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Wednesday, December 30, 2015
Enslavement to Emancipation, a Work in Progress
US Slavery ended 150 years ago.
At that time, some of my great grandparents were slaves and some had been born free in families that had been free for many generations.
The last surviving slave, Sylvester McGee died in 1971 that’s just 44 years ago that should give us an idea of just how far we’ve come, considering how recently our civil status in this country has been upgraded officially from slave to free. Keeping in mind that many if not most of our people, at the beginning of the 20th century were still unable to read or write and were subjected to the worst treatment that the white power structure could get by with dishing out. Among such ill-treatments were second rate educational facilities, limited access to the judicial and electoral system, unfair exclusion from economic opportunities and general exclusion from mainstream society. Much of what was wrong then is continuing to affect today but we are making progress.
Thursday, December 24, 2015
A Black Man Pulls Klansmen Out of the KKK
How A Black Man Pulls Klansmen Out of the KKK#NewsOneNow Race In America: Author and musician Daryl Davis, a Black man shares how he converts active KKK members.Watch portions of the #NewsOneNow Race In America Special - http://ow.ly/Whu21
Posted by Roland Martin on Wednesday, December 23, 2015
Tuesday, December 22, 2015
Wake up America! The Lesson of Muhammad Ali
Even as our government was preparing to sacrifice untold lives, Muhammad Ali, a Black American Muslim, at great personal risk to his own health and safety, went to a hostile Iraq and arranged the release of 15 American hostages. Ask the families and friends of these people if #BlackLivesMatter or if all Muslims are suspect?
Don't allow politicians to divide Americans more than we already are.
Americans can be united or divided. You decide on election day.
Don't allow politicians to divide Americans more than we already are.
Americans can be united or divided. You decide on election day.
Thursday, December 17, 2015
Xavier Best Reads Fanon's "The Black Man and Language"
The Black Man and Language from Frantz Fanon's Black Skin White Masks [0.1]
Wednesday, December 16, 2015
Killer Mike Render and Senator Bernie Sanders Talk Shop
Mike and Bernie talk "Real" talk in the barber shop.
Watch the entire playlist, I believe it's about an hour. it's worth watching if you have the time.
Watch the entire playlist, I believe it's about an hour. it's worth watching if you have the time.
Monday, December 14, 2015
Thursday, December 10, 2015
Tuesday, December 8, 2015
People's Century Part 18 1957 Skin Deep
This segment of the "People's Century" Covers the evolution of race relations in The US and South Africa
Thursday, December 3, 2015
Dothan Police Department Planted Drugs on Young Black Men
Police Impunity Reigns
Dothan Police Corruption
Leaked Documents Reveal Dothan Police Department Planted Drugs on Young Black Men For Years, District Attorney Doug Valeska Complicit
Doubts raised about report that racist Dothan, Ala. police planted drugs on young black men http://wpo.st/n09-1
Dothan Police Corruption
Leaked Documents Reveal Dothan Police Department Planted Drugs on Young Black Men For Years, District Attorney Doug Valeska Complicit
Doubts raised about report that racist Dothan, Ala. police planted drugs on young black men http://wpo.st/n09-1
Tuesday, December 1, 2015
Student from #Africa Tazed to Death. Cop gets 30 days.
Hand cuffed and shackled
A Georgia cop responded to a domestic violence call involving a bipolar black man. After restraining the man, he tased him to death. See Huff Post report.
Come on now people, it's time to give even more support to "Black Lives Matter". As much as the organization seems to upset some people, it would appear that those involved have to get even more proactive and creative when it comes to getting the point across that Black lives really do matter. We can't continue to allow this kind of slaughter to continue and those criminals who commit these acts off with a slap on the wrist.
A Georgia cop responded to a domestic violence call involving a bipolar black man. After restraining the man, he tased him to death. See Huff Post report.
Come on now people, it's time to give even more support to "Black Lives Matter". As much as the organization seems to upset some people, it would appear that those involved have to get even more proactive and creative when it comes to getting the point across that Black lives really do matter. We can't continue to allow this kind of slaughter to continue and those criminals who commit these acts off with a slap on the wrist.
Sunday, November 29, 2015
Mother Africa 'Circus of the Senses'
CIRQUE MOTHER AFRICA, a spectacular celebration created in Africa by an African, Winston Ruddle, and pounding with the heart of Africa, is coming to New Zealand next month.
It will open at the Founders Theatre, Hamilton, on September 7 and continue its thrilling New Zealand tour with shows in Wellington, Auckland and Christchurch.
Worldwide Cirque MOTHER AFRICA has thrilled two million. The show is filled with joy, emotions, surprises and amazement. Showing the full circus range of juggling, contortionists, high-wire acts as well as live music, dances and beautiful costumes, the two-hour program really is a sparkling event.
