Wednesday, January 13, 2016

The Black Arts Movement Wish List


Let's do the BAM Thang! City of Oakland approved The Black Arts Movement Business District along the 14th Street corridor, downtown Oakland. We expect to see the BAM flag flying immediately along with vendors on the street and the African Women's Market on Saturdays. We seek to establish a BAM Billion Dollar Trust Fund to secure the BAM Business District.


 





1. Black Arts Movement Districts established nationwide in each city with large populations of North American Africans. BAM chief architect, Amiri Baraka (RIP), called for the BAM tour to include 27 cities with large populations of North American Africans.


2. A community/corporate sponsorship of the Black Arts Movement 27 City Tour. Government agencies should support BAM as well, with the understanding that we are and shall remain artistic freedom fighters!



A Poetic Moment, Marvin X and Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf at Black Arts Movement 50th Anniversary Celebration, Feb. 7, 2015.




 Mrs. Gay Plair Cobb, Marvin X, Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf, Laney College President Elnora T. Webb, Dr. Nathan Hare, Paul Cobb
photo South Park Kenny Johnson

3. A BAM Endowment Fund  for veteran BAM artistic freedom fighters without basic survival funds. FYI, BAM/Black Power activists were patriots who believed in the values of American democracy. We believed in the American revolution. We quoted the US Constitution in our raps and principles. We believed in the consent of the governed, yet we suffered taxation without representation. We suffered a military defeat by the US Government. We hereby call upon all veterans of the US military to connect and support the BAM/Black Power veterans, especially those in need. We call on Black military veterans to reach out and touch the soldiers in America's domestic war against the freedom and independence of North American Africans, e.g., Black Panthers, Nation of Islam, Socialists, Communists, Liberation theologists and others. Now there are some who completely missed the 60s. They are like the girl who said Wake up to what? Poor girl doesn't even know she's sleeping. But US military veterans, reach out and touch your brothers in the war for freedom in America.

4. A BAM House in every North American African city. A separate house for men, women and youth in the BAM tradition. House can serve as a recovery center for those artists suffering from the addiction to white supremacy. BAM housing should be owned by a Land Trust. As per elder housing, they should be given the Life Estate to the space they inhabit, wherein they hold title to the property for natural life. Upon their transition to the ancestors, the title reverts to the Land Trust. On the general societal level, we think the Life Estate can end homelessness overnight in America. Of course, case management of many residents may be in order since many suffer traumatic slave syndrome, unresolved grief and communal amnesia, although Dr. Nathan Hare says it is not amnesia because they never knew, therefore they cannot suffer amnesia. Domestic colonialism severed the umbilical cord except for deep structure DNA residue. We know the ritual but not the myth, we beat the drum but don't know the rhythms as divine movement. How many of us recall the musical culture of Mali as origin of the Blues, especially in the Mississippi Delta. The Malian musician Ali Farka played with BB King and the Rolling Stones but he said he was not playing Blues. His music is from a ten thousand year old mythology, aboriginal and Islamic. Sorry we diverted from the housing issue but we must also address the dire mental apparatus that must be restored so the oppressed can regain their mental equilibrium as Dr. Hare notes. One project we have is the How to Recover from the Addiction to White Supremacy mental health peer group facilitated by Dr. Nathan Hare and Suzzette Celeste, MPA, MSW. They recently conducted a session at the Black Arts Movement 50th Anniversary Celebration on Feb. 7, 2015, Laney College, Oakland.



5. A BAM Union of Artists, modeled on the National Writers Union. Union will offer health and life insurance for all members. Please comment on the NWU model. Do you suggest we reinvent the wheel?

