an outgrowth of the first African American dance class offered
at the college in 1976. This year the dances, performed by the Afro One dancers
and students in the African American Dance, were pre-recorded. Reid Merritt also
offered a traditional libation ceremony to honor ancestors 鈥 鈥渢hose we did not know
but those whose stories are told to us; those who have been part of our struggles;
those who lifted our spirits.鈥
The program ended with a candle-lighting ceremony recognizing the seven principles of Kwanzaa, which begins Dec. 26.
鈥淲e miss seeing you all on campus,鈥 said Amaiya Roundtree, president of the Unified Black Students Society, which coordinates the pre-Kwanzaa program. 鈥淲e hope you enjoy the program. We worked hard to put it together.鈥
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