Contortionists Lazaraus and Hassani from Kenya and the Ramadhani Brothers, presenting hand-in hand artistry, are firm favourites with crowds.
The “Adagio Act” from Tanzania is astonishing. It’s a slow, very aesthetical dance where a couple shows slow motion movements by using leverage forces. “Icarus Games” is the name of a juggling act. Two artists juggle with their colleagues in the air by using their feet. Fast, colourful and swinging, that’s how the program is presented: The “Hoola-Hoop Act” with “a thousand hoops around a beautiful woman’s waist” and the “Diabolo Act”, where the diabolo flies high from one rope to the other.
The “In Africa Band” delivers a traditional sound, played with the “Kora” an instrument that comes from the African West Coast. With its 20 strings it sounds like a mixture between guitar and harp. Three beautiful ladies from South Africa and Zimbabwe are the lead singers, creating a warm and powerful sound together with the In Africa Band.
Cirque MOTHER AFRICA combines the best of all the classic circus elements. Forty artists from the length and breadth of the African continent – Ethiopia, Ivory Coast, Benin, Zimbabwe, Tanzania, Guinea, South Africa -- performing in intoxicating colours and extraordinary costumes and masks.
And doing it all-stops-out for two breathtaking hours.
And it has an unforgettable and unique dimension, something that no other circus can match: the infectious rhythm, the dance and the soaring music of Africa. At the heart of this spectacular circus is pulsating music.
Mark Rafter, the producer of Cirque MOTHER AFRICA, says he saw Cirque MOTHER AFRICA while producing a show in Germany. ‘I wasn’t expecting too much, to be frank, but when I saw the show I loved it! I thought, “It’s a Cirque De Solei with a twist from the heart of Africa.
‘More than quarter of the Cirque MOTHER AFRICA company are musicians. They play modern and traditional African instruments - and, yes, we have no vuvuzelas!
‘But we do have the world’s prettiest ‘ring master’. Mtshali Sibongile Prudence, from South Africa is a vivacious dancer and singer with a sparkling sense of humor who informs and entertains the audience when she’s not performing.’
Friday, November 27, 2015
Thursday, November 26, 2015
Mixed up Media Messages
CNN news reporters ask the very controversial question,
"Does Islam promote violence"
to Iranian-American author and religious historian Dr. Reza Aslan from a very
generalistic point of view.
Are these people really paid to not think and listen? How can we
respect or trust a newsperson who is so anxious to make their own
personal point, that they don't even bother to try and hear plain facts?
"Does Islam promote violence"
to Iranian-American author and religious historian Dr. Reza Aslan from a very
generalistic point of view.
Are these people really paid to not think and listen? How can we
respect or trust a newsperson who is so anxious to make their own
personal point, that they don't even bother to try and hear plain facts?
Young Turks discussing media messages
Monday, November 23, 2015
Wednesday, November 18, 2015
New democracy constitution in South #Africa November 18, 1993
November 18, 1993
Black and white leaders in South Africa approved the new democracy constitution that gave blacks the vote and ended white minority rule.
A side note.
Black and white leaders in South Africa approved the new democracy constitution that gave blacks the vote and ended white minority rule.
A side note.
Monday, November 16, 2015
Friday, November 13, 2015
Thursday, November 12, 2015
Tuesday, November 10, 2015
Racial Turnabout
This video an amazing statement on American racism.
In case you missed the point the following videos will help.
Remember this?
In case you missed the point the following videos will help.
Remember this?
Wednesday, November 4, 2015
Thursday, October 29, 2015
Monday, October 26, 2015
UK Black History - Windrush
The Windrush Generation. Caribbean migrants arrived in the UK in 1948 aboard the Empire Windrush. The arrival of the SS Empire Windrush in June 1948 at Tilbury Dock, Essex, in England, marked the beginning of post-war mass migration.
Friday, October 23, 2015
Thursday, October 22, 2015
The Strolling Series by Cecile Emeke
The Voice of the Young African Diaspora, ms Emeke is the media roll model we need.
Wednesday, October 21, 2015
Media Representation and #Africa
This is part of the conference Media Representation and Africa: whose money, whose story? which was held at SOAS, University of London on 20 February 2015.