6. A general fund.

Want to help? Contact: Marvin X, BAM 27 City Tour, 510-200-4164, jmarvinx@yahoo.com
Please send a generous donation to the BAM 27 City Tour, 339 Lester Ave. #10, Oakland CA. 94606. Your donation can be tax deductible. BAM 27 City Tour co-planner, Paul Cobb, Publisher of the Post News Group in Oakland, suggests 100 people donate $100.00 in each city. This would go a long way to making the BAM 27 City Tour happen in your city. Set up a planning committee in your city, secure donations, grants. I will help you plan the BAM 27 City Tour for your city. Each city must have the participation of local artists, after all, BAM was local as well as national. Each city had their little Black theatres, some funded but mostly unfunded but were able to do productions as they were able. This was certainly true for Black Arts West Theatre, San Francisco. We got no grants. The Bay Area Black bourgeoisie did not support BAM until we established Black House with Eldridge Cleaver. They supported Black House because we had a celebrity in da house. Eldridge released his best-seller Soul on Ice while at Black House.  Today, we again call upon the progressive Black bourgeoisie to support the Black Arts Movement 27 City Tour.


collage by Adam Turner of the BAM Poet's Choir and Arkestra performing at the Malcolm X Jazz/art fest, Oakland, 2014

City of Oakland endorses the Black Arts Movement Business District



We are happy to announce that today, January 12, 2016,  a committee of Oakland City Council members passed the resolution designating the 14th Street corridor as the Black Arts Movement Business District. The resolution was introduced by Oakland City Council President Lynette Gibson McElhaney. For their vote to officially establish the name Black Arts Movement Business District, they receive the BAM Gold Fist Award for Excellence:



Council President Lynette McElhaney, Marvin X, Duane Deterville; Middle row: Gerry Garzon (Oakland Public Library), Tureeda Mikell, Jaenal Peterson, Aries Jordan, David McKelvey, Eric Murphy (Joyce Gordon Gallery); Back row: Eric Arnold, Kwesi Wilkerson, Charles Johnson, Alicia Parker (Oakland Planning Department), Shomari Carter (Supervisor Keith Carson's Office). Far right: Elder Paul Cobb, Publisher, Oakland Post News Group.
For more information on the Black Arts Movement Business District, stay tuned to www.blackbirdpressnews.blogspot.com 

Monday, January 11, 2016


Hard Knock Radio – January 11, 2016

Today, 4pm, Davey D interviews Marvin X on Oakland's Black Arts Movement Business District

 

Marvin X on Hard Knock Radio – January 11, 2016

KPFA 94.1 www.kpfa.org

Davey D (KPFA FM Hardknock Radio) interviews Marvin X on Oakland's Black Arts Movement Business District, today, 4pm. Check it out.

Tomorrow, Feb. 12, Tuesday, 1:30PM, the BAM District planning committee meets at Oakland City Hall, Hearing Room 3. Be there or be square! President of Oakland City Council, Lynette McElhaney will present BAM Business District proposal to City Council committee.

Council President Lynette McElhaney, Marvin X, Duane Deterville; Middle row: Gerry Garzon (Oakland Public Library), Tureeda Mikell, Jaenal Peterson, Aries Jordan, David McKelvey, Eric Murphy (Joyce Gordon Gallery); Back row: Eric Arnold, Kwesi Wilkerson, Charles Johnson, Alicia Parker (Oakland Planning Department), Shomari Carter (Supervisor Keith Carson's Office). Far right: Elder Paul Cobb, Publisher, Oakland Post News Group.

For more information on the Black Arts Movement Business District, stay tuned to www.blackbirdperessnews.blogspot.com 

Black Arts Movement poet Sonia Sanchez at National Conference of Black Studies







NCBS logo

Promoting Academic Excellence and Social Responsibility

NCBS ANNOUNCES CONFERENCE EVENTS FEATURING SONIA SANCHEZ

Our sincere apologies. In our earlier email, we erroneously misspelled Professor Sonia Sanchez's name as Sonya Sanchez. We deeply regret this and would like to point out the correct spelling - Sonia Sanchez.







NCBS PLENARY SPEAKER
NCBS is excited to announce Sonia Sanchez as keynote plenary speaker for it's 40th Conference. Sonia Sanchez is a Poet, Mother, Professor, National and International lecturer on Black Culture and Literature, Women's Liberation, Peace and Racial Justice.  Sonia Sanchez is the author of over 16 books and a contributing editor to The Black Scholar and The Journal of African Studies. She has edited an anthology, SOS-Calling All Black People: A Black Arts Movement Reader, a landmark anthology of readings from the Black Arts Movement edited together with John H. Bracey Jr. and James Smethurst.


