Marvin X at the Fillmore Jazz Festival, San Francisco 7/7/12
Monday, July 9, 2012
Saturday, July 7, 2012
Aries Jordan on West Oakland Elders Council
West Oakland Elders council photoshoot
by Aries Jordan

In a society obsessed with staying forever getting old has become dreadful. However, for the distinguished men and women of the West Oakland Renaissance Elders Council, elder hood is celebrated and honored. The council meets once a month to address issues affecting Oakland residents and to envision a better future for the next generation. Council member Leonard Gardner stated, the intention behind the elders council “is to preserve and maintain the history of west Oakland, as well as share the wisdom and insight we have gained through life’s trials and tribulations.”
On June 22, 2012 members of the council gathered together at the historical Defremery park for a photo shoot, to make visible their presence within the community and promote the new TV show “West Oakland stories” .
The vision of having West Oakland natives tell their stories in their own words was a vision held by many, but brought to fruition by Francis and Ed Howard and endorsed by the council. The goal of West Oakland Stories is to share the stories of Oakland, CA regarding its Black population during the 40's 50's and 60's told by the people who lived there at that time.
In between photos the members, all west Oakland natives, reminisced about the good times they had and how the neighborhood has shaped who they are. When the council was asked what it means to accept elderhood? and their message to young people, the group responded candidly. They all agreed that being an elder is about passing the torch to the younger generation and sharing the wisdom they have gained over the years. Francis quoted Dr. Joe Marshalls quote “ The more you know! The more you owe!” which described his philosophy on elder hood. Marvin X passionately described the duty of an elder. “Elders have to recognize you have wisdom to share from your life, it is your duty and responsibility . If you fail to handle the responsibility you will suffer great chastisement as we see our youth chastising us now.”
The council also wanted our youth to know that they love them, respect them , honor them and want them to participate in making our community a better place.
In a world were youth and elders are becoming more disconnected the elders council has made a commitment “to embrace our youth” and share their wisdom.
by Aries Jordan

In a society obsessed with staying forever getting old has become dreadful. However, for the distinguished men and women of the West Oakland Renaissance Elders Council, elder hood is celebrated and honored. The council meets once a month to address issues affecting Oakland residents and to envision a better future for the next generation. Council member Leonard Gardner stated, the intention behind the elders council “is to preserve and maintain the history of west Oakland, as well as share the wisdom and insight we have gained through life’s trials and tribulations.”
On June 22, 2012 members of the council gathered together at the historical Defremery park for a photo shoot, to make visible their presence within the community and promote the new TV show “West Oakland stories” .
The vision of having West Oakland natives tell their stories in their own words was a vision held by many, but brought to fruition by Francis and Ed Howard and endorsed by the council. The goal of West Oakland Stories is to share the stories of Oakland, CA regarding its Black population during the 40's 50's and 60's told by the people who lived there at that time.
In between photos the members, all west Oakland natives, reminisced about the good times they had and how the neighborhood has shaped who they are. When the council was asked what it means to accept elderhood? and their message to young people, the group responded candidly. They all agreed that being an elder is about passing the torch to the younger generation and sharing the wisdom they have gained over the years. Francis quoted Dr. Joe Marshalls quote “ The more you know! The more you owe!” which described his philosophy on elder hood. Marvin X passionately described the duty of an elder. “Elders have to recognize you have wisdom to share from your life, it is your duty and responsibility . If you fail to handle the responsibility you will suffer great chastisement as we see our youth chastising us now.”
The council also wanted our youth to know that they love them, respect them , honor them and want them to participate in making our community a better place.
In a world were youth and elders are becoming more disconnected the elders council has made a commitment “to embrace our youth” and share their wisdom.
On Mali and the Crisis of the Negro Intellectual
Friends, here in Finksburg, Maryland, it is as hot as a sow's tit. The fan of my ChickenBones computer was running so fast that the humming was as loud as a diesel truck. I cut it off. Now I am in the basement, cooling my heels with a bit of literary chatter.