(The sound gets better after 4 minutes)
(The sound gets better after 4 minutes)
Tuesday, October 20, 2015
Travels in West Africa
Travels in West Africa
by
Mary H. Kingsley
LibriVox recording of Travels in West Africa, by Mary H. Kingsley. Read by Kehinde. Mary Henrietta Kingsley (13 October 1862 – 3 June 1900) was an British explorer and writer who greatly influenced European ideas about Africa and its people. Kingsley was an outspoken critic of European colonialism, a champion for indigenous customs, and a dedicated campaigner for a revised British policy which supported traders and merchants over the needs of settlers and missionaries.
see also
Travels in West Africa, Congo Francais, Corisco and Cameroons
LibriVox recording of Travels in West Africa, by Mary H. Kingsley. Read by Kehinde. Mary Henrietta Kingsley (13 October 1862 – 3 June 1900) was an British explorer and writer who greatly influenced European ideas about Africa and its people. Kingsley was an outspoken critic of European colonialism, a champion for indigenous customs, and a dedicated campaigner for a revised British policy which supported traders and merchants over the needs of settlers and missionaries.
see also
Travels in West Africa, Congo Francais, Corisco and Cameroons
Wednesday, October 7, 2015
UK Black History Month - Benin
The city of Benin was burnt to the ground and the Oba’s palace was destroyed and looted of its magnificent and valuable bronze and ivory sculptures which were sold off to pay for the expedition. There are over 1,000 Benin bronzes in various public and private collections, many in Germany and the USA, and around 200 at the British Museum.
Saturday, September 26, 2015
Maggie Lena Walker's Grave.
I don't know if this is still like this but if it is, something has to be done.
Friday, September 25, 2015
"Secret Daughter" by June Cross
June Cross tells the very moving personal story of her mixed race experience in this youtube video.
Thursday, September 24, 2015
Frances E. W. Harper, born September 24, 1825
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, African American lecturer, author, and suffragist, was the best known Black poet since Phillis Wheatley. Her antislavery verse, Poems on Miscellaneous Subjects (1854), sold thousands of copies and “The Two Offers”(1859) was the first short story published by an African American. Touring Southern Freedmen’s communities, she lectured on education and morality as racial uplift, and denounced white racial violence. Her suffrage work was long-standing. In the split among suffragists over the 15th Amendment, Harper favored voting rights for Black men; she affiliated with the American Woman Suffrage Association, and delivered speeches at its conventions.
Born in Baltimore of free Black parents, she was orphaned before she was 3. Reared by an uncle, whose school for free Blacks she attended, Harper was first a teacher, then a lecturer for the Maine Anti-Slavery Society. She married Fenton Harper in 1860, but was widowed within 4 years and returned to lecturing. Her Southern travels resulted in several narrative poems. She became head of the African American department of the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union. She helped organize the National Association. of Colored Women’s Clubs and became vice-president. She died in Philadelphia at 85.
Born in Baltimore of free Black parents, she was orphaned before she was 3. Reared by an uncle, whose school for free Blacks she attended, Harper was first a teacher, then a lecturer for the Maine Anti-Slavery Society. She married Fenton Harper in 1860, but was widowed within 4 years and returned to lecturing. Her Southern travels resulted in several narrative poems. She became head of the African American department of the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union. She helped organize the National Association. of Colored Women’s Clubs and became vice-president. She died in Philadelphia at 85.
Published on Jan 27, 2015
"LibriVox recording of Iola Leroy by Frances E. W. Harper. Read in English by James K. White This is the story of Iola Leroy, a free-born, mixed-race woman who passed as white. Her true racial identity eventually discovered, she was kidnapped and sold into slavery. Later freed by the Union Army, she journeyed to find others of her family who had been disunited from each other and strewn across the south by the forces of slavery. In the process she also struggled to improve the economic and social station of African Americans. Iola Leroy is a story about race and gender roles during the antebellum and post-Civil War eras, "passing" and the associated socio-political consequences. (Summary by James K. White)"
Wednesday, September 23, 2015
Cecile Emeke is still at it. The Young Black Voice.
The Strolling series by the young producer Cecile Emeke is, in my opinion, one of the best things to happen in Black media in recent years. Ms Emeke is in the act of combining the power of social media with her knack for video storytelling and presenting the voices of young artculate and efflorescent Black people from various localities (so far in Europe). She is giving them the opportunity to freely express their feelings with regard to the various cultures that they find themselves at once immersed in and excluded from. The series is not only one of the few outlets that allows these young people to vent their feelings but at the same time it demonstrates clearly their diversity. Each subject has his or her own unique story about their impressions and experiences in their particular society which, I feel, were very well told.
I see that this is a work in progress and I hope we will all recognize and support this effort for the valuable service that it brings to the people of the African diaspora wherever we find ourselves. I also hope that the series will stimulate others to share their talents with us while creating works that unify us to the same degree as Cecile Emeke is doing.
I am so impressed with the work this young woman is doing. I hope we are sharing these videos to the max.
