The Complex Meaning of a Simple Word

PUBLISHED NOVEMBER 14, 2007

I was tired of waiting for my future. I was standing in a line, waiting for my turn to be interviewed at the dreaded U.S. Embassy in Accra. The lounge was packed with people who may have been there for the first time, or may have been returning for their 100th visit. There was no air conditioning, or I was not feeling cool enough. People were going over their lines, sharing previous experiences from interviews, trading secrets about what to say, what not to say, and why they had to go to America. Interviews at the U.S. Embassy were always dreaded—people saved three months worth of their salaries for interviews that sometimes lasted less than 45 seconds.

The atmosphere was tense. It was so thick you could cut through it with a knife. The lounge where interviewees waited was so packed you could feel dreams lingering in the air. The aroma of wishes and hopes that would either be curtailed on that day, postponed for another day or endorsed by an agent was palpable. I was concentrating on the newspaper in my hand. It was almost 4 p.m. but time had no need to hurry. For me, the future was beyond the veil. I had nothing to lose but had much to gain. I was there to knock on the doors of fate, feel the pulse of destiny, shake the hands of time, and get a sneak peek into my future. I was tired of waiting. No one in my family knew I was going to the interview but they must have known I was tired of waiting for the future.

The first time I planned to visit England, Mum said I had to wait because my older brother had to travel first. I waited until my second year of high school was over. My older brother didn’t travel. I worked my way through my final year, performed excellently to win personality of the year, another window opened to visit the Queen’s country but mum said, “Your senior brother has to travel first.” I got selected three times into the finals of annual poetry competitions in Florida, worked on my first theater project that was receiving funding in England, and formed a company that toured through high schools using poetry as a tool to educate and motivate. I arguably started the spoken word movement in Ghana, got a rare opportunity to share my poetry on a highly ranked morning show and started writing for the national broadcasting co-op in Accra. More doors to travel opened up but Mum said I had to wait.

So that day when I sat the at the U.S. Embassy, fasting, waiting to be interviewed without telling my family, it wasn’t because I didn’t have any respect for Mum or my older brother, it wasn’t because I needed someone to massage my ego or tamper my impatience and temper, it wasn’t because I didn’t think older brother shouldn’t travel. I was anxiously waiting because beyond that interview was a future that was gradually getting clouded with each plea to wait. My acceptance letter from Columbia was sitting on the table and I was being told “older brother has to travel first.” I had performed to a crowd over 20,000 at the University of Ghana, my radio gig was going to move to one of the topmost stations in Accra, a deal which I knew was going to take me far away from school. I performed at the National Theater to ministers of state and presidents of banks and hit the peak of what a young person could dream of in Accra. I needed to move on and yet Mum was telling me, “Older brother has to travel first.”

Students from all backgrounds on campus have been told over and over to wait for changes to the Core Curriculum which have never been made, asked to wait for increased financial aid or better financial aid for international students especially in the School of General Studies, forced to deal with hate crimes without any proper guarantee of security, asked for a proper deal for the ethnic studies program, and nothing has really been done. We’ve heard of committees, forums, town halls, and banquets. We’ve received apologies, letters about patience, talks about how great the future will be, and rumors of resources that will enhance funding for students coming from poorer backgrounds. That future hasn’t still arrived.

We spent the first half of this semester dealing with the headache of hatred and distress. Our thoughts swung from fear to organizing protests to taking classes and facing the fear of waking up in the morning to another hate crime. Must we endure such plight in our humble pursuit of quality education? While we wait, we strike. The hunger strike is not because we are trying to get attention, we get attention from our lecturers during office hours. The hunger strike is not because we are being insensitive. We have been cool enough to endure the hatred and racism in our community without being unreasonable.

The hunger strike is because we are tired of waiting. Our future is here, our education is now. The opportunities we need are begging for our attention; the hate crimes are heightening our sense of fear and the lack of security. Perpetrators of hate crimes are not sensitive, they do not care, yet hunger strikers are condemned for their sensitivity toward the plight of those being abused by the ignorance of others. Our colleagues are dropping out of school because of lack of adequate funding. While I type these words, I cannot count the number of students I know who might drop out of school next semester because of poverty. Until when should we wait? And until what has been done?