I tend to do my most creative work during the hours of Stephen Crane. So most of my correspondence and ChickenBones work is done after midnight to the choral singing of morning birds. I lay down then to sleep during the cool morning hours to my wife's dismay. I am a member of 20 percent black unemployed. I finished last night this pagehttp://www.nathanielturner.com/timbuktutombdestroyers.htm
I tend to avoid such issues like the Mali Crisis or the Darfur Crisis, or the Congo Crisis, and so on and on. We black Americans and Africans are ever in crisis. I had noted the story of Mali from Facebook and blogs and emails and other internet sources. Of course, being informed is not like resolving the dilemmas or the tragedies of my interests, however sharp the analysis and use of the facts.
In the present Mali Crisis black American intellectuals might be more disturbed about the destruction of the religious Islamic history of Mali than African elites or its government heads. Why? From what I hear from Asante of Afrocentricity International and others, the core of the argument has to do with black American identity. Malian libraries document the literacy of Africans before they were kidnapped and transformed into Negro slaves in the Americas. We're still trying to undermine charges of Negro inferiority and slavery justifications.
African elites may be more practical and down to earth (feet on the ground) than African American progressives. Of course, African Americans don't have armies they command or can influence. They can only show their indignation and awareness of loss. Black Consciousness was one of our humanistic achievements of the 1960s and 1970s. We made lame attempts to back them up with guns but COINTELPRO dispersed us like scaredy cats into board rooms, other high places or other prisons.
African American intellectuals tend to deal with such African affairs abstractly as they are in secular ivory towers, which tend to set them apart from African decision makers. Certainly, Malian religious relics, scholarly books, manuscripts, mosques and mausoleums of the 14th, 15th, and 16th centuries do not weigh as heavily on African American people as their own poverty, health issues (HIV and AIDS; diabetes and heart attacks), incarceration and education issues, and insecurity and police repression.
African American elites have more confidence in UNESCO and thus the UN than they have in ECOWAS and the African Union. ECOWAS is more or less controlled by Nigeria, which is suspect by smaller African nations. For Nigerian leaders cannot command its own terrorists in northern Nigeria, which is more under-developed than the south and west, where Islamic fundamentalists argue exist the core of Nigerian and Christian corruption. But African American elites are not truly engaged in everyday African affairs with its problems of under-development, poverty, and governance. As I suggested above African American interests are regrettably narrow and self-serving.
African-American elites want to be politically correct. They know that only the United States and NATO have the means to deal with Islamic terrorism in Africa, or elsewhere. The United Nations can issue all kinds of injunctions and statements on world heritage. But the UN doesn't have an army, other than those agreed to by the Security Council which is controlled by the United States, the European Union, Russia and China. African American elites nor African nations have little or no power in that international body.
The African elites are justificably also narrow and self-serving. Their concerns are geared to professional advancement and personal wealth. Well, there is nothing wrong with placing that above ideologies like Pan-Africanism and humanism. Financial success as Mr. Romney argues is the measure of the man in our dog-eat-dog world. African elites know that such 20th century ideologies are not being funded by Qatar and Saudi Arabia, nor the World Bank. The politics of African and African American billionaires are indistinguishable from that of American and European billionaires, or even Chinese billionaires. So those sources cannot be called upon by African American progressives nor by the leaders of African governments. Certainly, these black billionaires are not as willing to fund ideologues in a manner similar to that of the billionaire oil-baron fundamentalists of Arabia and Qatar.
I'm typing away at an older slower computer downstairs, which is partially below ground, and thus the coolest place in the house, and really does not need air conditioning. I pray to the evangelical Christian god that rules America for relief for those older and poorer than me who can't afford air conditioning or the high prices of our energy provider BG & E. I hear that at least 16 in Maryland have died from this plague of 100-degree temperature and black buzzing flies.
The 2008 Depression is here to stay for most black people for the unseeable future. But most of us do not make populous decisions because of scarcity and political repression. We still have core values and a vision of freedom and democracy. And we are still capable of making selfless sacrifices for the generations to come and for the immediate present. Fundamentalists, whether Christian or Islamic, ultimately will not win the day. History does not tend for long to be swayed by those kind of criminal reactions.
