Friday, March 15, 2013

Nigger for Life wins Grand prize for poetry at Los Angeles Book Festival



LOS ANGELES 2012-2013 BOOK FESTIVAL NAMES GRAND PRIZE WINNER


NH photo carlos
LOS ANGELES _ Inspiring poetry that examines a man’s struggle for dignity and acceptance is the grand prize winner of the 2012-2013 Los Angeles Book Festival.

Book coverDr. Neal Hall’s “Nigger for Life” reflects the author’s painful, later life discovery that in “unspoken America,” race is the one thing on which he is first judged and measured. The book examines Dr. Hall’s deep sense of betrayal, yet offers clarity and inspiration while considering a topic often considered taboo. Dr. Hall will be honored at a private reception on Friday, March 8 at the Roosevelt Hotel in Hollywood.
Other winners in the competition:
POETRY
WINNER: Nigger for Life – Neal Hall
RUNNER-UP: A Lot to Say, Sumthin To Talk About – Mschell
HONORABLE MENTIONS:
  • But By the Chance of War – Richard C. Lyons
  • If Dreams Come True – Noorah Deen
  • A Conscious Guide to Daily Living – Amna Ahktar and Kiran Kaur

Dr. Nigger

Dr. Nigger
Can you cure me without
touching me with nigga hands
Can you save my life
without changing my life
Can you dance soft-shoe while
humming those negro tunes
when my white life codes blue
Can you reach inside yourself
beyond the shit we put in you…
past painful moments we put in you…
past despair and hopelessness
we’ve put in you and
find that old black magic in you
to save my life without changing
all the shit we put in you
Dr. Nigger
Can you breathe in me
air free of nigga
from a nigger not free
to breathe in free air
Can you stay on the colored side
of the color line and reach across
without touching me with nigga hands
to restart my blue heart without
changing my cold heart
Can you reach past the life
we’ve taken from you to
save my life and not
let white life pass me by
Dr. Nigger
save my life
without taking my life
Cure me without
touching me with nigga hands
Dance soft-shoe while
humming negro tunes
while you save my life
without changing my life
when my white life codes blue
Neal Hall, M.D., Copyright 2009

nigger-for-life“…a warrior of the mind … a warrior of the spirit,
an activist, a poet.”
- Cornel West, Ph.D.
Neal Hall, M.D., graduate of Cornell and Harvard, ophthalmologist and poet, has published a critically acclaimed anthology of verse, Nigger For Life, reflecting his painful, later life discovery, that in “unspoken America,” race is the one thing on which he is “first” judged, by which he is “first” measured, “first”, against which his life and accomplishments are metered diminished value, dignity, equality and justice. All of which have everything to do with accessing choice, opportunity, power and freedom in America.
It’s no ordinary muse that has Dr. Hall becoming as much a part of his poetry as his poetry has become a part of him. Rather it’s a deep sense of betrayal combined with a passion for life that shows through. He can’t help but bare his intelligence, his wit and his dreams. His anthology is as confronting as it is illuminating, as disarming as it is thought provoking
Two notable and well respected minds best describe why Nigger For Life is important and timely: Cornel West, Ph.D., (Princeton University) said of the book “…his poetry has the capacity to change ordinary people’s philosophy on social and racial issues”. Beth Richie, Ph.D. (University of Illinois at Chicago) stated the “ … images and issues addressed in Nigger For Life are tremendously important to our [African American] people and the academic field of African American Studies”
Nigger For Life’s candid, gut wrenching clarity gives it it’s tremendous power and impact to provoke both thought and honest dialog regarding race, racism, equality and freedom, not just in America, but throughout the world. The book’s unique ability to open minds, touch hearts and change philosophies of ordinary people is immeasurable.
The body of poetry is extraordinary … meaningful beyond black and white, worthy of – down through the ages – analytical and academic study for their compelling, empowering commentary. Nigger for Life should be read, studied and included amongst the great poetry volumes written.
Nigger For Life can be obtained at: www.surgeonpoet.com
Email: info@NiggerForLifeBook.com
Online Interview at: www.caribbeanbookblog.wordpress.com.
Conversations LIVE! Radio http://conversationslive.blogspot.com

Amiri Baraka flees Philly after learning Marvin X was coming


Amina and Amiri Baraka and son Ras, now running for Mayor of Newark, NJ. Marvin X has observed their 47 year old marriage. "I could write a play about them, but!" Someone asked Amiri Baraka, "Why
doesn't Marvin X write a play about you?" Baraka replied, "Because Marvin knows I will write about him!"