This strike is not about the strikers or the administration per se. The administration isn’t our enemy. Some of the deans and directors are our mentors and role models. We strike because we would rather starve now and be fed with a balanced diet later than get filled with half balanced meals that will only give an appearance of health but kill us inside. We strike because multiplying hate, increasing ridicule, and succinctly bringing us to the end of our educational quest is definitely not a fair deal in this honorable pursuit. We strike because we care about the legacy of our alma mater. The issues we are trying to address are about the core values of our community. The word ‘wait’ is a simple word. It doesn’t say yes, no or maybe. It could mean never. The word ‘wait’ is not an answer.

Article Tools:

View Comments ( 21)

Post a Comment

I find what passes for debate at Columbia to be quite amusing. What actually needs to be discussed are issues of class first, race second, and gender third. As much as people hate it, that's the way the cookie crumbles. Newsflash, there are wealthy black, and latin people on campus who don't feel disenfranchised, marginalized or beset upon. There are also people of color who do feel that way. What needs to occur is a shift of the paradigm, and the realization that not all people of color think the same way. Sadly, even people of color haven't realized that, yet they are the first to rally against being looked upon as a monolithic body devoid of diversity. Sometimes I believe people just want the diversity that suits them. As for the strikers, I believe they have the right to pursue their aims, and others have the right to either support or not support those aims and goals. Whether that agreement or disagreement can be done in a civil manner is highly doubtful. At least from reading these comments. Perhaps my advanced age allows me a bit of nuance and perspective. For what it's worth most of you will be singing a vastly different tune as you grow older and gain more experience. Till then, keep slagging each other off.

It stuns me that anyone can sit back and talk about how "the purpose of college [is] to study and receive and education," in the same breath that they condemn those who are - and have been, for years now - trying to educate themselves and others and create changes in the education at Columbia. It puzzles me when people say things like "they should work hard, get a good job on Wall Street, and finance a new department themselves." So what happens in the mean time?

Why is someone who supports changes to the Core considered to have an "anti-American bias"? What is this sense of righteous ownership that certain commentators on bwog and the spec seem to have? We are all at Columbia for a reason. We chose and choose to be here, and we learn as we attend the school. Does this mean that we should support injustices wrought by the university?

I fail to see any point at which Osekre insinuates that he is owed money - I would argue that he, and countless others, however, have earned the right to receive financing for an education. As for the issue of education, we are, in fact, all "owed" the right to an education, and, if anyone is pursuing a higher education, they've earned it, too.

My guess is that the people commenting negatively about this article are not minorities affected by ethnic controversy. I say this because if you knew what its like to feel threatened because of your race, you might understand. You probably (PROBABLY) have never felt intimidated by a large majority because of what color you are or what background you have.

You wouldn't understand what its like to have to sit around while racist people continue being racist and bureaucrats insist on discussion upon discussion with no action. We're tired of putting up with crap that we see as unjust. YOU obviously don't see it as unjust, because you're in the majority! What would you care about minority issues? You're happy as clams because the entire world is structured in such a way that you have the maximum advantage.

People are close-minded. Here is a minority trying to tell you what its like to be a minority at Columbia, and you ARGUE? How can you ARGUE against what someone experiences when you couldn't even begin to understand what they go through?

...Yes, I think he is owed an education. He is owed money and he is owed an apology, none of which he has yet received, for the injustices and the setbacks that the Majority have placed upon him and his people throughout history.

...But of course, you will only respond with attacks, and accuse me of being an idiot. You're going to try to dismiss everything I say as overzealous equality advocacy. BUT THATS BECAUSE YOU DON'T KNOW WHAT ITS LIKE.

-Frances Jeffrey-Coker.

"My guess is that the people commenting negatively about this article are not minorities affected by ethnic controversy...YOU obviously don't see it as unjust, because you're in the majority! What would you care about minority issues?....People are close-minded."

Hm. Yes, they seem to be. I'm bliiind, blind to injustice! Somebody, anybody, please, show me the light! Man, you guys are making it too easy.

Is he saying they should they chuck out the white strikers? What about the the Jews? Jews count as a minority, right? I'm so confused.