Click here to visit Cecile Emeke's Youtube channel
I've been inactive for a few years But it looks like Cecile Emeke is still active. Check out her link above to review that great "Strolling Series"
I see that this is a work in progress and I hope we will all recognize and support this effort for the valuable service that it brings to the people of the African diaspora wherever we find ourselves. I also hope that the series will stimulate others to share their talents with us while creating works that unify us to the same degree as Cecile Emeke is doing.
I am so impressed with the work this young woman is doing. I hope we are sharing these videos to the max.
Click here to visit Cecile Emeke's Youtube channel
I've been inactive for a few years But it looks like Cecile Emeke is still active. Check out her link above to review that great "Strolling Series"
Monday, September 21, 2015
Black Wall Street & Domestic Terror
Oklahoma is the location of the worst two acts of domestic terrorism in US history.
The worst took place in the Greenwood district of Tulsa.
Thursday, September 17, 2015
Wednesday, September 16, 2015
Ass Backward Texas "Just Us"
Kid with a homemade clock treated like a terrorist.
Cop terrorizes woman over a traffic warning resulting in her death.... nothing
Cop terrorizes woman over a traffic warning resulting in her death.... nothing
Wednesday, September 9, 2015
100th Anniversary of Association for the Study of Negro Life and History
September 9, 1915 The father of Black history, Carter G Woodson, founded the
Association for the Study of Negro Life and History on the 50th anniversary of
the end of slavery... After 100 years it is still active. ASALH
The Greatest Black Generation: African Americans and the Civil War from Daryl Scott on Vimeo.
Association for the Study of Negro Life and History on the 50th anniversary of
the end of slavery... After 100 years it is still active. ASALH
The Greatest Black Generation: African Americans and the Civil War from Daryl Scott on Vimeo.
"Woodson earned a bachelor of letters degree from Berea, B.A. and M.A. degrees from the University of Chicago, and in 1912 a Ph.D. in history from Harvard University. He did all this while teaching full-time in Malden, W.Va. (1898-1900), serving as principal of Huntington's Frederick Douglass High School (1900-1903), and teaching in the Philippines (1903-1907). In 1907, while traveling on a six-month world tour, he conducted research at various libraries and studied for a semester at the Sorbonne in Paris.
"The Cause" Takes Root
In 1909 Woodson moved to Washington to work on his dissertation at the Library of Congress and teach in the District of Columbia public schools. Originally assigned to teach the eighth grade at Thaddeus Stevens School, Woodson soon transferred to Armstrong Manual Training School -- a vocational and technical high school, and in 1911, to M Street High School -- an elite black academic institution.
Washington's African-American schools had incorporated black history into the curriculum at all levels, and Woodson's commitment to the study and teaching of black history was solidified during his tenure there (Goggin 1993, 31).
In April 1915 Woodson published his first book, The Education of the Negro Prior to 1861. In June 1915 he traveled to Chicago to participate in the Exposition of Negro Progress (held to commemorate the 50th anniversary of emancipation) and to research and write. In September Woodson founded the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History (ASNLH), which he incorporated upon his return to Washington. Historians August Meier and Elliott Rudwick wrote of Woodson's effort:
"Coming to intellectual maturity amid the tide of disenfranchisement, sharecropping, Jim Crow and mob violence that marked what Rayford W. Logan has termed the 'nadir' in the fortunes of American blacks during the post-Civil War era, Woodson sought to build and popularize a serious interest in Negro history at the apogee of popular and scientific racism in Western thought" (Meier & Rudwick 1986, 2).
Woodson, like many Americans who came of age during the Progressive Era, believed that education was a catalyst for social action and an agent of social change. He believed that the history of African peoples in Africa and in the Americas would inspire black pride, "uplift the race" and destroy white racist beliefs and prejudices. Declared Woodson in a speech at Hampton Institute:
"We have a wonderful history behind us. ... If you are unable to demonstrate to the world that you have this record, the world will say to you, 'You are not worthy to enjoy the blessings of democracy or anything else.' They will say to you, 'Who are you anyway?' ... Let us, then, study ... this history ... with the understanding that we are not, after all, an inferior people. ... We are going back to that beautiful history, and it is going to inspire us to greater achievements. It is not going to be long before we can sing the story to the outside world as to convince it of the value of our history ... and we are going to be recognized as men" (Meier & Rudwick 1986, 9).
Woodson's commitment to the ASNLH was firmly rooted, and "the cause" became his life's passion and work. While the association was not the first organization established specifically to promote African-American history -- black intellectuals had founded the American Negro Historical Society of Philadelphia in 1897 and the Negro Society for Historical Research (Yonkers, N.Y.) in 1912 (Winston 1973, 19) -- Woodson singlehandedly made it the most successful and long-lived of its kind.
