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Political Education

Political Education 101

by Nicole Crawford 11/26/2024
written by Nicole Crawford

At NOMMO Magazine we believe that journalism and storytelling are not only means of communicating but also a means of educating the public on ways to resist colonial truths and reclaim indigenous ways of knowing, learning, and relating to one another. This is why we are launching a new series of articles and programs that are specifically oriented to challenging our readers and community members to reframe the lens through which they perceive themselves, society, and the structural violence that we all endure.

In this series, we will cover excerpts from prominent educators, revolutionaries, community organizers and artists in hopes of making this knowledge and practice of political education more accessible and digestible for us all. We hope that these articles and the discussion questions that follow them will inspire you all to challenge your internal contradictions and take on a more proactive approach in our fight against oppression, colonialism, imperialism, and white supremacy on campus and more importantly, in the world around us.

To find the latest articles and discussion questions that we explore, please look under the Political Education section of our website.

Our existence is inherently political, every interaction that we have is inherently political; and although this reality can be overwhelming, we hope that providing further context for our lives and a way to study our histories will provoke you all to explore new modes of resistance and give you a sense of renewed hope for our futures.

All Power to the People,

NOMMO STAFF ’24-’25

11/26/2024 0 comments
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Arts & EntertainmentBlack HistoryCulturePoetry

Generational Curses III

by Nicole Crawford 11/21/2023
written by Nicole Crawford

you struggle to meet the eyes of the houseless within your community because you too cannot afford groceries or your lifestyle or rent, but you would rather turn your nose up to your reflections in hopes that if you ignore the mirrors around you for long enough they will disappear

but they won’t, they never do 

whether you see monsters or martyrs within your reflections you must understand that these are remnants of you too

what was lost and what is found within these moments of pause are the truth of this existence, the beginning of an internal dialogue that pushes us into action if we are able to hear the sounds of our own voices in the midst of the chaos 

the voices that tell us that as we run from who we are we become all that we fear and not because this life is some game of luck and misfortune but because we live within a world that chooses to let us “survive”, not as whole beings, but as false prophets  

and so as long as we deny our ancestral truths, the truths that show us that apathy only creates further division but neglects to feed starving children, we are “safe”

but I ask you, what is safety without freedom? 

safety here is to be fully conformed in the eyes of the oppressor and no longer a threat to the empire that gives us false names and applauds our confusion so much so that we struggle to mutter oshun, shango, ogun or yemaya in our native tongues because we have forgotten who to call or because we fear that it is too late to reclaim what they have stolen 

know that to survive this hell is to first see yourself in your entirety, to know who you are and where you have come from, to know that this is not home and cannot be made into one, and that the mirrors around you reflect truth, not pity 

we cannot afford to be blind to the reality of our sisters and brothers and the distant relatives who we may not have known in this life but surely will in the next

as long as there are mouths to feed and bodies to clothe we have more work to do here

and as I believe that we are all that we have left, we cannot afford to live and love as false prophets, we cannot afford to see anything less than the truth of this reality 

we need one another to survive, but to see ourselves as one, to truly be whole, means to look one another in the eyes 

11/21/2023 0 comments
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Arts & EntertainmentBlack HistoryCulturePoetry

Generational Curses II

by Nicole Crawford 11/21/2023
written by Nicole Crawford

sacred minds can see and think in tune with the frequency that is the universe 

that is our ancestors 

that is you

that is I(eye)

and you, my dear, are of the most divine, that mind so sublime that even when you find yourself at a loss you know you are right on time… exactly where you are 

lean into the magic that is the silver line between betrayal of one’s first perceptions and freedom, that inner knowing that allows you to be in your fullest form not because you want to be but because you are aware that all of what we know is a lie, that we are still in captivity even if you like to “think” otherwise 

it is in this shared consciousness that we heal what’s unspoken  

“there is truth in your vision, it is ok to see all that you see” is what a wise man once told me 

and I believe this to be true about you and i  

however, as we hold these truths we have a great responsibility to not only build upon them and create new realities but to sit in the discomfort that it is to know that you too are responsible for this moment, here and now 

i know that the grief and loss we share are not enough to move you because you require honesty, a mirror to see that what you have lost is not another but a part of yourself, your friend, your neighbor, your elders, and the children who carry this knowledge forth into the future 

and the problem is that we always feel like we have more time to get it right but never enough for presence, and I do not blame you

they convince you that the time you have is limited and that because you are running out you must use it wisely, on things that matter…

