Thursday, January 9, 2014

Appraisal of the Hare archives and Dr. Nathan Hare on Prayer

"I hate to hear people saying we're praying for you. Prayer won't stop my wife from dying. I don't want to hear about prayer. Right now, all I need is the Economic Doctor!"
Dr. Nathan Hare, Sociologist, Clinical Psychologist

The Drs. Nathan and Julia Hare archives are available for acquisition. The archive is appraised at $300,000. If you or your institution is interested and would like to arrange a viewing, please call Marvin X at 510-200-4164. Email him at jmarvinx@yahoo.com.
 
 
 
 
 


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Appraisal of the Archives of Drs.  Nathan and Julia Hare
 
 
 
Introduction
Nathan and Julia Hare, among the most prominent Afrocentric psychologists in the United States, were born in Oklahoma during the Great Depression. They met while attending Langston University, and both pursued academic careers. Nathan Hare obtained an MA (1957) and PhD in Sociology (1962) from the University of Chicago, then received another PhD in Clinical Psychology from the California School of Professional Psychology in San Francisco, California (1975). Julia Hare received a M.A. degree in music education from Chicago’s Roosevelt University and a PhD in education from the California Coast University in Santa Ana, California.
Black Studies
Nathan Hare came to national prominence as one of the intellectual fountainheads of the Black Power Movement during his academic career at Howard University and at San Francisco State University. His ideas began to jell with the publication of his first book, The Black Anglo-Saxons, emphasizing the need for what became black studies at historically black colleges.  In 1967, he wrote and publicized “The Black University Manifesto” at the behest of the student-led Black Power Committee at Howard.
 Hare wrote the “Conceptual Proposal for a Department of Black Studies" and coined the term “ethnic studies” after he was recruited to San Francisco State in February 1968. At San Francisco State, where the Black Student Union demanded an “autonomous Department of Black Studies,” Hare was soon involved in a five-month strike led by The Black Student Union, backed by the Third World Liberation Front, thousands of white students, community leaders, the Black Faculty Union and the local chapter of the American Federation of Teachers. In
February, 1969, SF State President S.I. Hayakawa dismissed Dr. Hare as chairman of the newly formed Black Studies department, the first in the United States,“to become effective June 1, 1969.” Hare stayed on until June at the request of the Black Student Union and remained for many more months in an unofficial capacity of “Chairman in Exile.”
Nathan Hare then teamed with Robert Chrisman and Allen Ross to found The Black Scholar in November of 1969. Nathan's invitation to the First Pan African Cultural Festival held in Algiers, enabled him to obtain  articles from leading African intellectuals as well as his former student at Howard University, Stokely Carmichael, and the recently exiled Black Panther leader, Eldridge Cleaver. Nathan also wrote the journal’s lead article, "Algiers 1969: The First Pan African Cultural Festival," covering the politics of and happenings at the Festival. Through Julia Hare’s friends and contacts, The Black Scholar was featured in Newsweek -- "From the Ebony Tower" -- and The New York Times, would soon call it “the most important journal devoted to black issues since ‘The Crisis.'”
Meanwhile, Julia Hare had created her own career. She served as Public Information Director of the Western Regional office of the National Committee against Discrimination in Housing (headed by Aileen Hernandez), the director of educational programs at the Oakland Museum and later hosted talk shows for both ABC television and KSFO radio stations. She also served as the public relations director in the local federal housing program in San Francisco.
During his tenure at The Black Scholar, Nathan received a second PhD, in clinical psychology. Working with Julia, he soon entered private practice, with offices in San Francisco and Oakland. They focused on forming a movement for “A Better Black Family” (the title of a popular speaking out editorial Nathan wrote for the February 1976 issue of Ebony magazine) shortly after completing his dissertation on “Black Male/Female Relations”.
By 1979, the Hares formed The Black Think Tank, which published the periodical, “Black Male/Female Relationships”. Most notably, the BTT sponsored the Rites of Passage movement, including workshops and lectures, based on bringing black boys to manhood. . Julia became an internationally-known motivational speaker and television personality, offering her expertise on male/female relationships, gender interactions in the workplace, mate selection, and much more. Both Hares have won numerous academic and public honors too numerous to mention.
Publications
In addition to dozens of articles in a number of scholarly journals and popular magazines, from d The Black Scholar and Ebony to Newsweek, Saturday Review and The New York Times, Nathan Hare is the author of The Black Anglo Saxons, which was reprinted numerous times, as well as a number of books in collaboration with Julia Hare, including:
  • The Endangered Black Family, San Francisco: The Black Think Tank, 1984,
  • Bringing the Black Boy to Manhood: the Passage, San Francisco: The Black Think Tank, 1985,
  • Crisis in Black Sexual Politics, San Francisco: The Black Think Tank, 1989,
  • Fire on Mount Zion: An Autobiography of the Tulsa Race Riot, as told by Mabel B. Little. Langston: The Melvin B. Tolson Black Heritage Center, Langston University, 1990,
  • The Miseducation of the Black Child: The Hare Plan to Educate Every Black Man, Woman and Child, San Francisco: The Black Think Tank, 1998 and
  • The Black Agenda, San Francisco: The Black Think Tank, 2002.
While publisher of The Black Scholar from 1969–75, Nathan Hare co-edited two books with Robert Chrisman:
  • Contemporary Black Thought, Indianapolis: Bobs-Merrill, 1973, and
  • Pan-Africanism, Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1974.
In addition, Dr. Hare has written and published many articles in such scholarly and popular periodicals as Ebony, Negro Digest, Saturday Review, the Massachusetts Review, Newsweek, Newsday,  The Black Collegian, Social Forces, Social Education, The Black Scholar, the Journal of Negro Education, Black World and The Times of London, to name a few.  Some of his articles have been reprinted in anthologies and two of them, "Black Ecology" (from The Black Scholar) and "Understanding the Black Rebellion" (from the London Times) were translated into other
languages around the world.
Julia Hare also authored How to Find and Keep a BMW (Black Man Working). Her written work has been featured in several magazines and newspapers including The New York Times, The Washington Post, and The Miami Herald.
 
