Sister Souljah
b. 1964
I never said I was an angel. Nor am I
innocent or holy like the Virgin Mary. What I am is natural and serious
and as sensitive as an open nerve on an ice cube. I'm a young black
sister with an unselfish heart who overdosed on love long ago. My closest
friends consider me soft-spoken. Others say I have a deadly tongue.
And while it's true that I have a spicy attitude like most of the ghetto
girls I know, I back it up with a quick, precise, and knowledgeable
mind. My memory runs way back and I'm inclined to remind people of the
things they'd most like to forget.
No Disrespect
Souljah was not born to make white people feel comfortable
I am African first, I am Black first
I want what's good for me and my people first
And if my survival means your total destruction, then so be it
You built this wicked system
They say two wrongs don't make a right
But it damn sure makes things even
The Hate That Hate Produced
--No Disrespect
Sister Soujah (Lisa Williamson) was born in 1964 in the Bronx, New
York. Her mother, who lived on and off the welfare system for approximately
15 years, raised her. She lived in government subsidized housing below
the poverty line, a cycle of poverty from which she later broke out.
She supplemented the education she received in what she calls the
white American School system by reading African history, which she
felt was purposely left out of the school curriculum. By doing so,
she feels she was able to become the well balanced, reassured woman
that she is. While in high school, she was Legislative intern in the
House of Representatives for the Republican Party. A winner of the
American Legion's Constitutional Oratory Contest, she attended Cornell
University's advanced placement summer program and the University
of Salamanca's study-abroad program in Spain. She later majored in
American History and African studies at Rutgers University, where
she was a well-known writer and political commentator for the university's
newspaper.
In the mid 1980s, while attending Rutgers University, she was offered
a job by Reverend Benjamin Chavis of The United Church of Christ Commission
for Racial Justice, which is a church-sponsored civil rights group.
She developed, organized, and financed, through hip-hop music, a sleep-away
summer camp called the African Survival Camp, located in Enfield,
North Carolina, for homeless families. The program lasted 3 years.
As a political activist, Sister Souljah is angered by the condition
of African American people throughout the entire world. Culturally,
she claims the so-called public education system has systematically
denied people the right to study and enjoy their culture and history.
Politically, she contends African Americans are not included in any
substantive, comprehensive agenda around economic development, foreign
policy, budget containment or social policy. She believes that African
Americans do not hold the capital to gain equitable economic power
to break the vicious cycle of discrimination and racism that goes
on in our country. She reflects these feelings in her writing and
in her songs. She feels it is her responsibility to help correct those
wrongs.
Sister Souljah is a strong, educated, opinionated black woman who
is at times seen as a threat to those that deny but are fully aware
of the conditions oppressing people of color. In fact, she was the
target of that when, in an interview with the Washington Post,
she made remarks that some believe advocate violence against whites.
Sister Souljah's response was, "The context in which my statements
were made in the Washington Post was this, and I paraphrase speaking
in the mind-set and in the mind of a gang member: Were you surprised
at what happened in L.A.? No. I was not. White people should not have
been surprised either; they knew that black people were dying everyday
in the streets of Los Angeles to gang violence created by poverty
and social chaos, but they did not care. If young black man in L.A.
would kill their kind, their own brothers and sisters, what would
make white people think they wouldn't kill them too? Do white people
think they're better, or is it that white death means so much more
then Black Death?"
Sister Souljah is also a humanitarian. In Zimbabwe she worked at
a medical center and also visited Mozambiquan refugee camps and traveled
throughout the South African region. She was also a notable speaker
at the Million Women march in Philadelphia. Her travels and lectures
have taken her all over America, Europe, and Africa. Currently, she
is Executive Director of Daddy's House Social Programs, established
by rap artist Sean Puffy Combs' non-profit company for children. This
program serves 600 children from ages 6 to 16 from the streets of
New York, New Jersey, and Philadelphia. The goal of Daddy's House
is to help children who have been mistreated by society, through helping
them gain confidence and to see themselves as powerful individuals.
Sister Souljah also educates teens about womanhood, manhood, and teen
pregnancy, and she teaches current events and history. She felt this
was a way of giving back to the community in which she lived.
In
her first book, No Disrespect, Sister Souljah writes very candidly
about the struggles of young black women growing up in a complex world,
surviving the obstacles of urban life and still being able to maintain
their integrity. It is also about women striving for sexual identity
and freedom that confronts every African-American--especially women.