We heard from a reliable source that Amiri Baraka rushed home to Newark, NJ after his performance at the University of Penn when he learned Marvin X was arriving to participate in the Black Love Lives Conference on Sat at the Univ. of Penn. We know only one thing, whatever Marvin X says at Black Love Lives, it will be controversial--and inspirational. At Harlem's Schomburg Library, the audience said his remarks on his relationship with Elizabeth Catlett Mora were very inspirational.

On Sunday he will  hold a brunch in North Philly and read for the senior citizens at York House.


In a phone conversation with AB, Marvin X told the Godfather that he would gladly leave town if he and his wife, Amina, would attend the Black Love Lives conference to share how they maintained 47 years of marriage. Marvin has observed their 47 years of marriage but will not disclose anything. "I have other friends who have been married 57 years and 20 years, but I don't want to disclose anything about the relationships of my friends. I will not speak on my brief marriages to multiple women (sometimes simultaneously), but I will discuss my 47 year friendship with Hurriyah Asar (Ethna X), who will be on hand to dispute any of my wild imaginings! lol

How the FBI Sabotaged Black America

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Dr. Nathan Hare on Eldridge Cleaver


Eldridge Cleaver and Marvin X in front of house in West Oakland where the Black Panthers had a shoot out with Oakland Police. Cleaver was wounded and Lil' Bobby Hutton was murdered in cold blood by the OPD.

photo Muhammad Al Kareem






Marvin X replies to Dr. Hare

Doc, we archived a folder with letters from Kathleen to you.


Dr. Hare to Marvin X: 


I didn’t know there was one. I remember the letter from Eldridge in jail on his return to this country. He commented aptly on my Speaking Out “For a Better Black Family” in Ebony, February, 1976. Hope you will find that one.


--- On Fri, 3/15/13, Nathan Hare  wrote:


From: Nathan Hare
Subject: RE: RE: Hare Papers
To: "'Marvin X Jackmon'"
Date: Friday, March 15, 2013, 5:13 AM


Random thoughts for whatever they may be worth: I was Just thinking of your work with Eldridge Cleaver, it occurred to me that I was chairman of his defense committee when Kathleen first formed it after their return from Algiers. I knew her, having met her before Eldridge did in 1967, while speaking in Tuskegee, and later in passing out here in the Bay Area. I’d go by to see Eldridge at the jail and once apologized for coming so seldom and he said I came more than other people. For a long time I had a letter he wrote me from that jail, suggesting that he was a natural born writer, though people try to give the white female lawyer all the credit for Soul on Ice and his other writings. I became aware of him before Kathleen did (when we both had articles in Negro History Bulletin in 1962 (I as a young Howard University instructor and he as a prisoner – Folsom at that moment, I believe, though much is made of the time he spent at San Quentin. Bayard Rustin and Edith Austin (political editor of the Sun Reporter) were about the only blacks at the meeting. A report of it appeared with a picture of me as chairman on the front page of the Sun Reporter.

         Amazon.com

 ELDRIDGE CLEAVER - MY FRIEND THE DEVIL: A Memoir [Paperback]

Marvin X Amiri Baraka 


Available from these sellers.

1 collectible from $65.00

Foad Satterfield Solo Exhibit


Please join us for the exhibition and opening reception, April 12th from 5:00 - 8:00 pm.


Inline image 1

-- 
Foad Satterfield 
Professor of Art 
Dominican University of CA

Cointelpro after Malcolm's Grandson, Malcolm el Shabazz


COINTELPRO Is Still Alive: Malcolm X Grandson, Malcolm el Shabazz, Issues Statement

Via Cynthia McKinney, Brother Malcolm el Shabazz speaks about his ongoing COINTELPRO-like saga

Sunday, March 10, 2013
 
I sincerely appreciate the care & concern of the People over my well-being after Press TV's report of the most recent events which have transpired regarding the F.B.I.'s harassment of me.
 
Given the storm of lies, and half-truths that come with being associated with being the descendant of El Hajj Malik el Shabazz, also known as Minister Malcolm X, any and everything that I do; great or small, good or not so good, real or imagined is subject to controversy. However, in this missive I will take this opportunity to properly & fully disclose what transpired.
 
In the beginning of 2012 I had been informed that I was under investigation by the F.B.I.'s Counter Terrorism Task Force Unit located in Goshen, N.Y.
 