Description of the Archive
The Hare’s archive consists of approximately 170 banker’s boxes containing a variety of materials. The first fifteen items all have at least some research value, but the most important materials begin with XVI.
I.               17 boxes contain books from Nathan Hare’s library, many, if not most, with his handwritten margin notes and underlinings. In addition, one box contains miscellaneous Who’s Who volumes.
II.             Two boxes contain materials pertinent to the Black Scholar, including copies of the magazine, copies of articles, drafts, etc.
III.           Six boxes contain various magazines, while a seventh contains copies of Negro Digest, Jet, Black World and Ebony. There are copies of some of these publications in the other six boxes, and among the 17n book boxes. While m most of the magazines in the six boxes are common mass market material, at least 10% are important publications pertinent to the civil rights and/or black power movements of the 1960s and beyond.
IV.           One box contains copies of papers and proceedings from conferences attended by the Hares.
V.             One box consists of Nathan Hare’s published articles, and there are two boxes of miscellaneous articles not authored by the Hares.
VI.           One box consists of Nathan Hare’s published books.
VII.         One box contains photographs, including an album of 8x10 black/white photographs of Muhammad Ali’s visit to Howard University.
VIII.       One box contains a miscellany of materials from Nathan Hare’s six years at Howard University – clippings, articles, a handwritten note, etc.
IX.          Three boxes contain honors bestowed upon the Hares – plaques, awards, certificates, etc.
X.            One box consists of personal materials – vitae, travel records, etc.
XI.          One box contains event programs and flyers.
XII.        Two boxes contain address books, calendars, phone logs, etc.
XIII.      One box contains material pertinent to Nathan Hare’s early career  as a boxer and as a boxing trainer.
XIV.        19 boxes contain newspaper clippings, articles and notes, many with handwritten notations by Nathan Hare.
XV.          28 boxes contain the Hare’s financial records (taxes, personal finance, business records (including materials from the Black Think Tank, Male/Female Relationships, and The Black Scholar.
XVI.        Three boxes of materials from Nathan Hare’s tenure at San Francisco State University. Two of the boxes are the materials that he kept from the San Francisco State strike described above, including internal Black Student Union documents, while the third is his archive of materials pertinent to the Black Studies Program that he headed. This material, some of which can be found nowhere else, clearly adds to our knowledge of this hectic year. See also Box 1 of correspondence (XXIV, below).
XVII.      Three boxes of material from the Black Think Tank and one box of issue of Black Male/Female Relations, along with a number of manuscripts submitted to the magazine. Other BTT material can be found in other parts of the archive, e.g., the financial records, correspondence, etc.
XVIII.    Four boxes of the Hares’ manuscripts – some handwritten, many with their emendations.
XIX.        Seven boxes of Julia Hare’s materials, including notes, drafts of articles and speeches, manuscripts, etc. Another box contains Julia Hare manuscripts and bound copies of Nathan Hare’s three dissertations.
XX.          A box of Nathan Hare’s notes on various topics, many handwritten.
XXI.        17 boxes of electronic materials, both Nathan’s and Julia’s: emails, backups, patient records, speeches (including notes and drafts), presentations, manuscripts, public events, teaching and professional aids, etc.
XXII.      One box of vinyl records, including numerous valuable small issues by movement groups, the Black Muslims, etc.
XXIII.    37 boxes of records from Nathan Hare’s clinical psychology practice: patient records, protocols, state contracts, depositions and other legal materials, professional materials and more. A gold mine for researchers.
XXIV.    Four boxes of correspondence to and from the Hares, primarily Nathan, in general including emails; submitted manuscripts; prisoner. Personal and professional correspondence; cards; press releases; and material on personal and cultural activities. Highlights include:
      Box 1: At least 10 substantive letters + one of his handwritten appeals from Ruchell Magee to the Hares; Black Think Tank correspondence files; substantive tlss from publishers and authors (Carlton Goodlett, Robert Johnson, Jerry Mander, Bob Chrisman); an als from Tom Feelings with 12 signed small drawings; letters and flyers from the California Homemakers Association; and a San Francisco State file.
      Box 2: A letter to, and reply f rom, Shirley Graham Dubois; ditto Robert F. Williams; three letters from Eldridge Cleaver (a 3p. als and 2p tls from 1976 and a 1p. als from 1973), plus a 1p. als from Kathleen Cleaver in 1976).
      Box 3: Considerable correspondence to and from activists, academics and elected officials (including a 1981 Willie Brown tls); a 2p. tls from Abdul Wali Muhammad on Final Call letterhead, 1988.
      Box 4: 2p. tls from Geronimo Pratt attorney Sharon Meadows in 1978; a 1p. tls from Richard Tropp – Jim Jones’ assistant – on Peoples Temple letterhead.
 