feeding your family first and then yourself, and then those shoes and an eighth because we might as well be high if we’re in hell…

and a drink too because you deserve it, but never enjoy it for too long because you do have work in the morning and bills to pay and something will come up 

and you must be on your best behavior if you want to treat yourself again next week(end) 

and so the cycle repeats

until you realize that the time they claim you are losing was already taken from you when they stripped you of your connections to the soils that brought you into existence and made you into the being whose heart aches in this sea of loss and destruction because we have indeed drifted so far from home, that at times it seems we may never return 

but know that this here, this presence, cannot be taken from you 

and in this serenity, we find clarity, peace, strength, and the light that guides us back home again and again

the time you lost is recovered in the history that lives inside of you

so look closely in the mirrors that surround you, into the heartbeat of this community

know you are indeed home and give thanks that these curses are broken with your power alone 

but know that this power comes from the love that surrounds you 

so let it surround you as we build our way back home

11/21/2023 0 comments
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Arts & EntertainmentBlack HistoryCulturePoetry

Generational Curses I

by Nicole Crawford 11/21/2023
written by Nicole Crawford

our elders outlive our youths

and we are left infatuated first, 

then desensitized 

to the menticide that is to see your own death replayed on big screens, on tvs, in these streets…

because when one dies, the way in which we continue cannot be the same, it is not life 

and all of this is survived just for them to tell you to move so they can wash the blood away 

this is just one way in which they pollute your mind, erase your dreams, and tear down your sky 

if you open your eyes, you now see that this game of life and death is only played for the entertainment of those who keep you in line 

because my love, that “prize” could never be yours even if your name was engraved upon it

so now you know how to die before you have learned to live 

and if accepted you are unable to recognize yourself, when you have helped an enemy, when you’ve murdered a friend… 

because there is no silver lining here, not for us; just tragedy 

and the cycle repeats… 

however, this is not an end, because it cannot be 

so the next time you want to lie down or turn your eyes 

remember that acceptance is suicide and we cannot afford to die 

not now at least 

in these times 

when our elders outlive our youths 

understand their attempts to erase you 

because even if in disbelief, you know deep down that you deserve to grow old, to live long enough to dream 

11/21/2023 0 comments
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NewsOpinionWorld

Comfort Kills, and We are Dying Slowly

by Nicole Crawford 11/11/2023
written by Nicole Crawford

In the last month, the global black and brown indigenous communities have been waking up to how western hegemony, capitalism, imperialism, and colonialism are ruining all of our lives. Furthermore, the indisputable fact that all of our lives and struggles are interconnected and interdependent became crystal clear, whether we have been occupying the lands of Turtle Island and fighting against the oppressive police state and hyper-surveillance, or fighting against settler-colonialism and exploitation in Haiti and Palestine. Our minds and souls have begun the long and painful process of unlearning colonial truths and two things have become unquestionable to those who have been searching for answers to these problems: first, we (black and brown indigenous peoples of the world) are at war no matter where we are in the world, and second, our enemy is the same. However, with significant leverage, some could argue that this truth is not one that our comrades within the Global South could afford to ignore and that those living in Nigeria, Haiti, Sudan, Syria, and Palestine have been violently exposed to the reality of this world for decades if not centuries. This leaves one pivotal question: if the majority of the pan-Afrikan diasporic and black and brown indigenous communities of the globe are conscious and principled in their struggle against the western capitalist empire, how have those in the west, who are part of these global communities, failed to realize the dangers we all face until now? Why is it only when the traumas of our brothers and sisters are so hyper-sensationalized in the media that we can no longer ignore it that we choose to act or begin to question the fallacies and propaganda we consume daily? Why does it take publicisation of an ethnic cleansing and active genocide that has been ongoing for decades for us to feel the need to act? I will provide a simple answer: we who live in the west are too comfortable. 

The problem is that those in the west have grown to be absent-minded and the curiosities that allow us to imagine a different world have dissipated as a result of our constant exposure to propaganda. You would assume that those who live within the belly of the beast would be able to recognize that we are not at war with some hungry dog that simply needs to be fed and coddled in order to make our existence tolerable, but that this beast has an insatiable appetite for violence and capital, so no matter how much it is fed, it will always desire to swallow us whole. But the propaganda of american exceptionalism tells us that we are different, that our systems cannot be abolished as they are the pillars upon which the rest of the world stands, and that reform is the only tangible solution as abolition is not only “too radical” but also “unrealistic”. To those who have yet to wake up to the dangers we face, I scream “WE CANNOT REFORM OUR WAY OUT OF OPPRESSION”. The principle of reform allows the institutions that uphold racism, capitalism, xenophobia, and imperialism to exist in the hopes of bending global elites to the will of our desires. It requires pandering to soulless entities in the hopes of swaying them into humanizing us, completely ignoring the fact that our systems are not “broken” but in fact working so well that we have begun to cosign our own demise. But Assata Shakur says it best, “only a fool lets somebody else tell him who his enemy is” and more importantly “nobody in history, has ever gotten their freedom by appealing to the moral sense of the people who were oppressing them”. 