--A dirty Jew

this isn't a minority trying to tell a majority what it's like. this has nothing to do with minorities affected by ethnic controversy. THIS CAMPUS IS 50% STUDENTS OF COLOR. i guarantee you that all 2,500 are NOT supporting the strike and i am one of them. this is about a vocal minority of student, regardless of their ethnic background or experiences, who are demanding things that most of the student body doesn't agree with. your argument is going to get into the issue of reparations. it's 2007. why are you focusing on what's happened in the past?

i'm a minority telling you what it's like to be a minority at Columbia. IT'S GREAT. this is the most diverse ivy league school BY FAR. we have the highest number of pell grant recipients at 13% which is also the highest in selective institutions BY FAR. and guess what? adding a seminar requirement to major cultures is not going to make me feel like i'm less of a minority. there are racist people everywhere. that's called LIFE.

there are so many layers to this strike and this article that it is completely unfair for you to dismiss as simply centering on minority and majority. if you feel that something is unjust, good for you. do something about it in the democratic avenues that exist at this school. you're not on student council. you're not on a committee for the core. you're not even one of the people striking!

and finally, i truly hope i am not the only one who think it's a little banal to compare one man's desire to attend to college overseas (who is hindered basically because his mother doesn't want him to... which happens EVERYWHERE) and his own laundry list of accomplishments to the hunger strike going on right now. they're completely different. nice try.

Don't get me wrong. I thought it was great too, until I read some of these bwog posts and realized how racist so many Columbians are. I didn't realize there were so many people who think Africans shouldn't be studied because they are "intrinsically inferior," or people who are surprised that a Hispanic group put out a newsletter ("These people are literate?").

I've been reading stuff over the past few days where people have said things like "I'm going to pay my Mexican lawnmower a few less dollars to spite the protesters." Those are actual posts that I've read and its disgusting. Telling Osekre to go back to Accura or Honda??? Ignorant, racist, and obnoxious!

I am shocked to realize that Columbia, as one of the top Universities in the county, can recruit some of the most brilliant thinkers and still wind up with such trash in its ranks. A lot of open-minded and tolerant students were denied admission to Columbia while ignorant students were accepted. Its creating a hurtful atmosphere, at least to me, when I read through the University's signature online source of information and find it peppered with blatant racism. You may as well hang a noose.

"there are racist people everywhere. that's called LIFE." Thats a valid point. BUT that doesnt give anyone an excuse not to fight it. I would encourage you, as a fellow minority at Columbia, not to fool yourself into thinking that all the non-minorities here embrace you. Look around bwog for a while... you'll quickly realize the contrary. I initially thought that it couldnt have been an undergraduate who hung the noose on the Professor's door... now I'm not so certain.

-Frances Jeffrey-Coker
(If you have something you want to tell me, don't be afraid to take a stance and put your name on it.)

Hey,

I fasted today in solidarity

I am also on the student council

There aren't racist people everywhere. I am sorry you have grown up to believe that. I didn't know what racism was until I came to college. Sadly, that's a part of the education I have received. It's useful - perhaps.

I promised my friends I wdn't read comments and respond to them but I thought I would let you know just in case you are accepting the false idea that there are racists everywhere. It's like telling Bush to face it because there are terrorists everywhere.

Please travel and learn. there's so much more than what you think you know.

I wish I could get the opportunity to chat with people about some of their responses because they are either way out of line or do not understand some of the lines. Either way, that's what some of these articles are meant for - discussion.

This piece is not about race in anyway.

- Osekre.

-Osekre

HOLLER AT MY BOY ADJEY !
SIKILETELE-TE-TELE!!!!! owwwwwweeeeeeee!!!!

Here's some Major Naija Love from your signature FJCFSOC! Frances Jeffrey-Coker, Female Student of Color!!!

Keep up the rhymes home brother. "Never again must seeds be sown, weeds upon we, planted in their time, jewels be extracted duals, astray, no more roast to toast and hosts to... all eyes are on you, ......misfortunes by us! Never again!!" Haha my version you'd think I'd know it better after TAPING IT SO DAMN MUCH!

Much Love! Madda is sweet! "When I no sleep, my madda no go sleep..." Shay I dey go chop, I dey no chop all day o'! I fasted too. (Am I getting betta'? Un petit peu? I no get betta if you no go teach me o') Don't make fun its not my fault I never learned. =(

Go home to the motherland soon brudda dem people dey will cut your legs. And I can have an excuse to be round Accra to visit, and to visit my Dad's friend who steals books AH-HAHAHA! Seeeeeeeeee you no more French lessons during Politics class all right???

Ms. F-J-SEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE... coming atcha LIVE from CNN! FJC720... Like Anderson Cooper but I cover the globe TWICE! My god could you imagine??? Disaster!

well, i am also a MINORITY telling you that

1. I don't receive PELL, HELL OR SHELL GRANT

2. if you are fine. Good. stay where you are and get some drink

this article reflects my hustle.

are you jealous of the writer?

u better be

Actually, very few people go through life without feeling uncomfortable or intimidated. In the real world people are constantly trying to put you down, intimidate you, and take what is yours. As a student at Columbia you already have as much a leg up as anyone ever gets, minus Paris Hilton and friends. Take this time to stop feeling sorry for yourself and learn to be self reliant and able to overcome adversity. You won't get far in the real world without those skills.