Analysis:
The Hare archive is, in many ways, unique. The couple’s role in the development of Afrocentric clinical psychology and couples therapies enabled the creation of an archive that has no parallel. Major African American psychiatrists, such as Alvin Poussaint and Price Cobbs, appear to have concerns from the Hares’. In addition, Nathan Hare’s role in the development of Black Studies within the American university setting is pioneering; the boxes of materials from his tenure at San Francisco State University will enable researchers to shed light on the stormy period that led to the creation of separate academic departments designed to serve students of various ethnicities.
While it is possible to put commercial values on some of the materials, those values would in no way reflect the overall import of this archive.  A university library would find the archive to be a treasure trove of research materials in psychology, African American studies, gender studies, the criminal justice system, the history of the 1960s and 1970s, media and much more. In particular, Nathan Hare’s patient records, Julia Hare’s media files, the materials related to the Black Think Tank and Black Male/Female Relationships, along with their voluminous correspondence will influence scholarship in many areas for decades to come. Accordingly, I would place a monetary value of $300,000.00 on this archive.
Respectfully submitted,
 
Michael A. Pincus
Andover Street Archives









Cassandra Wilson - You Don't Know What Love Is


Rachelle Ferrell - You don't know what love is


You don't know what love is Ella Fitzgerald


Billie Holiday: You Don't Know What Love Is


Nina Simone - You Don't Know What Love Is


Marvin X will be accompanied by his favorite musicians at UC Merced Black Arts Movement Conference, Feb 28, March 1-2, 2014

 Living legend violinist Tarika Lewis will perform with Marvin X at BAM conference

 Percussionist Tacuma King will accompany the poet
 
Trumpet master Earl Davis will be in da house. Earl was a member of Marvin X's Black Arts West Theatre, San Francisco, 1966. He also performed with Sun Ra's Arkestra, as did Marvin X.

