No one Individual can Ever Rise Above the Condition of His People
- By Deric Muhammad
- Published 08/23/2009
- Economics
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Rating:




Deric Muhammad
Deric Muhammad is a Houston-based community activist who blogs at http://www.askbroderic.blogspot.com.
I recently attended a Saturday workshop where my younger brother and journalist, Jesse Muhammad, was a featured presenter. Afterward, I decided to take a shopping stroll through the Galleria Mall to exchange some merchandise. I’d parked near the Neiman Marcus entrance and was exiting to return to my car, bags in hand, when I noticed an upper middle aged White female getting out of her Cadillac.
As she started towards the mall entrance, the first person she saw was me; a clean-cut fellow wearing a custom made business suit and tie with both hands full of shopping bags. I had the white hanky in my pocket with spit-shined Italian shoes, cuff links and all. But when she clutched her purse and ignored my “how you doin?” I realized that all she saw was just another ni--- walking by.
It’s not like I’ve never experienced this before. Growing up as a young Black male in America I’ve had many a purse “clutched” as I walked by. And I thought that maybe it had something to do with the way I was dressed as a youth or the hole in my t-shirt because I was poor.
But while a lot has changed in my life, one thing hasn’t. I am still a Black man in America and whether I wear a Hugo Boss suit or sagging blue jeans I am still subject to the “old purse clutch.” When Harvard professor Henry Louis “Skip” Gates was arrested by the Cambridge Police Department for “being upset” in his own home he fell under the same law.
Professor Gates is too intelligent to believe that what happened to him does not happen to Black males every minute in America. He knows that racial profiling is a pandemic. He just did not imagine it happening to him after all the university hours he’s put in to become an internationally renowned scholar, educator, and historian.
Real talk, the professor on that day became a student again. He became a student of a phrase coined by the Honorable Elijah Muhammad that should be adopted as a law. It says that “no one individual can ever rise above the condition of his or her people.”
Brothers in the hood were like “welcome to the real world Professor Gates.” But Gates made the mistake of thinking that a certain social status, level of education, wealth and influence should have separated him from the discrimination that his people received daily. And while the hallways of his home were reportedly littered with photos of the professor taken with presidents, dignitaries and others that police officer saw him just as the old White lady in the Cadillac saw me the other day; just another ni----.
President Barack Obama fell under the same law during his recent visit to Russia. While greeting Russian dignitaries alongside Russia’s president he noticed that the dignitaries would shake everyone else’s hand but his. They refused to shake Obama’s hand.
And even though he is the President of the United States of America, they saw him just like that old White lady in the Cadillac saw me.
There goes that law again. How much higher can one rise in this world’s society except to become the President of the United States?
And if Obama can’t get around this law then any Black man or woman in America who thinks they can is a fool. Not even the late-great Michael Jackson could escape the law. Once he was no longer under “their control” they crucified him in the media, hurled false charges at him, made him undergo physical strip searches and treated him the same way they’d treat a petty drug dealer on a corner in Brooklyn.
For all intents and purposes they felt like they’d treated the master well. But Jesus made it clear when he said, Inasmuch as you have not done this to the least of these my people you have also not done it unto me. Jesus was saying that true progress can only be measured by what we do for the least of God’s people. When the least of our people rise we all rise.

When the Russians snubbed President Obama by refusing to shake his hand, it was a
reminder to him that in the eyes of many White people throughout the world, he is still just a another n***.
As she started towards the mall entrance, the first person she saw was me; a clean-cut fellow wearing a custom made business suit and tie with both hands full of shopping bags. I had the white hanky in my pocket with spit-shined Italian shoes, cuff links and all. But when she clutched her purse and ignored my “how you doin?” I realized that all she saw was just another ni--- walking by.
It’s not like I’ve never experienced this before. Growing up as a young Black male in America I’ve had many a purse “clutched” as I walked by. And I thought that maybe it had something to do with the way I was dressed as a youth or the hole in my t-shirt because I was poor.
But while a lot has changed in my life, one thing hasn’t. I am still a Black man in America and whether I wear a Hugo Boss suit or sagging blue jeans I am still subject to the “old purse clutch.” When Harvard professor Henry Louis “Skip” Gates was arrested by the Cambridge Police Department for “being upset” in his own home he fell under the same law.
Professor Gates is too intelligent to believe that what happened to him does not happen to Black males every minute in America. He knows that racial profiling is a pandemic. He just did not imagine it happening to him after all the university hours he’s put in to become an internationally renowned scholar, educator, and historian.
Real talk, the professor on that day became a student again. He became a student of a phrase coined by the Honorable Elijah Muhammad that should be adopted as a law. It says that “no one individual can ever rise above the condition of his or her people.”
Brothers in the hood were like “welcome to the real world Professor Gates.” But Gates made the mistake of thinking that a certain social status, level of education, wealth and influence should have separated him from the discrimination that his people received daily. And while the hallways of his home were reportedly littered with photos of the professor taken with presidents, dignitaries and others that police officer saw him just as the old White lady in the Cadillac saw me the other day; just another ni----.
President Barack Obama fell under the same law during his recent visit to Russia. While greeting Russian dignitaries alongside Russia’s president he noticed that the dignitaries would shake everyone else’s hand but his. They refused to shake Obama’s hand.
And even though he is the President of the United States of America, they saw him just like that old White lady in the Cadillac saw me.
There goes that law again. How much higher can one rise in this world’s society except to become the President of the United States?
And if Obama can’t get around this law then any Black man or woman in America who thinks they can is a fool. Not even the late-great Michael Jackson could escape the law. Once he was no longer under “their control” they crucified him in the media, hurled false charges at him, made him undergo physical strip searches and treated him the same way they’d treat a petty drug dealer on a corner in Brooklyn.
For all intents and purposes they felt like they’d treated the master well. But Jesus made it clear when he said, Inasmuch as you have not done this to the least of these my people you have also not done it unto me. Jesus was saying that true progress can only be measured by what we do for the least of God’s people. When the least of our people rise we all rise.

When the Russians snubbed President Obama by refusing to shake his hand, it was a
reminder to him that in the eyes of many White people throughout the world, he is still just a another n***.
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2 Responses to "No one Individual can Ever Rise Above the Condition of His People" 
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said this on 14 Sep 2009 9:23:17 AM MST
I passed this article to many of friends of mine of a similar experience he and I had while working at USA on the Shuttle program in the mid 90's . A woman or co -worker clutched her purse as we entered the elevator and we often laughed about it , but we knew the reality of it all, where we stood then and now.
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said this on 01 Nov 2009 1:41:50 AM MST
Dang man thats hard. How do you think that made President Obama feel. And he still had to keep going without cursing them out. I dont think I would have been able to resist making a scene. It would have made the news. I never heard about that though. What can we do about what other people think about us though? Nothing. Just say F it and keep on moving like president Obama did. It's their loss. It's darkness in their hearts and bitterness on their part, not on us. But you have to show kindness and forgive those people also so that it does not become darkness on our heart and bitterness on your part. Like Jesus Christ said, love your enemies also, because you ain't no better if you hate them also, but love only those who love you. Just paraphasing, but it's something like that.
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