SONIA SANCHEZ FILM

BaddDDD Sonia Sanchez offers unprecedented access to the life, work
and mesmerizing performances of renowned poet and activist Sonia Sanchez
who describes herself as "a woman with razor blades between my teeth." A
leading figure in the Black Arts Movement and inspiration to today's hip hop spoken
word artists, Sanchez for over 60 years has helped to redefine American
culture and politics as an activist in the Black, women's and peace movements.

Maya Angelou called Sanchez "a lion in literature's forest" while spoken word
artist Bryonn Bain credits her with paving the way for his generation, "She not
only opened the door, she blew off the roof." Sanchez revolutionized poetry by
incorporating street language, a unique performance style and collaborations
with jazz musicians.

Sanchez's contemporaries Ruby Dee, Amiri Baraka, John Bracey, Jr., Haki
Madhubuti, Askia Toure, Marvin X and Nikki Giovanni joined by such newer
voices as Talib Kweli, Ayana Mathis, jessica Care moore, Bryonn Bain and
Questlove present impassioned readings of and insightful commentary on
her fearless verse, including her raw love poems.

Born in Birmingham, Alabama Sanchez grew up in Harlem, attended college
in New York and studied with former US poet laureate Louise Bogan who
introduced her to the importance of poetic form. In the early 1960s, Sanchez
was active in the New York City chapter of the Congress of Racial Equality
(CORE) and, inspired by Malcolm X, channeled her heightened political
commitment into her poetry. She joined with Leroi Jones (Amiri Baraka)
in forming the Black Arts Repertory Theatre in Harlem and like many poets
of the Black Arts Movement, wrote her work to be performed on the streets
where it could provoke action.

In 1965, Sanchez moved to the San Francisco Bay Area, teaching some of
the first Black Studies courses in the nation and participated in the San Francisco
State Strike which succeeded in establishing the country's first Ethnic Studies
Department. She supported the programs of the Black Panther Party (BPP)
and contributed articles to its newspaper. When she wrote a critical review of
BPP Minister of Information Eldridge Cleaver's Soul on Ice ("No man practices
rape on Black women in order to rape white women. That's not a revolutionary,
that's a hustler.") the piece was never published and Party representatives
later threatened her.

After leaving the Bay Area she joined the Nation of Islam for the stability and 
protection it offered a single mother but soon left because of its restrictions on
women. Meanwhile tenured faculty positions alluded her because college 
administrations were wary of her steadfast activism. Settling at Temple University 
in Philadelphia – eventually named that city's poet laureate - Sanchez earned a 
reputation as an accessible and generous teacher and mentor to the young, as 
seen in her lively engagement with her students and the broader community.

BaddDDD Sonia Sanchez, (named after her legendary early collection We a 
BaddDDD People) will be popular with students and faculty as an accessible 
resource for teaching English, Creative Writing, African American and Women's 
Studies, as well as for public programming and deepening public library's video 
offerings.

Here is an index of poems by Sonia Sanchez that she or others read in BaddDDD 
Sonia Sanchez, the time code for when they occur and the books in which they 
appear. A complete list of Sonia Sanchez's works can be found here.

SONIA SANCHEZ AND ANGELA DAVIS IN CONVERSATION

We are excited to post this audio from an historic dialogue between Birmingham 
natives Sonia Sanchez and Angela Davis which was sponsored by Philadelphia's 
900-AM WURD, the only African-American owned and operated talk radio station
in Pennsylvania, and one of few in the country. The conversation took place in May 
2014 in Oakland and it will be available to listen to through February 29, 2016.

 
Angela Davis with BAM poets Marvin X and Sonia
Sanchez in Oakland, 2014. 

Saturday, January 9, 2016

Save the besieged town of Madaya, Syria

                                         Syrian poet/novelist Dr. Mohja Kahf and Marvin X
Dear friends,

In the besieged town of Madaya, starving children are eating tree leaves, cats and insects. The Assad regime is literally starving over 40,000 people to death. It's hard to imagine the suffering of parents watching their kids die from hunger -- but we have a way to help them.