Just four months after establishing the association, Woodson published the first issue of the Journal of Negro History with money borrowed against his life insurance policy. The Journal provided a forum for black and white scholars to publish research on African-American history and culture and devoted a substantial portion of its pages to reprinting little-known primary documents.
Both the price of the Journal and the association's membership fees were kept low so as not to be prohibitive to the majority of African-Americans. This policy made it necessary for Woodson to contribute his own money and rely on white philanthropy. As a result, Woodson selected the association's officers and executive board members primarily on their ability to contribute or raise funds. Although the financial burden would have been lessened by affiliating with a black college or university, Woodson --fiercely independent -- adamantly refused such an affiliation and always stressed his autonomy.
&3A Brief Career in Academia. While working incessantly to promote "the cause" and to raise funds for the association, Woodson continued teaching and, in 1918, became principal of Armstrong Manual Training School. After just a year at Armstrong, Woodson became discouraged by the lack of support given to vocational education. He left to accept a position at Howard University and to begin his most fruitful decade.
That decade, however, did not begin smoothly. Joining the Howard faculty in the summer of 1919 as dean of the School of Liberal Arts and head of the history department, Woodson saw his new position as an opportunity to earn more money to contribute to the association, a chance to train young black historians that he could recruit to "the cause" and an occasion to devote more time to research and writing. However, he soon found himself locked in a series of disputes with J. Stanley Durkee, Howard's 11th (and last) white president.
Coming to the university in 1918, Durkee, an energetic and autocratic Congregationalist minister, was determined to shape the university to his own liking by reorganizing the entire academic structure and centralizing all authority, including that of the previously independent professional schools, in his hands. (Wolters 1975, 94-99).
In the winter of 1920, Woodson publicly criticized Durkee for damaging academic freedom by removing from the university library Elbert Rhys Williams's Seventy-Six Questions on the Bolsheviks and Soviets after a complaint from Sen. Reed Smoot. That spring Woodson balked at Durkee's order to monitor faculty attendance at daily chapel service and exacerbated their differences by organizing, without Durkee's permission, a series of continuing-education courses for Washington's public school teachers. Infuriated by Woodson's actions, Durkee rejected Woodson's conciliatory gestures and fired him before commencement in June 1920 (Goggin 1993, 50-53).
During Woodson's brief tenure at Howard, he introduced courses in black history in the School of Liberal Arts and organized the graduate program in history. Earlier efforts by Kelly Miller, Alain Locke, and others to institute courses in black studies and race relations had been rejected by Howard's predominantly white board of trustees. Historian Michael R. Winston attributes this rejection to the fact that "courses on race would help to more firmly identify the institution as black, and there were many who held fast to the conviction that Howard ought to be an institution for the education of 'youth' no matter what the realities of racial segregation in the United States" (Winston 1973, 21).
In late June, Woodson accepted with gratitude an invitation to become dean of the College Department of West Virginia Collegiate Institute (now West Virginia State College). "
from
An Essay on Carter G. Woodson
from
An Essay on Carter G. Woodson
By CHARLYNN SPENCER PYNE
Civil Rights Act, Sept. 9, 1957
"In 1957 Clarence Mitchell marshaled bipartisan support in Congress for a civil rights bill, the first passed since Reconstruction. Part III, a provision authorizing the Attorney General to sue in civil rights cases, was stripped from the bill before it passed. The Civil Rights Act of 1957 created a new Commission on Civil Rights to investigate civil rights violations and established a Civil Rights Division in the Department of Justice headed by an assistant attorney general. It also prohibited action to prevent citizens from voting and authorized the attorney general to seek injunctions to protect the right to vote. Although the act did not provide for adequate enforcement, it did pave the way for more far-reaching legislation."
Thursday, August 27, 2015
The Big Six 1963 Organizers of the March For Jobs and Freedom
The Big Six Organizers of the March For Jobs and Freedom
and Bayard Rustin
- A. Phillip Randolph
- James Farmer (president of the Congress of Racial Equality)
- John Lewis (chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee)
- Martin Luther King, Jr. (president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference)
- Roy Wilkins (president of the NAACP)
- Whitney Young (president of the National Urban League)
Malcolm X, "March on Washington Deceptive"
Malcolm X believed that the march was manipulated by the wealthy establishment.