Poet Eugene Redman will appear at the BAM conference. He is poet laureate of East St. Louis, former professor of English at Sacramento State University.

Color of Change: End the New Jim Crow: Private Prisons

Prison Hallway with money



Three months into our monumental campaign to end for-profit incarceration, and we are already seeing real progress.
Three months into our monumental campaign to end for-profit incarceration, and we are already seeing real progress.
Tens of thousands of Color Of Change members have signed on to pressure investors, board members, and politicians to end their support for the shameful private prison industry and we've contacted more than 150 corporations demanding divestment. Nearly 50 companies have responded, and many are open to discussing ways to end their financial support.
Please join us today in urging corporations, board members, and political leaders to end their support of discriminatory, for-profit imprisonment. We need a groundswell of voices in order to successfully hold them accountable and continue this exciting work — fueled by the well-known power of members, like you.
In the coming weeks, we plan to publicly pressure corporations that refuse to do the right thing and divest. We have a very unique opportunity to weaken the industry’s financial standing and its ability to cause widespread human suffering, we just need your support to make it happen.
Sincerely,
Rashad Robinson
Executive Director, ColorOfChange.org

Private prison companies make billions from torture and confinement.
We can stop this by holding prison companies' investors, board members, and public officials accountable.Join Us
Dear Nefertitti,
The United States incarcerates more people than any other country in the world, and the private prison industry is making a killing off this broken system. For-profit prison companies get paid for each person that fills their cells — raking in $5 billion in annual revenue.1 Empty beds mean lost profits, so to keep the money flowing the industry spends millions lobbying the government to expand the destructive policies that keep more people behind bars for longer, harsher sentences.2
Tragically, one-third of all Black men will spend part of their lives in prison.3 Meanwhile, for-profit prisons promote and exploit mass incarceration and racial-bias in the criminal justice system — further accelerating our nation's prison addiction. We can stop this. The prison industry depends on corporate backers for the capital it needs to keep growing,4 and allies in government for contracts that fill their prisons. If we convince enough investors and board members to leave the industry, we can discredit incarceration as a business, bring attention to the harm it creates, and deter public officials from granting contracts to prison companies.
Please join us in urging investors and board members of for-profit prison companies to get out of this exploitative business. We'll inform them of what they're involved in, and if they refuse to do what's right, we'll hold them publicly accountable.
Federal agencies and state governments contract with three main companies to lock people up: Corrections Corporation of America (CCA), GEO Group, Inc., and the Management and Training Corporation (MTC). The top two prison companies, CCA and GEO, are publicly traded and financed by investors, major banks and corporations, who hold shares in the industry. CCA and GEO Group make money by charging a daily rate per body that is sent to them — costing tax payers billions for dangerous, ineffective facilities.5 The industry also makes money by avoiding tax payments. CCA will dodge $70 million dollars in tax payments this year by becoming a real estate investment trust (REIT) and designating their prisons as "residential".6
In order to maximize profits, prison companies cut back on staff training, medical care, and rehabilitative services — causing assault rates to double in some private prisons.7 A 2010 ACLU lawsuit against CCA-run Idaho Correctional Center cited a management culture so violent the facility is known as the "gladiator school".8 The industry also maximizes profits by lobbying for and benefiting from laws that put more people in jail. In the 1990's CCA chaired the Criminal Justice Task force of shadowy corporate bill-mill, the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), which passed "3 strikes" and "truth in sentencing" laws that continue to send thousands of people to prison on very harsh sentences.9 Black folks are disproportionately subjected to these uniquely harsh conditions due to our extreme overrepresentation in the private prison system.10
