
Oprah Winfrey at the Grammy Foundation's 'Starry,
Starry Night' Gala which honored Los Angeles Mayor
Antonio Villaraigosa with the Foundation's Leadership
Award, at Villa Casablanca, a private residence in
Malibu, CA. (July 2006) Photo Credit: Charley
Gallay/London Entertainment/Splash
News
Constantine's Tale
http://www.stabroeknews.com/index.pl/article_editorial?id=56513528
Tuesday, February 6th 2007
The United States census of 1870 contains an entry for a
33-year-old slave named Constant Tine. In fact, the
slave's name was Constantine. Like other slaves, he used
the surname of his master Absalom when he started making
his way in the world. Six years after the census had
carved him in two, Constantine made a deal with a white
man that would change his life forever. He promised to
pick eight bales of cotton in two years, if John Watson,
the white man, would compensate him for this Stakhanovite
labour with eighty acres of prime real estate. Somehow,
even
though Constantine was fully employed at the time, a deal
was struck, and both parties delivered as promised. As if
this were not remarkable enough, Constantine's signature
on the land deed proves that he had taught himself to
read and write in the previous decade.
Twenty years later, when the black school in Poplar
Creek, Mississippi was closed down by the white
community, Constantine relocated the school to his
property. Like the great Toussaint L'Ouverture,
Constantine seems to have never let hopeless odds
distract him from his ambitions for long. His belief in
owning land and getting an education must have seemed
Quixotic at the time, but history will record that not
only did Constantine Winfrey manage to overcome most of
the obstacles that were set in his way during those
difficult years, but he also turned out to be the
great-great-grandfather of the best known black woman of
the twentieth century. The only living black billionaire,
the host of the most watched talk show in the history of
television and, perhaps most astonishing of all, the only
person who can make millions of Americans buy a serious
book simply by endorsing it. Oprah Winfrey may be the
best known example of the American dream, but the story
of her grandfather-unearthed by Professor Henry Louis
Gates for a PBS documentary-shows that even dreamers can
have the right kind of ancestral spirits watching over
them.
The PBS documentary and book which has emerged from
Gates's research, is the twenty-first century version of
Roots, Alex Haley's amazing reconstruction of the lives
of his enslaved ancestors. Haley managed to trace his
family right back to a particular village in modern
Africa but Oprah's Roots, the documentary, goes one
better by using DNA matching to determine exactly where
her genes originated, and the story gets better by the
strand. Although Oprah turns out not to be a Zulu as she
had previously declared, her genetic sequence shows that
her ancestors came from tribes who lived in what we now
call Zambia and Cameroon-the apparent confusion of
genes a result of the transportation of women who had
been captured in war. The genetic code has allowed
researchers to follow her ancestors at a level of detail
that would have been pure science fiction a generation
ago. In an interview on the Charlie Rose show, Gates
explained, "[Oprah's ancestor] was captured among
the Kpelle people of Liberia, shipped to the sea islands
off the coast of Carolina and Georgia, and then shipped
into Georgia. We even know the name of the man who took her ancestor to
Mississippi. His name was James Davidson."
Oprah Winfrey was born to unwed teenagers in 1954. She
was raised by her grandmother, then moved to a ghetto at
the age of six. Molested as a child, pregnant at 14 (the
baby died), her life must often have seemed as hopeless
as Constantine's. Yet, somehow, both escaped from what
would have been a predictable fate. Their perseverance
and extraordinary success should inspire anyone who
thinks life has treated them harshly, and their example
should make those of us who have had relatively easy
lives work a little harder. Our ancestors would expect
nothing less.
www.stabroeknews.com
|