A truce to lift the siege on Madaya and other cities was brokered in September, but civilians are still trapped inside without food and medicine. Turkey and Iran can work with their allies to ensure the siege is lifted, but won’t act on their own. If we raise a one million strong outcry calling on UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to intervene and work with all sides, we could save thousands of families from starving to death in Madaya.

Ban Ki-moon can do this -- if the siege is lifted, it could set a hopeful foundation for upcoming peace talks. And with his service to the UN ending soon, lifting the siege would be a great achievement for his legacy. With enough pressure from each one of us, we can get Ban Ki-moon to be the champion Madaya desperately needs right now.

Add your voice to the urgent petition. Avaaz will take stories and photos from Madaya to the media, the UN, and key foreign ministries until the siege is lifted:

https://secure.avaaz.org/en/madaya_starvation_siege_loc/?tuTiqjb

After mounting media pressure, the regime just announced that it will finally allow some aid into Madaya. But then what? Aid was distributed in October as well, though most of it was expired, and it quickly ran out. To really save the people of Madaya, we need the siege to be lifted entirely.

Already 31 people have died from starvation this month. Residents risk being blown to pieces if they try to escape because the town is encircled with landmines. On Sunday a pregnant woman and her daughter tried to escape, and accidentally triggered one. They survived, but the blast gave their location away to militants. There is no escape for the people of Madaya -- only lifting the siege can save these desperate families.

The regime is using barbaric tactics to punish and intimidate anyone who opposes their control. Citizens from Madaya were active during the 2011 protests. Now they are paying the price for daring to speak out years ago. Many parties in this conflict are guilty of blockading towns, but the regime is responsible for the vast majority, and regularly airlifts food to its supporters, while Madaya’s residents waste away. Our call for lifting the sieges would help civilians in rebel and regime-held areas.

We won’t be able to end the Syrian conflict by saving Madaya, but all the pieces needed to lift this siege are at our fingertips. We could help save thousands of innocent Syrians who deserve a chance at life -- we can’t give up on them now.

The UN was made exactly for moments like this. Let’s end this nightmare in Madaya and show Ban Ki-moon that we won’t give up until all sides commit to freedom of movement for civilians, food and supplies. Sign the urgent petition and tell everyone:

https://secure.avaaz.org/en/madaya_starvation_siege_loc/?tuTiqjb

Sometimes it feels like this war is never ending, but time and again our community has come together and stood with the Syrian people. We’ve done it since day 1, and we won’t give up. Now let’s do it for the families of Madaya who need us to fight for their lives now more than ever.

With hope,

Rewan, Mais, Wissam, Mohammad, Alice, Emma, Ricken and the entire Avaaz team

More information:

'Children are eating leaves off the trees': The nightmare of the siege of Madaya, Syria (Vice News)
https://news.vice.com/article/children-are-eating-leaves-off-the-trees-the-nightmare-of-the-siege-of...

Up to 40,000 civilians are starving in besieged Madaya (The Independent)
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/war-in-syria-up-to-40000-civilians-are-starving-...

Syrian army and rebels agree to new truce in Zabadani (Al Jazeera)
http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2015/08/syrian-army-rebels-agree-truce-zabadani-ceasefire-150827070432...

United Nations says it mistakenly sent expired biscuits to Syrians (NY Daily News)
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/world/mistakenly-expired-biscuits-syrians-article-1.2409670

Madaya: Aid to be sent to besieged Syrian village Sunday (BBC)
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-35271260)

Avaaz.org is a 41-million-person global campaign network
that works to ensure that the views and values of the world's people shape global decision-making. ("Avaaz" means "voice" or "song" in many languages.) Avaaz members live in every nation of the world; our team is spread across 18 countries on 6 continents and operates in 17 languages. Learn about some of Avaaz's biggest campaigns here, or follow us on Facebook or Twitter.

You became a member of the Avaaz movement and started receiving these emails when you signed "UN Secretary General: Save Madaya from starvation" on 2016-01-10 02:32:37 using the email address jmarvinx@yahoo.com.

Amiri Baraka - Dope

Marvin X reads "Dope" by Amiri Baraka