The agents of this division-and in collaboration with others-have visited several residences of which I was known by them to frequent. However, they would never come when they knew me to actually be there. They would leave their cards with the residents asking them to tell me to call them, and then would tell surrounding residents to observe the house and to notify them if they saw me.
 
These are the homes of long-time friends, and very close supporters. Yet, when federal agents begin knocking on someone's door on multiple occasions to snoop, and ask questions, whether one is guilty of an offense or not, it's enough to coerce people into distancing themselves from you. This cheap tactic employed by the F.B.I. is a means of agitation & harassment. They seek to neutralize my networking abilities.
 
They have visited locations in California, Chicago, Miami and most aggressively in New York.
 
People were advising me that if I had nothing to hide, then I should just contact them as requested and cooperate. Though I must say that in these kind of matters I am of a particular ethic. For one, I have been engaged in no criminal activity of their concern, and they could have located me if they so chose. Secondly, I don't recognize the authority in them beckoning me.
 
It wasn't even until my mother informed me that they had been contacting her that I truly became agitated. She advised me to see what they had to say, and so I obliged the next time they came around looking for me. My encounter was with 2 federal agents of Goshen, N.Y.'s Counter Terrorism Task Foci Unit. The primary agent identified himself as Special Agent Tom Brozicky.
 
They expressed concern over-as they put it-my "international travels"; I have lived & studied in Damascus, Syria for over a year, and now the U.S. is instigating conflict within the very same region; I went on ex-congresswoman/former presidential candidate Cynthia Mckinney's delegation along with Dr. Randy Short to Libya, and met with Leader Muammar Gadhafi one week prior to N.A.T.O. intervention and I was most recently getting ready to travel to Tehran, Iran to be a participant of the International Fajr Film Festival and give a lecture addressing the issues of Hollywood and violence:
 
- Modern Violence & Terrorism,
- Provoking clashes between religions & populations
 
I was picked up by authorities after I filed for a visa to Iran, and 2 days prior to my departure. A detective squad from the City of Middletown Police Department surrounded me in the street about 2 blocks from where I was residing. They asked me my name, and I gave them an alias, but they were already well aware of who I actually was. I didn't tell them my real name because I didn't know what was going on. When I was brought before a Judge of City of Middletown court I was surprised to be informed that I was being charged with Grand Larceny, and False Impersonation charge. Then I was sent to jail, and told to appear again 7 days later. Then following court date the bogus charge of Grand Larceny, which they only put to justify stopping me in first place, was dropped. And they left me to face the False Impersonation. I was offered 90 days for the offense of giving the authorities the wrong name which I declined before bailing out after 2 weeks.
 
When I was being held within the belly of the beast on trumped up charges, to my rescue came the journalist at Press TV based in Iran. My relationship with powerful & progressive news outfit began in April of 2012, and prior to that I had discussions with their journalist regarding current events internationally. I developed a positive rapport with some of them, and as a result was invited to travel to Iran to discuss the impact of Hollywood in stereotyping Muslims, Iranians and African people. From January 15th through 18th, 2013, I was a featured interviewee for the Press TV documentary “The Façade of the American Dream”. And prior to my date of departure to Iran, Lifetime television released a television bio-picture called “Betty & Coretta” which was a sensationalistic misrepresentation of my grandparents, my mother and me. This film aside from being poorly acted, and shallow in depth also threatened to inflame old controversies, and open unhealed wounds and to remind the public of sad outcomes without ever identifying B.O.S.S.I., the C.I.A., F.B.I. and other forces that set the climate for my grandfather’s assassination, and made my family a long-suffering casualty of COINTELPRO, and other anti-Black repression programs. Naturally, anything done to stir up old hatred of The Shabazz Family will impact me as the name-sake, and first male heir of Malcolm X, and whether I am high or low in fortunes does not exempt me from this reality.
 
The formula for a public assassination is: the character assassination before the physical assassination; so one has to be made killable before the eyes of the public in order for their eventual murder to then deemed justifiable. And when the time arrives for these hits to be carried out you’re not going to see a C.I.A. agent with a suit & tie, and a badge that says "C.I.A." walk up to someone, and pull the trigger. What they will do is to out-source to local police departments in the region of their target, and to employ those that look like the target of interest to infiltrate the workings in order to set up the environment for the eventual assassination (character, physical/incarceration, exile) to take place.
 
