May Day Seattle: Hip Hop Rise & Decolonize

poster: Hip Hop Rise and Decolonize

For many of us, the relationship between "Occupy" and "Decolonize" is still a live question. For one group in Seattle, the question is ALL The Way Live.Bringing the cypher to the picket line, Seattle's activists in Hip Hop Occupies To Decolonize infuse the militant dynamism of hip hop into their local movements: not just in superficial form, but in a deep spirit of creativity, collaboration, and resistance led by oppressed communities.  As they write on their web site:From its genesis, Hip Hop has been a vehicle of expression and liberation for oppressed peoples. Disenfranchised youth in the development-torn 1970s Bronx responded to the economic violence imposed upon their neighborhoods through occupation. Youth occupied vacant buildings, walls, and subway trains with their art work. Entire communities occupied city streets and other publically owned spaces with massive parties and parks jams, powered by occupied electricity, siphoned from street lights. It was in these acts of occupation that the elements of Hip Hop, b-boy/b-girling, graffiti, DJing, and emceeing emerged and spread. Gangs were unified, communities were built, and a new globally recognized culture was founded.Although since then, Hip Hop has experienced commoditization by corporate and capitalist interests, there still thrives a vast and rapidly growing network of artists of every gender, race, class, and age, who remain dedicated to its revolutionary roots. It is this sleeping giant that is awakening to energize and shape the recent occupation movement, and give voice to the voiceless. The struggle is “Bigger than Hip Hop,” but through this culture, we can galvanize, uplift, and provide collective vision for the future. 

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Righteous and ready to burn: 20 years after LA

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Karma of Confinement: Amazing Timeline On US "Freedom"