Race, Poverty & the Environment: Youth In Action: Greening Hip Hop
In case you missed this season’s issue of Race, Poverty & the Environment, the amazing folks at Grind for the Green were featured in a piece about youth of color who are using hip hop to spread environmental awareness in Bay Area hoods. Check it out below.
And in the same issue, ChecktheWeather.net’s co-founder Ellen Choy co-authors an article on Richmond, CA’s Chevron refinery and climate justice organizing! Get the whole issue online here.
Youth in Action: Greening Hip Hop
The Greening of Hip-Hop: Urban Youth Address Climate Change and Sustainability
By Eric Arnold
Twenty-year-old aspiring rapper Tre Pound was born in San Francisco’s Hunters Point, a predominantly low-income community of color with the dubious distinction of housing the two most toxic Superfund sites in the United States, as well as power and sewage treatment plants. Asthma, cancer, and diabetes rates in that area are all disproportionately higher than in other parts of the Bay Area. “I kinda knew where I was living wasn’t environmentally safe,” says Pound, but the public school he attended provided little information about industrial pollution or climate change.
Pound says he frequently incorporates socially-aware themes into his music, but he had never made an environmentally-aware rap song until he signed up to compete in Grind for the Green’s (G4G) Eco-Rap battle. He ended up winning the competition, earning a $1000 prize and studio time, by outpacing several other contestants with his eco-friendly flow during G4G’s second annual free concert at the Yerba Buena Gardens in San Francisco.
Pound is just one voice in the growing number of youth voices engaged in community organizing for social change. Millions of young people around the world participate in social activism. According to Wiretap Magazine, there are more than 600 youth-led community organizations currently creating green jobs, removing toxic waste, combating corporate pollution, and fighting against violence in their communities.
The undeniable reality of climate change speaks to the need for greater awareness and eco-sustainability among inner-city residents and people of color. Green has become the new face of youth activism, and today’s urban eco-activists use hip-hop as their medium.
Powered entirely by solar panels, the G4G event attracted hundreds of youth, their parents, community members, hip-hop fans, and members of other environmental activism groups, like Green for All, Alliance for Climate Education, and BayLocalize. 
G4G Executive Director Zakiya Harris says she is utilizing hip-hop to focus young people’s attention on environmental issues. “We have to make it culturally relevant and engaging,” she explains. According to stic.man of dead prez, who headlined the concert, the green hip-hop movement is about empowerment, information, and economics—allowing people to “stop being just consumers and victims of corporations,” while “producing and providing those alternative resources that we need.”
During the concert, Oakland rapper Mistah F.A.B. showcased his community-minded side with material like “If ‘If’ Was a Fifth”—in which he muses, “What if poverty was gone and there was no more war and hunger?” At the conclusion of his performance, he announced that he was donating his $3,500 performance fee to the upcoming Green Youth Media Center, a joint project between G4G, Art in Action, Weapons of Mass Expression, and other progressive non-profit organizations.
The first of its kind in California, the Green Youth Media Center symbolizes the hope of green hip-hop activists like G4G’s Harris and Ambessa Cantave and Art in Action’s Galen Peterson, who envision similar centers opening up all over the United States.
The center, which opened its doors in October 2009, is a green building offering vocational, arts, and new media training; music production; youth leadership and violence prevention training; and green jobs education; as well as creating green revenue streams by selling art, music, and merchandise produced by its participants.
In order to teach urban youngsters about climate change, “We literally have to change their climate… their social climate,” Cantave explains. “We’ve related [climate change] to their health. It goes back to telling the story of something they already know; where they’re from.” 
The emergence of green hip-hop activism represents the latest development in the ongoing movement to mobilize young people—a line connecting Mother Jones’ 1908 march of 100,000 child laborers from rural Pennsylvanian coal mines to Washington D.C., to the Student Nonviolence Coordinating Committee’s organizing around civil rights issues in the 1960s, to the Books Not Bars’ fight against the juvenile justice system in the early 2000s. These days, young people are organizing around community-sustainable platforms combining social justice with a burgeoning environmental awareness.
“You can’t start out talking about three million parts per billion of carbon,” Cantave says. “It’s not just something about polar bears.” Inner-city kids like Pound “have an innate sense of justice,” he says, “but haven’t yet connected that to the need for environmental justice.”
Eric K. Arnold is a writer and photographer based in Oakland, California who has been documenting emerging hip-hop and youth activist movements in the Bay Area since 1994.
Tags: BAY AREA, Dead Prez, Grind for the Green, hip-hop, youth
This is a very important post, I was looking for this information. Just so you know I found your webpage when I was browsing for blogs like mine, so please check out my site sometime and leave me a comment to let me know what you think.
This is a very helpful post, I was looking for this knowledge. Just so you know I discovered your weblog when I was looking around for blogs like mine, so please check out my site sometime and leave me a comment to let me know what you think.
This is a amazing post, but I was wondering how do I suscribe to the RSS feed?
Thank you for this particular fascinating post! I also possess a website and i’m curious about, how can i acquire these kinds of great theme like yours?
I have read a few of the articles on your website now, and I really like your style of blogging. I added it to my favorites blog list and will be checking back soon. Please check out my site as well and let me know what you think.
I must say I really like your writing style it is so much better than most blogs I read.
Hi – It’s good to find such topical writing on the Web as I have been able to discover here. I agree with much of what is written here and I’ll be returning to this website again. Thanks again for publishing such great reading material!!
The best thing about this post is that, it can convince masses. Its language is easy and conveys the theme of the article in a most appropriate way. The write is not just playing with the words but he is actually providing use full information. The content is unique and depicts the theme very well
Thank you for checking out the site and for the motivation to keep it going
Hi,
When ever I surf on web I come to this website.checktheweather.net really contains lot of useful information. Let me tell you one thing guys, some time we really forget to pay attention towards our health. Let me show you one truth. Recent Scientific Research displays that about 90% of all U.S. grownups are either chubby or overweight. So if you’re one of these people, you’re not alone. In fact, most of us need to lose a few pounds once in a while to get sexy and perfect six pack abs. Now the question is how you are planning to have quick weight loss? Quick weight loss is really not as tough as you think. Some improvement in of daily activity can help us in losing weight quickly.
About me: I am blogger of Quick weight loss tips. I am also health trainer who can help you lose weight quickly. If you do not want to go under painful training program than you may also try Acai Berry or Colon Cleansing for effective weight loss.
[...] (required) Website. Search for: Copyright 2009 African-American Ethnic Sports Hall of Fame … Blog Archive Race, Poverty & the Environment: Youth In …Race, Poverty & the Environment: Youth In Action: Greening Hip Hop. In case you missed … hop [...]
Nice blog! I’ll probably be referencing some of this information in my next assignment.
The virus makes the radio play and i don’t do anything. What’s happening? santoramaa
I really liked reading your post!. Quallity content. With such a valuable blog i believe you deserve to be ranking even higher in the search engines
. Check out the link in my name. That links to a tool that really helped me rank high in google. This way even more people can enjoy your posts and nothing beats a big audiance
I have been a reader for a long time, but this is my first time as a commenter. I just wanted to say that this has been / is my favorite post of yours! Keep up the good work and I’ll keep on checking back. If you’d be interested in swapping blogroll links with me, my website is Best Self Tanning Lotion.
Interesting site
I’m glad I stumbled onto it through yahoo, gonna definitely need to put this one on the blogroll