Whatever we might have to say on Mali, ultimately, it will be the Malians who resolve their present crisis, despite the literary or archietcural treasures they may possess that serve the narrow interests of a narrow few. I counsel against military interventions from the West and the East. I do not expect the leaders of African nations to solve African American crises. Those African nations and peoples cannot expect any relief from African American elites or their peoples. We are both on our own however good the terms may be among us. Money talks, bullshit walks, alone.
Hard times do not sustain themselves always. The weather will cool down by Tuesday, I understand, without any help from us. We finally solved the problem of an underground water leak. It took us a week to raise the money but we got it done, me and Yvonne, to the tune of $2500. Who has that kind of money lying around. But Yvonne is a praying, hard-working woman.
I tend to do my most creative work during the hours of Stephen Crane. So most of my correspondence and ChickenBones work is done after midnight to the choral singing of morning birds. I lay down then to sleep during the cool morning hours to my wife's dismay. I am a member of 20 percent black unemployed. I finished last night this pagehttp://www.nathanielturner.com/timbuktutombdestroyers.htm
I tend to avoid such issues like the Mali Crisis or the Darfur Crisis, or the Congo Crisis, and so on and on. We black Americans and Africans are ever in crisis. I had noted the story of Mali from Facebook and blogs and emails and other internet sources. Of course, being informed is not like resolving the dilemmas or the tragedies of my interests, however sharp the analysis and use of the facts.
In the present Mali Crisis black American intellectuals might be more disturbed about the destruction of the religious Islamic history of Mali than African elites or its government heads. Why? From what I hear from Asante of Afrocentricity International and others, the core of the argument has to do with black American identity. Malian libraries document the literacy of Africans before they were kidnapped and transformed into Negro slaves in the Americas. We're still trying to undermine charges of Negro inferiority and slavery justifications.
African elites may be more practical and down to earth (feet on the ground) than African American progressives. Of course, African Americans don't have armies they command or can influence. They can only show their indignation and awareness of loss. Black Consciousness was one of our humanistic achievements of the 1960s and 1970s. We made lame attempts to back them up with guns but COINTELPRO dispersed us like scaredy cats into board rooms, other high places or other prisons.
African American intellectuals tend to deal with such African affairs abstractly as they are in secular ivory towers, which tend to set them apart from African decision makers. Certainly, Malian religious relics, scholarly books, manuscripts, mosques and mausoleums of the 14th, 15th, and 16th centuries do not weigh as heavily on African American people as their own poverty, health issues (HIV and AIDS; diabetes and heart attacks), incarceration and education issues, and insecurity and police repression.
African American elites have more confidence in UNESCO and thus the UN than they have in ECOWAS and the African Union. ECOWAS is more or less controlled by Nigeria, which is suspect by smaller African nations. For Nigerian leaders cannot command its own terrorists in northern Nigeria, which is more under-developed than the south and west, where Islamic fundamentalists argue exist the core of Nigerian and Christian corruption. But African American elites are not truly engaged in everyday African affairs with its problems of under-development, poverty, and governance. As I suggested above African American interests are regrettably narrow and self-serving.
African-American elites want to be politically correct. They know that only the United States and NATO have the means to deal with Islamic terrorism in Africa, or elsewhere. The United Nations can issue all kinds of injunctions and statements on world heritage. But the UN doesn't have an army, other than those agreed to by the Security Council which is controlled by the United States, the European Union, Russia and China. African American elites nor African nations have little or no power in that international body.
The African elites are justificably also narrow and self-serving. Their concerns are geared to professional advancement and personal wealth. Well, there is nothing wrong with placing that above ideologies like Pan-Africanism and humanism. Financial success as Mr. Romney argues is the measure of the man in our dog-eat-dog world. African elites know that such 20th century ideologies are not being funded by Qatar and Saudi Arabia, nor the World Bank. The politics of African and African American billionaires are indistinguishable from that of American and European billionaires, or even Chinese billionaires. So those sources cannot be called upon by African American progressives nor by the leaders of African governments. Certainly, these black billionaires are not as willing to fund ideologues in a manner similar to that of the billionaire oil-baron fundamentalists of Arabia and Qatar.