For several months prior to my arrest in late January, 2013 I faced a pattern of harassment from law enforcement which is usually reserved for important figures. On Thursday, November 1, 2012 @ 11:53pm in the park circle area of Middletown, N.Y. I was stopped by officers of the Middletown Police Department, and given a ticket for "J-Walking" (crossing in the middle of the street), which then escalated into a "Disorderly Conduct" supposedly because of the exchange of words that I had with the officers. I told them that they couldn't possibly be serious for writing me a "J-Walking ticket", that I didn't appreciate how they were treating me and that they shouldn't be looking at me as less of a man because they were in police uniform. For this I was arrested. The officers stole the little amount of money that I had on me, they then stripped me and threw me in a freezing precinct cell for the remainder of that early morning. I was finally taken before the "Judge Steven Brockett" around 1:30pm. He gave me an unreasonable bail, and then ordered that I be remanded to the Orange county Jail.
 
This penalty may seem a bit extreme or harsh to most of you, but here is where it gets worse: On Tuesday, October 30th, exactly 2 nights prior to this incident, the same officer "J Berman" who wrote me the ticket for "J-Walking" & "Disorderly Conduct" stopped me coming from out of a store in the same area, and questioned me as to what I was doing.
 
I told him that I was coming out of the store. He asked to see what I bought which was a pack of sun flower seeds. I had actually just so happened to be eating a few while he was talking to me, and I spit one of the shells on the ground. At this point officer "J Berman" threatened to write me a ticket for littering. Needless to say, I was
dumbfounded, but I went home that night.
 
Yet, it still doesn't even begin there. I had an encounter with other officers of the Midletown Police Department one week prior to officer "J Berman's" threats to write me a ticket for spitting a sun flower seed on the ground: I was coming out of a restaurant with my mother, and her friend. As the 3 of us entered the car to leave 2 police cars converged on our vehicle, and boxed us in. My mother was petrified. With guns drawn I was then ordered to step out of the back seat. I asked them why to which they replied that I had several warrants for my arrest. I told them that they were mistaken, but I still complied with their request. Humiliated in front of all on-lookers I was then thrown on the car while the officers ripped through my pockets. After they were done they said that it was my lucky day because I actually didn't have any warrants at all, and so I was free to go! One of these officer's name was "R. Ribeiro"...
 
You may wonder if it could possibly get any worse than this. Well, it does! Approximately 3 weeks prior to the public humiliation of my mother, and me by "R Ribeiro" and another officer of the Middletown Police Department I found myself subject to the discrimination & prejudice of Mayor Joseph M. Destefano of Middletown, N.Y. himself. A friend, and I went out to eat at a restaurant in Middletown, N.Y. which is owned by the Mayor, and to our surprise he appeared from nowhere and asked us to leave. When we inquired as to why he stated that officials of the Middletown Police Department told him not to let us patronize his establishment. Mind you that this goes without incident.
 
As I stand for the people, God-Willing, I would pray that the same people wouldn't hesitate to stand for me. If these unjust & heinous actions are tolerated & allowed to be done to me without recourse, then no one is safe. Just as Huewy P Newton of the Black Panther Party stated that police are in the white community to protect & serve, yet occupy ours like a foreign troop... I tell you that we shouldn't fall victim to the conditioning of feeling inferior or fearful at the presence of law enforcement for no apparent reason.
 
With that being said, I was not arrested by federal agents. I was taken in by a squad from the City of Middletown, N.Y.'s Police Department. I was not being held in an "undisclosed location" so to speak. I was actually being held in the Orange County Jail in Goshen, N.Y. However, from the time that I was booked at the precinct, to standing before a Judge the next day who told me to come back in 7 more, to being processed at the Orange County Jail and up until 7 days later I was not permitted to make any calls to notify anyone of my status; as though I had just been kidnapped from of the street.
 
Unfortunately, until this day my family hasn't been fully abreast of my situation as I haven't had the opportunity to properly consult with any of them. Dr. Randy Short who notified Press TV of my situation is a close comrade of mine who was on our delegation in Libya. Media reports from Press TV about my situation were not intended to create controversy. In reality, I have a few associates that are affiliated with this reputable International media outlet, and they had expected to meet with me in Iran. So when I disappeared, and rumors spread, the inability to get concise information from a credible source prompted them to rouse public attention on my behalf, for which I am grateful.

In April of 2012 I had the opportunity to be a guest analyst/contributor on Press TV. This network has a large following all over the world, and millions find its news, documentaries and programming to be both an educational, and insightful alternative to the conglomerated, and highly biased mainstream American & British news media. Regarding the Source magazine, nothing that they published was vetted by me, and was made by persons, at best, vaguely familiar with my situation.