She accomplishes this by using her own life experiences as a base
for this book. Sister Souljah's language is bold and some consider
vulgar, but necessary for the subject of this text. She felt writing
on this subject was necessary for the development of African females
in America, so she could influence their thought process in a positive
manner. She expresses these feelings in her book by describing, "the
ghetto girl whom nobody ever tells them the definition of womanhood
or manhood for that matter." Her voice has been spread throughout
the black community as she is considered a solid thinker who aggressively
expresses justifiable anger and hostility about the unfair practices
in America toward Afro-American people. In No Disrespect, she
sets the record straight on where she stands on life, love, spirituality
and race, concluding her book with a message for the reader to think
about: "Listen Up! Straighten It Out!"
Sister Souljah further displays her brilliant writing style in her
second novel, The Coldest Winter Ever. The language, the setting,
and the characters leaves one to question the depth of one's consciousness.
The tone was graphic and shocking yet intentional and deliberate--fiction,
indeed, but the realism should not go unnoticed. In comparison to
writer Toni Morrison, who replicates history through storytelling
in her novels, Sister Souljah is fueled by the anger she feels by
the the injustices done to Black people in history. "Yes, I am angry,
which means that I am sane. Only an undereducated and misguided African
person would not be angry at the racist White transgressions of this
society." The setting is in Brooklyn, New York, where she tells the
life and demise of a "kingpen" drug dealer and the accepting attitude
of a culture surviving yet birthing their own destruction. The story
was surreal and the characters were accurately depicted. She takes
the reader to a culture maybe unfamiliar yet accessible and understandable
through the events and personalities of the characters in the book.
The emotions she elicits are thought-provoking enough to generate
"change," which is ultimately her goal.
Sister Souljah as a hip-hop artist incorporated her views of black
injustices in her music. Her 1992 rap album, 360 Degrees of Power,
is a combination of all her thoughts, personal, and professional experience.
She states, "Any person who purchases my album will have a full understanding
of what I think and believe, although it was designed specifically
with the African community in mind. " Her video, "Final Solution:
Slavery's Back in Effect, brought her national attention for its
candor:
If your white great-great grandfather killed my great-great
grandfather,
And your white great grandfather sold my great grandfather,
And your grandfather raped my grandmother,
And your father stole, cheated, lied and robbed my father,
What kind of fool would I have to be to say "Come my friend" to the
White daughter and son.
Many criticized her for her graphic lyrics, claiming that her words
perpetuate hate among the races, but she feels that the hatred lies
not within words, but in a place far deeper. She writes: "At the root
of our confusion...is a mental function with or without our permission,
on both a conscious and subconscious level. We don't discuss this
problem though. It is a problem rooted in a forbidden topic. The forbidden
topic is, shh, slavery and the behavioral, mental, spiritual, and
money problems it caused. You know the little episode in history that
lasted only five and half centuries, which means only five hundred
and fifty years. This represents only twenty generations of black
folks." In her songs and writing, she reflects how the effects of
slavery still plague the African-American. It is like a wound that
never heals and an image that can never be forgotten. Sister Souljah
has decided to go against the majority and dedicate her life to seeking
a solution to these problems. Her struggle is not lost; in fact it's
only the beginning, for "One Must Return To The Past To Go Forward."
Selected Bibliography
Works by the Author
- The Coldest Winter Ever (1999)
- No Disrespect (1995)
Works about the Author
- Chambers, Gordan. "Souljah's Mission." Essence v22 Dec. 1991:
60.
- Douglas, Susan J. "Race, Rap, And White Blindness." The Progressive
v 56 Aug. 1992: 16.
- Gleick, Elizabeth. "And the Heat goes on." People Weekly
v37 June. 1992: 104-5.
- Neely, Kim. "Souljah's Bad Rap: Candidate Clinton Thrusts the Rapper-
Activist into the Spotlight." Rolling Stones Aug. 1992: 15+.
- Pryce, Vinette K. "Sister Souljah leads youth from Wall Street to
South Africa." New York Amsterdam News v 89 issue 30 July.
1998: 20.
- Rehak, Melanie. "The Drama of the Ghetto Child." The New York
Times Magazine May. 1999: 13.
- White Jack E. Jr. "Sister Souljah Capitalist Tool." Time
v139 June. 1992: 88.
Related Links
- Rock
Out Censorship - Statement by Sister Souljah
- www.theroc.org is the official website of Rock Out Censorship.
This site is a statement from Sister Souljah that provides biographical
information, explanations of her political positions, and a statement
about the controversy between her and President Clinton.
- Sister Souljah
- A brief bio on Sister Souljah.
- HarlemLive
- Information about Sister Souljah
This page was researched
and submitted by: Loretta Campbell,
Deena M. Jefferson, Regina
Perez, and Ambia Ricks
on 2/10/00.