The
Survival Bible: 16 Life Lessons for Young Black Men
Click to order via
Amazon
by
Jihad
Paperback: 192 pages
Publisher: Envisions Publishing, LLC; 1st edition (October 5,
2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0970610246
ISBN-13: 978-0970610249
Book Review by
Kam Williams
“On April 13th, 1999, I was released from federal prison
after serving 7 years for being ignorant. Yeah, I was a dope
dealer… For 22 years, I was a rebel without a cause. Nobody
could tell me anything as I went through women, sold drugs,
and committed all kinds of negative acts to people who
looked like me—all for the almighty dollar, and a few
seconds of fame…
For so long, I robbed, stole, and sold drugs. For so long, I
was filled with self-hate and didn’t even know it, until I
discovered who I was, thanks to some of the most intelligent
men who… will never see the light of day from behind
America’s penitentiary walls.
I make no excuse for the wrong I did. It is my hope that
this book will help at least one misguided young man… In the
pages of this book are true to life essays that I hope will
educate and inspire our young black men to aspire to be the
Kings they were destined to be.”
—Excerpted from the Introduction (pages 3-8)
The road to manhood for most African-American boys is a
perilous path paved with potholes with the specter of prison
looming for any misstep. For the criminal justice system has a
history of doling out far harsher treatment to black males than
whites. Consequently, half of the 2 million inmates currently
behind bars are black.
Complicating the picture is the fact that approximately 80%
of African-American children are now raised by single mothers.
This means that most black boys grow up without a male role
model around. Thus, it’s really no surprise that formative years
spent under the spell of gangsta’ rap videos might encourage
them to hang out on the streets and to participate in a host of
misogynistic, anti-social and illegal behaviors likely to mire
them in a neverending cycle of dysfunction, if not land them in
a penitentiary.
For this reason, Elbert Lee Frazier, Jr., aka Jihad, decided
to write The Survival Bible: 16 Life Lessons for Young Black
Men. You see, he speaks from experience, since he himself was
raised by a single-mom and ended up a troubled youngster who
served a long prison sentence. The basic aim of his practical
how-to book is to help impressionable young minds avoid making
the same mistakes.
So, for example, he discourages wearing saggy, baggy pants
because most “lil homies” are unaware that this is an
advertisement to homosexuals that they are submissive, so-called
“catchers.” And with AIDS so rampant in the black community, the
last thing a straight kid probably wants is to be unwittingly
flirting with a desperate, HIV+ recently-paroled predator on the
down-low.
In a chapter entitled “What Up, Dog?” Jihad suggests that
black people stop referring to each other by ethic slurs or by
terms reserved for animals, like “bitch” and “dog.” He points
out that this practice is a self-hating holdover from slavery
when whites used such derogatory epithets to separate Africans
from their families, culture, history and traditions.
Written in a down-to-earth style that the average adolescent
can understand, The Survival Bible is chock full of sensible
advice about everything from STDs to teen pregnancy to drug use
to snitching to the importance of getting a good education. A
sobering lesson from a successful graduate of the school of
overwhelming regret with a tough love message amounting to, “do
as I say, not as I did.”