In many parts of the country, the political tide is shifting against the for-profit prison industry. Earlier this summer, Kentucky, Texas, Idaho, and Mississippi broke ties with CCA after reports of chronic understaffing, inmate death, and rising costs to the states became undeniable.11 In April, New Hampshire rejected all private prison bids because the prison corporations could not show that they would follow legal requirements for safely housing prisoners.12 And, there is growing opposition to California Governor Jerry Brown's misguided plan to comply with a Supreme Court order to alleviate the State's prison overcrowding crisis by moving thousands of prisoners into private facilities, at a public cost of $1 billion over 3 years.13
The private prison industry should not control who is locked up, for how long, and at what price. For-profit prison companies have investors that cut across many industries. Some of these investors — wealthy individuals, major banks and financial companies — know exactly what they're doing. But with enough pressure, they might reconsider whether it's worth being known as profiting from exploitation and racism in the criminal justice system.
Profiting off the brutality and discrimination of incarceration is shameful. Please join us in calling on the investors and board members of for-profit prison companies to get out of this corrupt business.
Thanks and Peace,
--Rashad, Matt, Arisha, Aimée, William, Lyla and the rest of the ColorOfChange.org team
September 4th, 2013
Help support our work. ColorOfChange.org is powered by YOU—your energy and dollars. We take no money from lobbyists or large corporations that don't share our values, and our tiny staff ensures your contributions go a long way.
References
1. "A Boom Behind Bars," Bloomberg Businessweek, 03-17-2011
http://act.colorofchange.org/go/2913?t=10&akid=3236.1164386.gg43J7
2. "Gaming the System," (.pdf) Justice Policy Institute, 06-01-2011
http://act.colorofchange.org/go/2914?t=12&akid=3236.1164386.gg43J7"
3. "1 in 3 Black Men Go To Prison? The 10 Most Disturbing Facts About Racial Inequality in the U.S. Criminal Justice System," AlterNet, 03-17-2012
http://act.colorofchange.org/go/2915?t=14&akid=3236.1164386.gg43J7
4. "Private Prison Profits Skyrocket as Executives Assure Investors of Growing Offender Population," ThinkProgress, 05-09-2013
http://act.colorofchange.org/go/2916?t=16&akid=3236.1164386.gg43J7
5. "Banking on Bondage: Private Prisons and Mass Incarceration," (.pdf) ACLU, 11-01-2011
http://act.colorofchange.org/go/2926?t=18&akid=3236.1164386.gg43J7
6. "The Legacy of Chattel Slavery: Private Prisons Blur the Line Between Real People and Real Estate With New IRS Property Gambit," Truthout, 02-04-2013
http://act.colorofchange.org/go/2917?t=20&akid=3236.1164386.gg43J7
7."The Dirty Thirty: Nothing to Celebrate About 30 Years of Corrections Corporation of America," (.pdf) Grassroots Leadership, 06-01-2013
http://act.colorofchange.org/go/2918?t=22&akid=3236.1164386.gg43J7
8. "ACLU Lawsuit Charges Idaho Prison Officials Promote Rampant Violence," ACLU, 03-11-2010
http://act.colorofchange.org/go/2919?t=24&akid=3236.1164386.gg43J7
9. "Too Good to be True: Private Prisons in America," (.pdf) 01-01-2012
http://act.colorofchange.org/go/2921?t=26&akid=3236.1164386.gg43J7
10. "The Color of Corporate Corrections: Overrepresentation of People of Color in the Private Prison Industry," Prison Legal News, 08-30-2013
http://act.colorofchange.org/go/2920?t=28&akid=3236.1164386.gg43J7
11. "Three States Dump Major Private Prison Company in One Month" ThinkProgress, 06-21-2013
http://act.colorofchange.org/go/2924?t=30&akid=3236.1164386.gg43J7
12."New Hampshire Rejects All Private Prison Bids," ThinkProgress, 04-05-2013
http://act.colorofchange.org/go/2927?t=32&akid=3236.1164386.gg43J7
13. "Gov. Brown's misguided private prison plan" SF Gate, 08-28-2013
http://act.colorofchange.org/go/2925?t=34&akid=3236.1164386.gg43J7