March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom - August 28, 1963
Updated 27 August 2015-
52 years ago I boarded a bus destined for "the March on Washington"along with two dozen or so other South Jersey teens. We didn't all know one another but we had become acquainted while we waited with some apprehension for the bus to arrive. The bus wasn't full and there were also a several adults. In those days this was about a four and a half hour bus ride. During the first half hour of the trip the person responsible for our bus gave us instructions on how to behave under different conditions, which included the possibility of arrest or harrassment, riot or calm - the point being we didn't know exactly what to expect. We were all northern raised teens and actually represented quite a diverse group considering the fact that we were all from rural and small town areas of Burlington and Camden counties in Southern NJ, the mix included Black, Jewish, White, Native and Asian teens. We all had some experience with local sit-ins and boycotts, and picketting but this was something that was out of our territory so we didn't really know how it would play out. We sang all the movement songs on the bus ride which were all very inspirational and as we arrived in DC along with thousands of other busses the energy was magical. We could see that the people we passed in the streets were all in high spirits and very positive. Even the weather was perfect. We got our instructions for meeting the bus for our return trip and we were cut loose in the city. It was truly amazing. We all more or less went our separate ways since the bus I went on wasn't part of a group. I just strolled through DC meeting kids from all over the country and exchanging addresses and finally drifted to the Mall and sat in the grass as the music and the speeches got started. In all of this day I saw not one altercation and the mood was such that everyone present was fully aware of the part each one of us played on that momentous occasion. I think that most of the people there that day were active in there own local day to day struggles, but from that day on we understood just how much, we were not alone or isolated and this breathed renewed resolve into the movement to put the nation on the right pathof liberty and justice for all. Heady stuff but then it was something we were committed to. It's hard to believe that 50 years later, in spite of some changes that we still have so far to go. I suppose really, that every day, we have to remain in a state of vigilence for the cause of universal justice and as long as new people keep being born, the work will never be completely done.
For Jobs and Freedom: A Black Nouveau Special | Program
National Archives and Records Administration
THE MARCH ON WASHINGTON
U.S. Information Agency. (1982 - 10/01/1999)
ARC Identifier 49737 / Local Identifier 306.3394. Scenes from Civil Rights March in Washington, D.C., August 1963. People walking up sidewalk; gathering on Mall, standing, singing. Lincoln Memorial, Washington Monument, crowd gathered on the Mall. People marching with signs, many men wearing UAW hats. People at speakers podium, men with guitars. Crowds outside of the White House, sign: The Catholic University of America. Band, people marching down street. Many signs, including All D.C. wants to vote! Home Rule for DC; Alpha Phi Alpha; and Woodstock Catholic Seminary for Equal Rights. Lincoln Memorial with crowds gathered around reflecting pool. People singing and clapping at speakers platform. Signs, people clapping. Man speaking, woman playing guitar and singing at podium. More speakers and shots of the crowd. A chorus, NAACP men in crowd. Close-ups of people in crowd with bowed heads. Shots taken from above of White House. More speakers, including Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. Women at podium singing We Shall Overcome. Crowd swaying, singing, holding hands.
52 years ago I boarded a bus destined for "the March on Washington"along with two dozen or so other South Jersey teens. We didn't all know one another but we had become acquainted while we waited with some apprehension for the bus to arrive. The bus wasn't full and there were also a several adults. In those days this was about a four and a half hour bus ride. During the first half hour of the trip the person responsible for our bus gave us instructions on how to behave under different conditions, which included the possibility of arrest or harrassment, riot or calm - the point being we didn't know exactly what to expect. We were all northern raised teens and actually represented quite a diverse group considering the fact that we were all from rural and small town areas of Burlington and Camden counties in Southern NJ, the mix included Black, Jewish, White, Native and Asian teens. We all had some experience with local sit-ins and boycotts, and picketting but this was something that was out of our territory so we didn't really know how it would play out. We sang all the movement songs on the bus ride which were all very inspirational and as we arrived in DC along with thousands of other busses the energy was magical. We could see that the people we passed in the streets were all in high spirits and very positive. Even the weather was perfect. We got our instructions for meeting the bus for our return trip and we were cut loose in the city. It was truly amazing. We all more or less went our separate ways since the bus I went on wasn't part of a group. I just strolled through DC meeting kids from all over the country and exchanging addresses and finally drifted to the Mall and sat in the grass as the music and the speeches got started. In all of this day I saw not one altercation and the mood was such that everyone present was fully aware of the part each one of us played on that momentous occasion. I think that most of the people there that day were active in there own local day to day struggles, but from that day on we understood just how much, we were not alone or isolated and this breathed renewed resolve into the movement to put the nation on the right pathof liberty and justice for all. Heady stuff but then it was something we were committed to. It's hard to believe that 50 years later, in spite of some changes that we still have so far to go. I suppose really, that every day, we have to remain in a state of vigilence for the cause of universal justice and as long as new people keep being born, the work will never be completely done.