I'm typing away at an older slower computer downstairs, which is partially below ground, and thus the coolest place in the house, and really does not need air conditioning. I pray to the evangelical Christian god that rules America for relief for those older and poorer than me who can't afford air conditioning or the high prices of our energy provider BG & E. I hear that at least 16 in Maryland have died from this plague of 100-degree temperature and black buzzing flies.
The 2008 Depression is here to stay for most black people for the unseeable future. But most of us do not make populous decisions because of scarcity and political repression. We still have core values and a vision of freedom and democracy. And we are still capable of making selfless sacrifices for the generations to come and for the immediate present. Fundamentalists, whether Christian or Islamic, ultimately will not win the day. History does not tend for long to be swayed by those kind of criminal reactions.
Whatever we might have to say on Mali, ultimately, it will be the Malians who resolve their present crisis, despite the literary or archietcural treasures they may possess that serve the narrow interests of a narrow few. I counsel against military interventions from the West and the East. I do not expect the leaders of African nations to solve African American crises. Those African nations and peoples cannot expect any relief from African American elites or their peoples. We are both on our own however good the terms may be among us. Money talks, bullshit walks, alone.
Hard times do not sustain themselves always. The weather will cool down by Tuesday, I understand, without any help from us. We finally solved the problem of an underground water leak. It took us a week to raise the money but we got it done, me and Yvonne, to the tune of $2500. Who has that kind of money lying around. But Yvonne is a praying, hard-working woman.
The state says that my old truck does not pass the emission tests, which guard against global warming. Thy are taxing me a $450 minimum for a waiver. Two years ago, I paid ignorantly over $1500 to resolve the problem and still failed te test. Well there's nothing I can do about it if I want to keep my 1997 truck on the road. Now the Supreme Court says governments have a right to tax, however they want to call it. So be it.
In this emission test affair in Maryland, the tax goes indirectly to mechanics (a job stimulus?) and then to the government coffers. Well, regressive taxes are placed on the books by the best of Democrats. I am still making up my mind on voting November 2012. Plumbers, mechanics, computer companies are keeping my pockets dusty. But I carry on. God bless social security!
In this emission test affair in Maryland, the tax goes indirectly to mechanics (a job stimulus?) and then to the government coffers. Well, regressive taxes are placed on the books by the best of Democrats. I am still making up my mind on voting November 2012. Plumbers, mechanics, computer companies are keeping my pockets dusty. But I carry on. God bless social security!
Pray for the Malians. Pray for ChickenBones: A Journal
Loving you madly, Rudy
Rudolph Lewis, Editor
ChickenBones: A Journal
www.nathanielturner.com
Loving you madly, Rudy
Rudolph Lewis, Editor
ChickenBones: A Journal
www.nathanielturner.com
Thursday, July 5, 2012
Destruction in Mali
Statement issued By Dr. Molefi Asante
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE!
AFROCENTRICITY INTERNATIONAL ASKS FOR AN IMMEDIATE RESPONSE FROM A SILENT AFRICAN UNION ON THE MALIAN QUESTION
Afrocentricity International condemns the destruction of historic monuments in the ancient city of Timbuktu and calls for an immediate response by the African Union to the Ansar Dine criminals who have chosen to bring their destruction to the heart of West African culture. Led by Ag Ghaly, a Tuareg nomad who converted to the Pakistani style Islam, Ansar Dine is allied to MUJUAO of Algeria and Boko Haram of Nigeria . Since it is not clear if the African Union has either the will power or the military capability to respond to the assault against one of the most sacred of African cities then we call upon the nations of Africa , acting in their capacity as regional powers, to arrest this destruction. However, we demand in the name of African people the immediate response of the African Union to this crisis!
Afrocentricity International does not believe it is the responsibility of NATO, the European Union, or the United States AFRICOM to save Africa .