Marvin X and the world fasts for Syria

Photo: Thanks to the organizers of Day of Solidarity with Syria - global demonstrations on Saturday, January 11. London, Dublin and Malmo, Sweden will also have groups doing a Solidarity Hunger Strike on that day. Check out their info and attend the demonstration in your area. There are demonstrations in Syria; Vienna, Austria; Milano, Como Genova, Bologna, Ancona, Roma, Napoli, Palermo, and Lecce in Italy; Munich Stuttgart, Freiburg, Heidelberg, Frankfurt, Aachen, Cologne, Hamburg, Dortmund in Germany; Helsinki, Finland; Amsterdam, Netherlands; Barcelona, Granada and Seville in Spain; Paris and Montpelier in France; Montreal in Canada; Mexico City in Mexico; Nairobi in Kenya; Warsaw in Poland; Cairo in Egypt; Antwerp in Belgium; Lausanne in Switzerland; Buenos Aires in Argentina; Los Angeles and Washington in the U.S. https://www.facebook.com/solidaysyria

Thanks to the organizers of Day of Solidarity with Syria - global demonstrations on Saturday, January 11. London, Dublin and Malmo, Sweden will also have groups doing a Solidarity Hunger Strike on that day. Check out their info and attend the demonstration in your area. There are demonstrations in Syria; Vienna, Austria; Milano, Como Genova, Bologna, Ancona, Roma, Napoli, Palermo, and Lecce in It...aly; Munich Stuttgart, Freiburg, Heidelberg, Frankfurt, Aachen, Cologne, Hamburg, Dortmund in Germany; Helsinki, Finland; Amsterdam, Netherlands; Barcelona, Granada and Seville in Spain; Paris and Montpelier in France; Montreal in Canada; Mexico City in Mexico; Nairobi in Kenya; Warsaw in Poland; Cairo in Egypt; Antwerp in Belgium; Lausanne in Switzerland; Buenos Aires in Argentina; Los Angeles and Washington in the U.S. https://www.facebook.com/solidaysyriaSee More

 On Friday, January 10, 2014 Marvin X will fast for Syria and the hoods of America suffering genocide and fratricide. Also, he asks you to join him in prayer for poet Amiri Baraka and Dr. Julia Hare. Fasalli li Rabbika! (So pray to your Lord)

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Mrs. Amina Baraka on Amiri Baraka


 Mrs. Amina Baraka


Mrs. Amina Baraka and Malika Iman

In a phone conversation with Marvin X, Mrs. Amina Baraka said the condition of her husband is not getting better. He is on dialysis and still fighting pneumonia. "We can't let capitalism take him out. Marvin you gotta come back here. You know he will get up if you come cause he ain't gonna let you get the last word. You know how he is! Plus, I want to slap him again and tell him some things that're on my mind. So please come, if you can. He still has not regained consciousness and the condition of his heart, liver and kidneys are not good. But we're not gonna let capitalism take him out--they want to take us all out but it ain't gonna happen! We will fight!"

Marvin X will fast for Syria and the Hoods of USA


Congressman Keith Ellison, Syrian-American Mazen Halabi, Gail Daneker from Friends for a Nonviolent World and 15 other Minnesotans are preparing for a day long hunger strike in solidarity with Qusai Zakary, a Syrian who is in the 25th day of his hunger strike to protest the siege of over 30 towns in Syria.  They are the first phase of an action that is gathering international support (see attached list). On Friday, January 10, 2014 Marvin X will fast for Syria and the hoods of America suffering genocide and fratricide. Also, he asks you to join him in prayer for poet Amiri Baraka and Dr. Julia Hare. Fasalli li Rabbika! (So pray to your Lord)


Black Arts Movement Poet, Marvin X


Syrian poet, novelist, professor Mohja Kahf and poet Marvin X. She considers Marvin X the father of Muslim American literature. 



FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:                                            
Contact:  Mazen Halabi  612-386-1081   
               Terry Burke   952-926-0198  312-399-0454 (cell)
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 20, FIRST DAY  
of an International Hunger Strike for Syria

Congressman Keith Ellison, Syrian-American Mazen Halabi, Gail Daneker from Friends for a Nonviolent World and 15 other Minnesotans are preparing for a day long hunger strike in solidarity with Qusai Zakary, a Syrian who is in the 25th day of his hunger strike to protest the siege of over 30 towns in Syria.  They are the first phase of an action that is gathering international support (see attached list).

Syrians are dying of malnutrition because military blockades have prevented food and medicine from coming into their areas - approximately 1 million people are affected. The goal of the strike is to break the siege.