One line in particular: "forced to deal with hate crimes without any proper guarantee of security."

One, "forced?" It is not as though you're being strapped to a chair. There is enough hyperbole in this whole nonsense without you adding to it. Two, when it comes to cowards furtively scrawling shit on walls, there is no "proper guarantee of security." People have always, will always write shit on walls, and short of total surveillance, there is no way to "guarantee" our safety from them. There is no weaker or more insignificant "hate crime" than an anonymous scrawl on a wall (note I've signed my name). And don't say that it's a short leap from graffiti to assault--the graffiti is there because it's the only outlet available to the ones writing it. If they could do more, they would. There will always be hate. How we manage and respond to it is what we should be concerned with, not with magicking it away with some extra classes that no one will take. I also somewhat resent the idea that I need to be artificially protected from very small people of whom I should have no fear. More than that, though, I resent the strikers' presumption to speak for me, when they do nothing of the kind. I share some of your demands, perhaps, but to say that anyone who opposes you, however liberal they may call themselves, is little better than the bad men in the night with the sharpies is dangerously offensive. It also sounds a heckuva lot like "you're either with us or against us."

Oh, Spec automatically hides your name. It's Sam Ashworth. Not to be grandiose. I leave that to the hungry people on the lawn.

well the strikers speak for some of us. if u feel they are not representing you just chill and let us who are being represented get the support we need. how about that?

50% of us, apparently. You know, accounting for the margin of error. Not really an angry mob. You can't claim to speak for the entire campus when solidly half of it is against you. That's just silly. Do the other 50% get our counterprotest? Or should we just, you know, "chill?"

This stuff takes money. Where's it coming from, kids? You can't simultaneously create whole new departments ex nihilo AND slash tuition for internationals AND hire a dozen new professors. Expansion, of course, would help, but that's off the table. It's like saying we can cut taxes and raise military spending. Where are we? A few hundred billion in deficit. You have to compromise. Look, if some alum wants to endow a chair of Native American Studies, then I'm all for it. I doubt very seriously that's going to happen, though. Professors spend years on the phone trying to raise money to endow chairs in their department; if these kids want it so bad, then they should get on the phone. --Sam

Wow, people arguing against the existence of hate and racism at Columbia by being hateful and racist.

The question becomes -- does Columbia want the best minds or the best wallets? You don't get the best minds if you won't fund them. Yes, we need stupid, rich kids here because their parents can foot the bill. But it's a shame when qualified, brilliant students have to quit for financial reasons. That doesn't just hurt poor students, it robs Columbia of its best minds.

finally, a sensible article!

You wanted security? Way to piss off hundreds of people. I'm surprised they haven't burned down your tent yet.

There's no way having a hunger strike is going to reduce hate. But thank you for increasing mine. Now I have enough for the both of us.

Hating is a choice. It is a conscious decision made every day, every minute that it is acknowledged, whether internally or otherwise. Congratulations for doubling yours. It speaks volumes about the kind of person you are.

"We have been cool enough to endure the hatred and racism in our community without being unreasonable."

Are you serious? So you use the word "the" to imply that the student body as a whole is imbued with an inherent racism and hatred. So yet again you invoke a "if you're not with us you're against us" dichotomy. All this serves to prove is that you put as little thought into your framing of the argument as you do in your attempt to use correlation without any form of causation to draw the most tenuous parallels between unrelated issues. You are a disgrace to the academic institution that you attend which unfortunately has yet to instill a sense of necessity in you with regard to the use of empirical evidence and logic structure that is the basis of any academically respectable argument. You are fodder for parody and ridicule and justly so.

Huh? What are you trying to say? Are you OWED money? Are you OWED an education? Wtf makes you think you have the right to come here and DEMAND that the core be changed to suit your anti-American bias? If you have it so rough here try going to school in a muslim country...yeah thats what I tbought. You think just because you have a pulse that you should get a paycheck every month and all your demands met. Just wait until the tax revolt happens, son, just wait.

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • You may use <swf file="song.mp3"> to display Flash files inline
  • Allowed HTML tags: <!--pagebreak--><p><br><i><b><a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd><!--pagebreak-->
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Security question, designed to stop automated spam bots