For Jobs and Freedom: A Black Nouveau Special | Program
National Archives and Records Administration
THE MARCH ON WASHINGTON
U.S. Information Agency. (1982 - 10/01/1999)
ARC Identifier 49737 / Local Identifier 306.3394. Scenes from Civil Rights March in Washington, D.C., August 1963. People walking up sidewalk; gathering on Mall, standing, singing. Lincoln Memorial, Washington Monument, crowd gathered on the Mall. People marching with signs, many men wearing UAW hats. People at speakers podium, men with guitars. Crowds outside of the White House, sign: The Catholic University of America. Band, people marching down street. Many signs, including All D.C. wants to vote! Home Rule for DC; Alpha Phi Alpha; and Woodstock Catholic Seminary for Equal Rights. Lincoln Memorial with crowds gathered around reflecting pool. People singing and clapping at speakers platform. Signs, people clapping. Man speaking, woman playing guitar and singing at podium. More speakers and shots of the crowd. A chorus, NAACP men in crowd. Close-ups of people in crowd with bowed heads. Shots taken from above of White House. More speakers, including Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. Women at podium singing We Shall Overcome. Crowd swaying, singing, holding hands.
March on Washington program
Tuesday, August 25, 2015
Friday, August 21, 2015
Wednesday, August 19, 2015
Kids Who Die
A Movement Grows #Ferguson
Poem by Langston Hughes
Narration Danny Glover
Video created by Frank Chi and Terrance Green
Monday, August 17, 2015
#Africa Hidden Meanings in Congo Music
"Viewed through the lens of music, the Congo presents a stark contrast. From the ravages of the slaving Portuguese, to King Leopold's virtual slave state in the late 19th century, through the monumental corruption and ruthless oppression of the regime of Mobutu Sese Seko that ended in 1997, this African heartland has known a history of unrelieved brutality and sadness. And yet, its cities have produced some of the most innovative and ebullient popular music the continent has known in the past century. Beginning in the 1950s, when Congolese music began to be distributed on vinyl records, it found admirers and imitators throughout East, West and Central Africa, and in much of southern African as well. With Congolese-born ethnomusicologist and author Kazadi wa Mukuna and arts educator and community scholar Lubangi Muniania as guides, this Hip Deep program will delve into the untold stories and messages disguised within the lyrics of Congolese songs."
Sunday, August 16, 2015
Civil Rights Activist Julian Bond Dies at 75
Julian Bond
Born: January 14, 1940 (age 75), Nashville, Tennessee, United States
Died: August 15, 2015, Fort Walton Beach, Florida, United States
Spouse: Pamela Horowitz (m. 1991), Alice Clopton (m. 1961–1989)
Parents: Julia Agnes Washington, Horace Mann Bond
Children: Jeffrey Alvin Bond, Julia "Cookie" Louise Bond, Phyllis Jane Bond-McMillan, Horace Mann Bond II, Michael Julian Bond
Organizations founded: Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee,Southern Poverty Law Center
I suggest you make the time to watch these videos.
Violence is black children going to school for 12 years and receiving 6 years' worth of education.
Julian Bond
Died: August 15, 2015, Fort Walton Beach, Florida, United States
Spouse: Pamela Horowitz (m. 1991), Alice Clopton (m. 1961–1989)
Parents: Julia Agnes Washington, Horace Mann Bond
Children: Jeffrey Alvin Bond, Julia "Cookie" Louise Bond, Phyllis Jane Bond-McMillan, Horace Mann Bond II, Michael Julian Bond
Organizations founded: Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee,Southern Poverty Law Center
I suggest you make the time to watch these videos.
Violence is black children going to school for 12 years and receiving 6 years' worth of education.
Julian Bond
Black in Brazil
- Brazil has the world's second biggest black population after Nigeria, the largest number of people of Japanese ancestry outside Japan, and more people of Lebanese or Syrian extraction than the combined populations of Lebanon and Syria.
Saturday, August 15, 2015
Thursday, August 13, 2015
Thursday, August 6, 2015
Killer Mike Render Interview at The Breakfast Club Power 105.1
Killer Mike Interview at The Breakfast Club Power 105.1
Mike talks police accountability, Black participation, truth and reconciliation and more.
Mike talks police accountability, Black participation, truth and reconciliation and more.
Voting Rights Act (1965)
... during the civil rights movement many people struggled, organized and even died for the right to vote in this country.
Monday, August 3, 2015
Thursday, July 30, 2015
Real News from IMixWhatILike
Are you tired of NEWS that's skewed?
