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Icon says modern hip-hop ‘The Devil’

Jason Whitlock @WhitlockJason


Jul 15, 2013 at 1:00a ET

Over the past two weeks, I’ve written several columns decrying the diseased popular culture that baits high-
profile athletes to choose a mindlessly rebellious music culture over a superior, healthier athletic culture.

I pinpointed N-word-addicted rapper-turned-sports agent Jay-Z as the heir to the cultural throne once held
by Jackie Robinson, Joe DiMaggio, Johnny Unitas, Bill Russell and Michael Jordan. I argued that Jay-Z’s
ascension symbolized America’s dangerous and pervasive love affair with pop-culture anti-heroes such as
Tony Soprano and Walter White.

Criticizing Jay-Zesus is a sin in the black community. He’s been approved by our President. Jay-Z’s wealth,
to some, means he can do no wrong.

Predictably, my email inbox and Twitter timeline filled with angry black men and women calling me an
Uncle Tom, a sellout and a hater. People who are in no way offended by Jay-Z’s constant use of the N-word
were outraged that I labeled the Jigga Man a n*gga rapper.

To my surprise, one very important person was not offended at all. Dahveed Nelson, formerly David Jordan
Nelson, the driving force behind The Last Poets, emailed me to praise my column. Nelson and The Last
Poets are the fathers of rap/hip hop music. The politically charged, pro-black poems they performed over
drumbeats in the late 1960s and early 1970s birthed rap music.

“Jay-Z is getting well paid,” Dahveed told me Sunday during a 90-minute Facebook Skype. “He’s one of the
most wealthy people in America, certainly one of the wealthiest blacks and most influential, for being a
n*gger, for putting on blackface and coo*ing. That’s what he’s getting paid for.”

It’s going to be hard for anyone to argue that Dahveed Nelson is an Uncle Tom and a sellout. The Last Poets
were so militant and progressive that President Nixon had them placed under FBI surveillance. Nelson’s
infamous poem, Die N*gger, inspired the title of Black Panther member H. Rap Brown’s autobiography.
The rap group N.W.A. sampled Nelson performing the poem at the beginning of one of the group’s songs,
Real N*ggaz Don’t Die.

Four years ago, Nelson moved to Ghana, Africa. He lives there now. He’s 74 years old and still an active
basketball player. He’s a hoops junkie. That’s how he found my column. He reads my columns and listens to
my podcasts from Africa.

He’s not a sellout. He’s appalled by what rap music has become. He sued N.W.A. years ago for sampling his
voice and perverting the meaning of his poem (he regrets settling out of court).

“The message of my poem was just the opposite,” Nelson told me. “The message was for n*ggers to die so
the real black man could be resurrected and seek salvation. This whole hip-hop generation, it’s the devil. It’s
Satan. It’s hedonism. It’s the pursuit of pleasure. There’s no soul. They’ve captured our medium.”
I connected with Nelson on Sunday because I wanted to talk with him about the George Zimmerman trial.
Although I believe the jury reached the only logical conclusion based on the trial, I’m highly disappointed
Zimmerman was not held criminally responsible for following Martin, ignoring police instructions and
shooting a 17-year-old kid after losing a fight his pursuit instigated. Zimmerman and the Sanford police
force that initially bought Zimmerman’s explanation profiled Martin.

But they had an enthusiastic, unapologetic accomplice — N-word-addicted, gangsta rappers and the record
companies that pay and promote them. They have branded young black boys and men within pop culture as
criminal, violent and people to be feared. America is still a predominantly segregated society. We learn
about each other through TV, the entertainment industry.

Thug rappers and their employers are partially to blame for Zimmerman seeing a black kid in a hoodie and
immediately thinking “punk criminal.” The same group is also partially responsible for making young
people think it’s cooler to pose as a wannabe thug than a wannabe scholar.

“More than partially,” Nelson interrupted me. “I think you’re being conservative. You can put the blame
squarely on hip hop. It’s a marriage. It’s like the movie Django; you have those who collaborate with the
enemy. The enemy has its responsibilities, but you’ve got the collaborators. That’s what the whole hip-hop
culture is. I know the history of hip hop.

“The black cultural revolution that we had started was squashed by party and gangster rap music.”

Nelson isn’t afraid to call out the sacred cows.

“Russell Simmons was the first big pimp of hip hop,” Nelson said. “He had 99 million groups and only one
of them had any positive words to put into it and that was Public Enemy. Simmons and Jay-Z are pimps and
prostitutes.”

Nelson’s words read as angry, but they were said without animosity. He’s quite satisfied with his life in
Ghana. He’s the acting president of the African-American Association of Ghana. He speaks to students.
He’s a distance runner. He wants to put on a world tournament for basketball players over 50. His mind is
sharp. He effortlessly sang old rap songs, performed his infamous Die N*gger poem and praised socially
conscious rappers such as Lupe Fiasco.

Nelson even holds out hope that modern rap moguls such as Jay-Z and Simmons can change.

"I believe that righteous seeds gone astray can be redeemed, even pimps and prostitutes — I’m not angry
with either of them," he wrote me on Facebook. "I hope they repent, pray for the Creator’s pardon and turn
to a righteous path."

But Nelson can’t ignore the human and intellectual rot that is being caused by commercial American rap
music.

“You can see it in the kids in Africa,” he said. “The influence of the music is global.”

It’s going to be tough arguing the father of rap music is a sellout. Nelson’s critics will just have to claim he’s
too old to understand the brilliance of black folks defining themselves as N-words in music and all walks of
life.

It’s George Zimmerman profiling and shooting black boys like a video game in Chicago and every other
major American city. George-Z is the excuse we use not to check Jay-Z for profiling us for his ticket out of
the ghetto and into the White House.

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