Performing for peace and unity
A troupe of Baha'i followers dances and recites downtown for a
hard crowd to please
Friday, August 6, 1999
By Marques G. Harper of The Oregonian staff
Some of the lunchtime crowd, gathered on the
steps of Pioneer Courthouse Square, slows down to watch the street
performance going on in the square's lower northwest corner, near
Starbuck's.
People stare at the dancers who offer a message about racial unity. Then
they either walk on or turn their attention to the burritos, hot dogs or
salads in their laps.
The performers, members of the Mid-Valley Baha'i Youth Workshop of Oregon
and the Reflections of Diversity Dance Workshop of Utah, weave into their
performance a message about race and unity, which emerged 25 years ago from
the streets of Los Angeles.
A recent movement for the Baha'i faith brings together young adults, who
are followers or non-followers, to share a message of racial unity, one of
the principles of founder-prophet Baha'u'llah (Glory of God), who was
imprisoned for teaching his religion.
His followers believe in world peace, the harmony of science and
religion, the equality of men and women, the investigation of truth and
the oneness of humankind.
At Pioneer Courthouse Square, the workshop members dance Janet
Jackson-styled steps and read poems with social messages and the words
of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. to the crowd.
Performing past the heckling
Hasan Cross, a member of the Mid-Valley Baha'i Youth Workshop, sees a
group of teen-agers sitting on the street level of the square. They're
laughing and heckling at the Baha'i's message.
"You can't dance. I'm sorry," one of them shouts. The others laugh.
In response, Hasan Cross, 19, focuses his character on the group of
teen-agers.
"Sometimes we're trying to be cool. We don't act ourselves," he says.
They are Portland's forgotten kids, dressed in black T-shirts and jeans and
boots, and they are discussing lunch, beauty and dancing. Their tired eyes
follow the arm lifts, body shakes and costumes of the performers.
"Tim, dude, let's go eat."
"Do you have ID?"
"That's Mr. Faggot to you," says one man, giggling as he holds
up a paperback copy of Michael Thomas Ford's "That's Mr. Faggot to You:
Further Trials From My Queer Life."
"I have a sister. I can make you look from a goth queen to a
beauty queen."
"Dude, I'm going to eat. Are you coming or what?"
"Let's go."
The street performance continues for another half-hour. But the
blond woman wearing lip gloss, the man who does, too, another man
wearing a ripped Harley-Davidson T-shirt and a few others leave.
Later, Cross says he doesn't regret addressing the crowd's
reaction. He recounts the event with his father, Henri, and Oscar DeGruy
as they eat Pad Thai noodles and spring rolls in the living room of the
Crosses' Southwest Portland home.
"As that character saying those lines, I wanted to make sure
everyone knew what I was talking about," Cross says.
The three are spending part of the afternoon talking about the
first Baha'i youth workshop in California, the challenges to offer
Americans a social message and the future.
Some hate the message
DeGruy, an actor who appeared in "Good Times" and a former member of the
Black Panthers, co-founded with his wife the first youth workshop in Los
Angeles. In 1974, DeGruy blended the styles of street dancing and theater
with the Baha'i principles of equality, racial harmony and unity of religions.
"Either you loved us, or you hated us back in those days," says DeGruy,
who lives in Portland now. "You felt like you had to do something."
In 1974, the workshop started in the DeGruys' living room with a
bunch of neighborhood kids, mostly gang members and at-risk teens. Many
of them wanted to explore dance, theater and acting, DeGruy says.
Since the 1970s, workshops have started in other parts of the
nation as well as in Canada, Europe, Israel, Africa and South America.
Each workshop focuses on the similar Baha'i themes.
"We had some KKK stuff written on cars a few times," says
DeGruy, 48. "Neo-Nazis came up. Skinheads came up. No one ever
physically did anything. We knew everyone wasn't going to like our
message."
Henri Cross, 47, was a member of the first youth workshop in Los
Angeles. In the mid-'80s, his son started working with the Oregon
workshop.
First workshop was eye-opener
Traveling around the country, the first workshop of primarily African
American and Latino teen-agers faced an America that didn't accept racial
unity and understanding, Henri Cross says.
DeGruy says: "We had a lot happen to us in the South. It was
quite an eye-opener for the kids who had never really experienced the
Southern kind of reaction.
"We had to separate from each other on the bus. We had to walk
separately and not really hang out with each other in certain cities."
This generation of the workshop, DeGruy says, faces less in
terms of acceptance. But the message hasn't changed, as it was made
clear the day before during the performance at Pioneer Courthouse
Square.
The younger workshop members are taking a stand on other social
issues, including gay bashing, HIV/AIDS and school violence.
For Cross, though, these issues are a reminder of the continuing
struggle for Baha'is to bring together diverse people, a struggle his
father and DeGruy confronted on the streets of East Los Angeles 25 years
ago.
"I don't think things have changed very much," he says.
You can reach Marques G. Harper at 503-412-7039 or by e-mail at
marquesharper@news.oregonian.com.
©Copyright 1999, Oregan Alive
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