Synonyms: askew, aslant, atilt, cock-a-hoop, cockeyed, crazy, crooked, listing, lopsided, oblique, off-kilter, pitched, skewed, slanted, slanting
www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/skewed
IMixWhatILike Real News Network
News from a Black perspective is a badly needed service that we should not take for granted. Follow this link if you're interested in seeing reportage that is not automatically placing Black people in a negative light as regards to the issues.Tuesday, July 28, 2015
Silent Protest Parade July 28, 1917
Silent Protest parade on Fifth Avenue, New York City, July 28, 1917, in response to the East St. Louis race riot. In front row are James Weldon Johnson [far right], W. E. B. DuBois [2nd from right], Rev. Hutchens Chew Bishop, rector of St. Philip's Episcopal Church [Harlem] and realtor John E. Nail.]
JULY 29th, 1917
Ten Thousand African Americans March in New York City to Protest Racial Violence
On July 29, 1917, prominent news sources reported that nearly 10,000 African American men, women, and children had staged a silent march down Fifth Avenue in New York City the previous day. In what is considered one of the first public demonstrations by African Americans in the 20th century, the NAACP mobilized thousands of members of the black community in the New York “Silent March” or “The Negro Silent Protest Parade.”
Formulated by James Weldon Johnson, this march was intended to be a public response and criticism of the racial violence that had been committed against African American communities in the United States that summer, particularly in the East St. Louise riots. Threatened by a growing African American labor force, a group of white men gathered in the downtown area of East St. Louis in May 1917 and began attacking and beating unsuspecting African Americans to death. That July, an armed white mob drove into black residential areas and opened fire on men, women, and children; when black residents shot back and accidentally killed a police officer, riots erupted. Whites flooded the black community, shooting black residents as they fled, lynching black people from street lamps, and burning black homes and businesses to the ground.
The thousands of marchers in New York City were also spurred to action by the racially-motivated murder of 17-year-old Jesse Washington, who was lynched, burned, and dismembered by a white mob in front of the Waco, Texas, City Hall on May 15, 1916.
The silent marchers communicated their frustration to the nation by holding signs and banners, but without speaking one word. Children led the march wearing white, followed by prominent NAACP members like W.E.B du Bois and a banner that read “Your Hands Are Full of Blood.” The American flag was also carried as a reminder of the democratic ideals that failed to protect African Americans. This march launched the NAACP's public campaign against lynching and racial violence.
Down Fifth Avenue
They piled them tier by tier while the crowd in silence watched them.
And as the pile rose and spread, to many it seemed
Like the red .blood of Russia welling from a mortal wound. And some saw red fagots of freedom rising and kindling
a fire that would warm all the world. But no man there could tell the truth of it.
The crowd makes way for them.
The mob of motors-women in motors, footmen in motors, Manhattan's transients in motors, life's transients in motors-has cleared and disappeared.
And their mothers and ·their children, their wives, their lovers and friends, are lining the curb and knitting and whispering.
The flags are floating and beckoning to them, the breezes
are beckoning and whispering their secrets,
That the city has hushed to hear, while trade and trivial things give place.
And through the crowd, that holds its breath too long, a restless stir like the starting of troubled breathing says, "They are coming." And the distant beat of feet begins
to blend with the beat of laboring hearts;
This is a street of mothers and their sons-for an hour in the life of Manhattan.
And today makes way for them.
The past makes way for them.
This morning's discontent, yesterday's greed, last year's uncertainty, are muted and transmuted to a surging urge to victory.
Spirits that stood at Bunker Hill and Valley Forge, Ticon
deroga, Yorktown, Lundy's Lane, Fort Sumter, Appomatox, are resurrected here;
With older fathers and mothers who farmed, and pushed frontiers and homes for freedom westward steadily;
With freedom's first grandfathers and forerunners, whu grew to hold hill towers and forest fastnesses, and range the sea and all its shores and islands for the right to live for liberty.
And their blood beats in these boy hearts, and their hill
bred and sea-bred strength is stirring in these feet that beat their measured cadences of courage.
For now the tide is turning eastward at last.
And the sound of the fall of their feet on the asphalt IS the sound of the· march of the waves of a tide that IS flooding-
Waves that marched to the western coast past forests and plains, mountains and deserts, and wrought their work in a world gone by.
And the ripple of the light on eyes and lips that watch and work, is the swelling of a greater flood that forces them to go.
And the ripple and arrest of light on dull gun-barrels that
crest their flow are runes of a ritual spelled in steel and a service enduring.
And each beat of their feet and each beat of their hearts is a word in a gospel of steel that says the nations through ruins grow one again ;
When God's drill-master War has welded nations in ranks
that their children may serve Him together.
For tomorrow makes way for them.
John Curtis Underwood
Down Fifth Avenue
Author(s): John Curtis Underwood
Source: Poetry, Vol. 12, No. 3 (Jun., 1918),
Published by: Poetry Foundation
A report on the East St. Louis Riot
A report on the East St. Louis Riot