It's a "rolling" strike where at least one person participates in the hunger strike each day.  Congressman Ellison is fasting on Monday, December 23.  Mazen Halabi, Gail Daneker, Wendy Tuck, Terry Irish, and Ava Dale Johnson are the Minnesotans fasting on Friday, December 20.  

The Minnesota Syrian-American community has been extremely active - sending doctors to help in the refugee camps, making speeches around the state, and raising money for refugees and medical aid.

Mazen Halabi is one of the local Syrian-Americans whose friends and family in Syria are caught in a crisis that has been described as the worst humanitarian catastrophe since World War II.  Halabi expressed his appreciation for Ellison's responsiveness.  "Congressman Ellison has always been there for us - to listen and to try and find a way to resolve the Syrian conflict.  We are grateful to have a compassionate, involved representative in Congress."

Qusai Zakary, who is in Moadamiya, Syria, pleads with the world to help the "starving and frozen Syrian people".  "Starvation is a much worse weapon of war than sarin gas," he points out.  "Dozens of women and children have died from malnutrition in the last few months.  The world has to raise their voices together and say 'Stop using food as a weapon of war'.  My hunger strike will continue until the siege is broken and aid convoys enter the besieged towns of Syria."

The solidarity hunger strike has gotten support from U.S. academics and nonviolence advocates around the world, including American poet Marilyn Hacker.  Here in Minnesota, Gail Daneker, director at Friends for a Nonviolent World and a peace activist for 30 years, says, "We live in an era where we have ample resources so that no one on the planet should be hungry and yet thousands are being deliberately deprived of food and medicine.  We should be beyond using food and medicine as weapons of war."

A petition supporting Zakarya's strike was created by the human rights advocacy group Avaaz last month.  The petition calls for a binding resolution from the U.N. Security Council requiring the regime in Syria and all armed parties to allow humanitarian organizations immediate unfettered access to aid the civilian population without discrimination, including cross-border access and access across military lines.


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Saturday, September 7, 2013


Two Poems for the People of Syria by Marvin X and Mohja Kahf




Oh, Mohja
how much water can run from rivers to sea
how much blood can soak the earth
the guns of tyrants know no end
a people awakened are bigger than bullets
there is no sleep in their eyes
no more stunted backs and fear of broken limbs
even men, women and children are humble with sacrifice
the old the young play their roles
with smiles they endure torture chambers
with laughs they submit to rape and mutilations
there is no victory for oppressors
whose days are numbered
as the clock ticks as the sun rises
let the people continue til victory
surely they smell it on their hands
taste it on lips
believe it in their hearts
know it in their minds
no more backwardness no fear
let there be resistance til victory.
--Marvin X/El Muhajir



Syrian poet/professor Dr. Mohja Kahf



Oh Marvin, how much blood can soak the earth?

The angels asked, “will you create a species who will shed blood

and overrun the earth with evil?” 

And it turns out “rivers of blood” is no metaphor: 


see the stones of narrow alleys in Duma

shiny with blood hissing from humans? Dark

and dazzling, it keeps pouring and pumping

from the inexhaustible soft flesh of Syrians,

and neither regime cluster bombs from the air,

nor rebel car bombs on the ground,

ask them their names before they die. 

They are mowed down like wheat harvested by machine,

and every stalk has seven ears, and every ear a hundred grains.

They bleed like irrigation canals into the earth.

Even one little girl in Idlib with a carotid artery cut

becomes a river of blood. Who knew she could be a river 

running all the way over the ocean, to you,

draining me of my heart? And God said to the angels, 

“I know what you know not.” But right now,
the angels seem right. Cut the coyness, God;

learn the names of all the Syrians.

See what your species has done.

--Mohja Kahf                     

Marvin X tour dates

Marvin X will read at New York University on February 4, 2014, at a tribute for poet Jayne Cortez.
February 22 he will read at the Hinton Center, Fresno CA.
February 24 he will read at Fresno City College
February 28, March 1-2, he will co-produce (with Kim McMillan) the Black Arts Movement Conference, University of California, Merced.
For more information or to invite Marvin X to your campus and/or conference, call 510-200-4164.