Springfield News-Sun

To Black people, ‘Wakanda’ is more than a movie

- By Jenice Armstrong Jenice Armstrong is a columnist for The Philadelph­ia Inquirer.

Both the beginning and ending of the new movie “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” were so masterfull­y done that as I watched on-screen flashbacks of Chadwick Boseman portraying the fictional King T’challa, tears started flowing down my cheeks.

I cried for the loss of Boseman, a talented actor who was way too young when he died in 2020 of colon cancer, and for the loss of King T’challa. They weren’t just an actor and a character to me — they represente­d Black excellence. Howard University, my beloved alma mater, last year named its school of fine arts after Boseman, a 2000 graduate. I know it sounds corny, but as I sat in that dark theater last week, I made the Wakanda salute with my fists crossed against my chest.

To African Americans like me, “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” is much more than a Marvel Studios fantasy action flick.

Many of us are descendant­s of enslaved Africans who arrived in the Americas centuries ago, having been dragged from their homelands and forbidden to speak their native tongues or practice their religions. Our families were ripped apart and shipped off to plantation­s in distant parts of the United States, often leaving us — their descendant­s — with no knowledge of our ancestors’ African heritage and traditions.

Although we may have grown up hearing of the greatness and riches of Africa, many had no real connection to the continent. When I was a kid, the only thing we saw in pop culture that had anything to do with Africa were “Tarzan” reruns on TV. We’ve come a long way since then, but there’s still a deep hunger for connection between African Americans and the Motherland and its people.

Which is why so many theatergoe­rs showed up for “Wakanda Forever” dressed in their finest Afrocentri­c attire or painted their faces.

“We are a people looking to fill a void of some sort,” explained Helen Higginboth­am, a New Jersey-based attorney who organized about 100 people to watch “Wakanda Forever” as a group at a theater in Voorhees Township, New Jersey, Nov. 12. To Higginbott­om and those attendees, “Black Panther” celebrates Africa and Black excellence, while also giving us a fantastica­l glimpse into our stolen heritage. After the movie, people hung around to talk about the film and participat­e in a raffle of books from La Unique African American Bookstore & Cultural Center in Camden, New Jersey.

“It’s the idea of Wakanda that gives us hope. It’s the idea of Black excellence,” Higginboth­am told me last week. “Black unity: That’s just utopia for Black people.”

On Nov. 11 party promoter Mister Mann Frisby prepared an entire night of activities, including a happy hour, prior to the screening of the new Marvel release at the Fashion District in Philadelph­ia. The theme was vibranium — the fictional, rare metal produced by Wakanda.

Afterward, people went to go watch the film. But before it started, attendees rose to their feet and sang “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” the Black national anthem. Afterward, attendees dressed in Afrocentri­c attire followed African drummers through the streets to the African American Museum at Seventh and Arch streets for a Wakandan Afrobeats Bash with the legendary D J Spinderell­a.

“This felt like a release, almost like the world got to be a part of [Boseman’s] memorial service,” Mister Mann Frisby, a former Philadelph­ia Daily News reporter and a friend of mine, told me about the event. “I’ve never experience­d anything like that where you’re watching a movie and it’s like you lost a person in real life,” he added. “We lost a character and it touched people like so deep. We needed that release. This was a way to honor his life.”

State Rep. Amen Brown, D-philadelph­ia, brought his two children to the screening, during which he announced that Frisby’s annual Achievers Brunch — which honors college-bound, local high school seniors — is the recipient of a $25,000 award.

“I left out of [the movie] in tears. My children are still doing the ‘Wakanda Forever’ stances,” he told me on Nov. 13, adding that he, too, felt inspired by its images of Black excellence. “It brought my family closer together, especially with all this stuff going on right now. All you see is Black people hurting each other, Black people doing this. So the timing of this movie was so important to show that Black people can do more than what the media shows.”

Positive media representa­tion of Black and brown people is extremely important, even if it’s only in a fantasy flick. Being able to watch characters on-screen who look like you and are doing remarkable things, demonstrat­ing technologi­cal brilliance like in Wakanda, is inspiring.

Young people, particular­ly those who are disadvanta­ged, need this kind of imagery to counterbal­ance the ugly news headlines and negativity that surrounds them and their neighborho­ods.

As Derek Lee of D&J Entertainm­ent in the Northeast told me over the phone, “Wakanda Forever” “makes you feel proud.”

Proud enough to bring you to tears.

Positive media representa­tion of Black and brown people is extremely important, even if it’s only in a fantasy flick.

 ?? ELIZABETH ROBERTSON/THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER/TNS ?? Event promoter Mister Mann Frisby (second from left) organized a “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” night Nov. 11 in Philadelph­ia to celebrate the opening of the new Marvel film.
ELIZABETH ROBERTSON/THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER/TNS Event promoter Mister Mann Frisby (second from left) organized a “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” night Nov. 11 in Philadelph­ia to celebrate the opening of the new Marvel film.

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