Africa must save itself!
If Africa cannot save itself and will not save itself, then it cannot be saved. The rampant campaign against the monuments in the north represents another strand of death to African culture. Over the past millennium we have lost the indigenous treasures of some of the world’s greatest civilizations to the outrages of foreign religionists. They have even fought among themselves for the honor or dishonor of claiming to be better than the others who support these foreign invasions of Africa ’s culture. In their attacks and assaults they have smashed everything of value, all treasures from the past, manuscripts, sculptures, evidences of ancient African art and culture, and stamped their feet on our ancestors’ graves. These are not men with a divine mission; they are pure and simple criminals whose ambition is to rule and they will use any ruse to destroy monuments and manuscripts that were created by Africans out of our own tradition. The people of Mali Africanized many of the symbols that came with invaders; they did not accept the idea that Africa was devoid of culture prior to the coming of the Arabs and whites.
Afrocentricity International looks at this situation as we have looked at other instances of this destruction to our culture. It is a political and mental war, carried on for ages against the best that is Africa, and in Mali we are seeing the latest, but not the last, attempt to ruin Africa . As in Sudan , now in Mali , the attackers and the attacked are both Muslims. But in Mali we know that the ancient graves of the 333 saints include many African philosophers and thinkers who made the civilizations of Mali and Songhay the rivals to the world’s greatest cultures. But what do these Ansar Dine criminals do? They destroy the monuments of the greatest ancestors of African people and claim they are doing it in the name of Allah. But Allah has given them no such command; they must be condemned, captured, and brought to justice for their crimes against humanity.
The attackers who have sacked the mausoleums of Timbuktu allied themselves to the Tuareg MNLA, a group fighting to have the government recognize legitimate grievances of the northerners. Soon after the Taureg rebels seceded the northern part of Mali from the rest of the country in March 2012, the little known Ansar Dine group supposedly with support from Al Qaeda in Libya drove the secular MNLA out of Timbuktu and Gao and took over as the absolute rulers of the north. They have taken rights away from women, killed people they claim were violating the Koran, and imposed Sharia law. These Neanderthalian activities have plunged Mali deeper into the closet of ignorance than almost any other nation in Africa . Afrocentricity International blames Malian leadership for the crisis because that leadership did not practice equality, justice, and respect toward its own people and opened the door for this throwback gang of terrorists who have now laid hold to the land of Sunni Ali Ber .
Once again the crisis in Mali has proved what Afrocentricity International has always claimed that when you accept the religion and ideology of foreigners, you will end up fighting against your own interests. Indeed, the rumble in the ancient cities of Northern Mali, Timbuktu , Jenne, and Gao, is nothing more than a down payment on the problems that Africa will face in Burkina Faso , Senegal , Niger , Chad , Guinea , and Ivory Coast . Indeed, we have already seen this problem in Nigeria and Ivory Coast . It is yet to be resolved and will not be resolved until Africans, any Africans, some Africans, have the courage to speak up in the interest of Africa and not in the interest of Europe or the Arabs. The dilemma is real; the task is our responsibility. Afrocentricity International supports any effort to bring the crisis in Mali to an end, but we insist that the criminals who destroyed the precious historical monuments must be brought to justice. Unity is our aim; victory is our destiny!
Dr. Ama Mazama, Per-aat International
Dr. Molefi Kete Asante , International Organizer
www.Afrocentricityinternational.org
July 4, 2012
all
Marvin X is Plato teaching on the streets of Oakland.
-Ishmael Reed
The Wisdom of Plato Negro Parables/Fables
Marvin X
He’s the USA’s Rumi! The wisdom of Saadi, the ecstasy of Hafiz!—Bob Holman
Marvin X has been ignored and silenced, like Malcolm X would be ignored and silenced if he had lived on into the Now. He's one of the most extraordinary, exciting black intellectuals living today.
--Rudolph Lewis, Chickenbones.
Marvin X was my teacher. Many of our comrades came through his Black Arts Theatre: Bobby Seale, Eldridge Cleaver, Emory Douglas and Samuel Napier.