We are too close to the problem to admit that we benefit from it and are, in fact, part of said problem. The process of returning to indigenous ways of knowing and restoring our understanding and connections to our histories is one of uncomfortable introspection. We first must become disgusted with ourselves and our compliance with the dehumanization of those around us to begin to see our struggles through an internationalist lens. Most are simply unwilling to admit this. Most refuse to face themselves and that there is no grey area here, there is no compromise. Most refuse to acknowledge that you cannot vote your way into and out of freedom, that these systems are designed to fail us, and that we are only setting our immediate and international communities back by continuing to partake in the charade that is the amerikkkan political arena. It is our responsibility to become uncomfortable with the privileges that we have been given. The privilege that tells us that when we are “overwhelmed” by the truth we can look away, and that thoughts and prayers are enough to keep our comrades safe. Nothing we have done thus far has been enough, nothing we have done thus far has worked. The last two weeks of Palestinian resistance have made this abundantly clear, just as it was in 2020 when we watched the public lynching of George Floyd and again when we protested the war in Afghanistan that was funded by our taxes. Active genocides are being committed against Palestinians and the Congolese on the dime of both those who voted for Biden as a democratic savior and “lesser of two evils” and those who voted for Trump in the years prior. Understand clearly that no matter who is ruling the empire, the fascist and white supremacist regime will always value capital over the lives of black and brown people. Therefore, by virtue of our existence in the belly of the beast, we are complicit in its crimes against humanity. There is no amount of think pieces, community healing circles, reading, or civic action that can be done to rectify the harm caused by our presence here. The sooner that we realize this, the sooner we can take real action toward dismantling the systems of oppression that keep us stagnant. But as long as we are comfortable, and as long as our love of comfort holds more weight than our love for humanity, we will continue to treat our one good deed a year as a confessional that wipes our conscience clean while we still label those who can’t afford the comforts we have stolen as dope fiends. Be wary of the fingers you point to those around you, as the greatest addictions we must break are those to our comforts that enable the dissociation and apathy we fall into. Understand that dissociation and apathy are of the most cruel responses to death and ask yourself: do our martyrs not deserve to know your heart, to feel your grief that affirms your love for their humanity? Dissociation and apathy do not absolve you of your compliance in the evils we see, they make you a coward. Be brave enough to feel deeply. Be brave enough to fight against the habitual comforts we seek when we are met with the truth. Be brave enough to love and to grieve. 

We must change the ways in which we navigate this world and understand that of everyone who exists on this planet, we are the most responsible for the tragedies and devilry we have seen unfolding in the Middle East, the Caribbean, in Panama, and on the continent of Afrika. It is only in accepting our compliance and responsibility that we can then transmute the shame and guilt that comes with this into tangible steps towards the total liberation and autonomy of all black and brown indigenous peoples around the globe. 

As a final note, I will leave all who read this with a reminder of the importance of honoring our ancestors as we engage in collective struggle:

We cannot know where we are going and who we are to become if we do not know who and where we have come from, a principle of Sankofa. Our struggles have remained the same for centuries, it is only in acceptance of this: our common enemy, our divine love that transcends generations and gives us strength to move through the darkness of this world as the epitome of light, that we can set ourselves and our comrades free. The most important thing you can do in this fight is to first decolonize your mind, all other impactful actions will naturally follow. Practice without theory is reckless and dangerous and theory without practice makes you nothing more than an egotistical mouthpiece.  

Without this understanding, we fall back into complacency, and the evils of the western fascist empires begin to surprise us and we succumb to a grief so heavy that we can no longer think or act. Your mind is the tool that allows you to feel grief and transcend this into action. I urge you to your internal gardens, know and feel deeply that you have never been alone, that we are all connected and therefore we have to fight, we have to speak, we have to act. This is so much bigger than any of us alone. and we will remain protected as long as we know who we are.

11/11/2023 0 comments
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