“I think the
notion of Black love in this book is an
answer to the hatred that has taken
place between Black men and Black women.
Something has been poured in the waters
of the Black community that has made
hate and animosity more understood than
love itself...
Reading this book
will hopefully spark the necessary
conversation needed to find the love
within ourselves to connect to one
another again… Any community dialogue
involving healing, relationships, or
renewal will find this book an essential
tool, thus making it possible to find
and totally unlock the love that has
been missing between the Black man and
woman.
Peace.”
n
Rapper Chuck D of Public Enemy in the
Foreword (page 13)
I have read a lot
of love advice books in my lifetime, but
never one that
Offered such a
compelling history lesson in the process
of talking about how to have a
successful relationship. When it comes
to African-Americans, this approach
might make sense, provided you buy the
idea that the fallout from the trauma of
slavery continues to radiate like a
ripple on a pond and to have a profound
effect on how black men and women
interact with each other.
Those
who would say that’s just an excuse
since black folks have been emancipated
for generations would do well to heed
the sage words of William Faulkner, a
white Southerner, who freely
acknowledged: “The past isn’t dead. In
fact, it isn’t even past.” This is the
crux of the argument postulated by Kamau
and Akilah Butler in The Love Ethic, a
compassionate examination of the black
battle-of-the-sexes viewed through the
prism of the oppressive African-American
ordeal in the U.S.
The
authors bring a plethora of personal and
academic insight to the project, for not
only are they a happily-married couple
raising a young son together in Chicago,
but they are also each in the process of
completing a Ph.D., Akilah in Sociology,
Kamau in Social Service Administration.
These skills add immeasurably to their
ability to deconstruct and discuss in
often vivid detail the ramifications of
the dehumanization of Africans and the
systematic breakup of the black family
for centuries on end.
Thus,
we see how the sexualization and rape of
sisters by plantation owners and their
being forced to mate with strangers for
breeding purposes rather than for love
when added to the inability of
emasculated brothers to protect their
females have contributed to a distance
and distrust still in evidence. But not
to worry, for The Love Ethic does
provide the answer to the unfortunate
standooff in 13 principles to be
implemented by anyone eager to heal
themselves in order to experience “the
magnificent possibilities that Black
love holds.”