-Dr. Huey P. Newton, co-founder of the Black Panther Party
--Rudolph Lewis, Chickenbones.
Marvin X was my teacher. Many of our comrades came through his Black Arts Theatre: Bobby Seale, Eldridge Cleaver, Emory Douglas and Samuel Napier.
-Dr. Huey P. Newton, co-founder of the Black Panther Party
INTRODUCTION
To all seekers of truth living in the post modern world, this volume of literature is your pragmatic hustler’s guide and intellectual syllabus for success. Some people found it strange when scholar Ishmael Reed first compared Marvin X, the son of Owendell and Marian Jackmon to the classical Greek Philosopher Plato (427 B.C.), son of Ariston and Perictione.
No one can argue that both Plato and Marvin X have
proven in their dialogues/writings to be great thinkers and critics of their
respective eras. Although separated by over two thousand years of history and
clearly two distinct worldviews, research proves that these poet/philosophers
strangely share similar souls.
Recently while reading about the Dialogues of Plato,
I came across a quote by William Chase Greene, former Professor of Greek and
Latin at Harvard University. Greene describes Plato’s works by profoundly
stating, “In yet another field the Platonic Philosophy seeks to find an escape
from the flux.
Those poets and artist who are content to record the
fleeting impressions of the senses, or to tickle the fancies and indulge the
passions of an ignorant people by specious emotional and rhetorical appeals,
Plato invites to use their art in service of truth.”
These are timeless words describing Plato’s classic
works, yet if you simply replace Plato’s name with Marvin X in the above quote,
and review Marvin’s work over the past 40 years, you won’t be surprised why he
has adopted the title “Plato Negro”. In this classic volume Marvin X truly
becomes Plato personified, as we see him transcend from master poet to
philosopher.
Plato was once a master poet until the death of his
teacher Socrates in (399 B.C.). This marked a turning point in Plato’s life
causing him to fully convert to philosophy. The same can be said now with
Marvin X who recently lost his master teacher John Douimbia and has since
elevated beyond poetry, reincarnating as the philosopher “Plato Negro”.
These “New Dialogues” of The Wisdom of Plato Negro
provide a post modern Gorgias, Sophist, Symposium of Laws, on how to hustle and
survive in the new Obamian American Republic.
It is clear that Marvin X has become the true
Platonist of the day by demonstrating his Platonic love for the people, taking
us on a symbolic trip through the parable of the Cave, where all true analysis
takes place, inside the true self.
As an African Philosopher, as ironic as it sounds,
the works of “Plato Negro” prove to be a major contribution to the field of
African Philosophy. These works provide a model for a standard approach toward
reflective thinking and critical analysis for African people, still trying to
define their own philosophical worldview.
What Plato’s works did to inspire classical Greece
and the European generations to follow, we hope this brilliant piece of
literature from “Plato Negro” will shed light on Africans today and future
generations to come. Write on “Plato Negro”.
--Ptahotep A. El (Tracy Mitchell)
Minister
of Education, Academy of Da Corner
Contents
Introduction by Ptah
Allah El
Preface: A Dialogue—Ishmael Reed, Dr. Nathan Hare, Dr.
Rodney D. Coates
Parables and Fables
Parable of Love p.1
Fable of the Donkey 5
Fable of the Elephant
7
Parable of the Heart
8
Parable of the Sacred
10
Parable of the Poor
Righteous Teacher 12
Parable of the Parrot
14
Parable of a Happy
Dope Fiend 15
Parable of the Man
who loved his Mama 17
Parable of the
Madpoet 21
Parable of the
Witchdoctor 24
Parable of the
Preacher’s Wife 29
Parable of the Rabbit
32
Parable of the Black
Bourgeoisie 34
Parable of Iraq 37
Parable of the War that is not War 39
Parable of the
Colored People 41
Parable of the Man
Who Left the Mountain 44
Parable of Girl Ignut of Men 48
Parable of the A
Students 50
Parable of the Good
Children 52
Parable of Man, Beasts, Ancestors, Nature 53
Parable of the Drunk
Man 54
Parable of the
Hustler 57
Parable of the Woman
at the Well 59
Parable of the
Gambler 61
Parable of Letting Go
62
Parable Death of Dreams 64
Parable of the Bar 66
Parable of the Table
67
Parable of the Bitter
Bitch 68
Dialogue on Bitch 70
Parable of the
Weather 75
Parable of the City
of God 77
Parable of the Sick
Soul 78
Parable of the
Criminal Society 80
Parable of Monks and
Ministers 83
Parable of the Dirty
South 85
Parable of the No
People 86
Fable of the Black Bird 87
Parable of the Real Woman 89
Parable of the Cell Phone 91
Parable of the Man With the Gun in Hand 94
Parable of the Gangsta 96
Fable of the Rooster and the Hen 98
Parable of the Pit Bull 100
Parable of Black Man and Block Man 102
Fable of the Sleeping Lion 103
Parable of the Baby Carriage 104
Parable of the Woman in the Box 106
Parable of the Fire 107
Parable of the Basket 110
Parable of the Man Who Wanted to Die 111
Fable of the Black Bird 87
Parable of the Real Woman 89
Parable of the Cell Phone 91
Parable of the Man With the Gun in Hand 94
Parable of the Gangsta 96
Fable of the Rooster and the Hen 98
Parable of the Pit Bull 100
Parable of Black Man and Block Man 102
Fable of the Sleeping Lion 103
Parable of the Baby Carriage 104
Parable of the Woman in the Box 106
Parable of the Fire 107
Parable of the Basket 110
Parable of the Man Who Wanted to Die 111
Parable of Snow in
Oakland 113
Parable of
Neo-colonialism at University of California, Berkeley 115
Parable of What Right? 118
Parable of Gov.
Moonbeam 120
Parable of the Family
123
Parable of the North
American African as Haitian 125
Parable of Same Sex Marriage,
Straight Men, Prostitution 128
Parable of Zionism
and National Insanity 130
Parable of the Green
Revolution 132
Parable of Gang
Violence and Political Power 134
Parable of Who Asks
the Negro? 137
Parable of broken
systems, broken minds 139
Parable of Cornel
West as angry black man 143
Parable of the
Sub-prime Negro 144
Parable of the Man
Who Talked with Cows 146
Parable of A Day in
the Life of Plato Negro 147
Dialogue on White
Supremacy 151
Parable of Grand
Denial 155
Parable of
Imagination 159
Parable of Dope,
Mamas and Preachers 167
Parable Fall of
America 170
Parable Evil in the
World 171
Parable of American
Gangsta J. Edgar Hoover 173
Parable of Sobriety
177
Parable of Michael
Jackson 180
Parable of Suicide
181
Parable of the White
Man 183
Parable of the Ash
Cloud 188
Parable of One
Million School Dropouts 190
Parable of Creativity
and Sexuality 192
Parable of
Desirelessness 195
Revolution from Egypt to the Americas: My people are rising by Mohja Kahf
Revolution from Egypt to the Americas: My people are rising by Mohja Kahf: Syrian poet/novelist/professor Dr. Mohja Kahf is full of passion about current events in her beloved Syria and the Middle East. We love he...
Tuesday, July 3, 2012
Aries Jordan
Members of the West Oakland Renaissance Committee/Elders Council gathered at Defermery Park
aka Bobby Hutton Park recently. L to R, Dr. Larry Moore, Brother Francis, Leonard Gardner,
Ed Howard and Marvin X. Leonard Gardner and Ed Howard are producing a TV show called
West Oakland Stories. Marvin X is organizing The Archives Project to preserve the archives of North American Africans. Most of these brothers grew up playing at Defermery. The Elders meet the first Friday of each month at the Post Newspaper conference room, 1pm, 14th and Franklin, 12th floor.
Call 510-200-4164 for more information.
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His Black Consciousness Program Rocked the Bay Area like no other black panthers black arts black studies kwanza Khalid Ab...