Further, I have never had an affiliation or relationship with The Source, nor have they ever directly consulted with me about anything.
 
Facebook: Hajj Malcolm el Shabazz
Twitter: Malcolm71084
Instagram: mecka1084

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Black Scholar Magazine Editor, Robert Chrisman Joins Ancestors

From: abdul

Every Black Studies ac academic unit and journal should think about a special focus on the impact of Robert Chrisman on all aspects of Black Studies given the importance of The Black Scholar and his leadership. Here is some of his work and commentary on him.

Bob's PhD dissertation
Robert Hayden : modernism and the Afro-American epic mission
http://www.worldcat.org/title/robert-hay
den-modernism-and-the-afro-american-epic-mission/oclc/68808487

Retirement from the Black Scholar
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Black_Scholar#Robert_Chrisman.E2.80.99s_Retirement

The Dirty Wars (book of poems by Bob)
http://www.theblackscholar.org/books.php

Commentary about Bob
http://leoadambiga.wordpress.com/2011/03/08/letting-1000-flowers-bloom-the-black-scholars-robert-chrisman-looks-back-at-a-life-in-the-maelstrom/

Books by Robert Chrisman
http://www.alibris.com/booksearch?author=Robert+Chrisman&aid=933067

Ten Reasons: A Response to David Horowitz by Robert Chrisman and Ernest Allen, Jr.*
http://www.umass.edu/afroam/hor.html

H-Afro-Am
http://h-net.msu.edu/cgi-bin/logbrowse.pl?trx=vx&list=h-afro-am&month=0502&week=d&msg=E1h35qZP5pDJyxCySC%2BNVw&user=&pw=

Nebraska conference on Malcolm X
http://brothermalcolm.net/2002/omaha/brochure.htm

The crisis of Harold Cruse
The Black Scholar November 1969

Observations on Race and Class
at San Francisco State
http://www.freedomarchives.org/Documents/Finder/Black%20Liberation%20Disk/Black%20Power!/SugahData/Essays/Chrisman.S.pdf

Go Down Moses
http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/t/text/text-idx?cc=mqr;c=mqr;c=mqrarchive;idno=act2080.0037.423;rgn=main;view=text;xc=1;g=mqrg



From: johnwood@umich.edu

Bob Chrisman was a real giant. A quiet one, but kind, honest, brilliant,
fearless; he was supremely ethical personally and politically; he was
helpful and generous, especially to young scholars. On top of that, he was a wonderful and powerful poet. I hope he and Robert Allen get the respect and gratitude they deserve, putting out an independent, progressive and needed journal of Black scholarship and criticism for more than 40 years.


The Dirty Wars
The Dirty Wars:
New Poems by Robert Chrisman
San Francisco: The Black Scholar Press
65 Pages
ISBN-10: 0-578-08767-2
$15.00 paper
Robert Chrisman, Ph.D., is the co-founder and retired Editor-in-Chief of The Black Scholar, Journal of Black Studies and Research. Chrisman holds an M.A. from San Francisco State College and a Ph.D. in English from the University of Michigan. He retired from a Professorship and Chair of Black Studies at University of Nebraska, Omaha in 2005. His previous teaching includes Michigan, Williams, UC Berkeley, University of Vermont, and Wayne State University. He lives in San Francisco.
Robert Chrisman’s latest volume of poems, The Dirty Wars: New Poems by Robert Chrisman, continues and expands upon the themes of his first two volumes, Children of Empire (1981) and Minor Casualties (1993). Chrisman perceives a universe in which the U.S. thrust for total global hegemony has resulted not only in global havoc for various peoples, but also corrupts individual relationships and psyches with its strain.
In such a world, “There is no sleep but pain/ There is no victory, nor valedictory/ There is no peace. There is no forgiveness/ There is no chamber music.” On the other hand, Chrisman finds consolation in individual efforts of fraternity, such as the building of a housing collective in Cuba: “We have planted the seeds of our lives, / They grow beyond us, / Large, vast, fragrant, / Like the ceiba, that large tree/ That guided your labor seven years ago, / And still sways, much larger, / Over the fruits of Los Naranjos.” He also celebrates the endurance and strength that can be found within when facing oppression, such as that of ANC President Nelson Mandela during his incarceration: “He was constant as Orion, / A broad-shouldered winter clock/ who shoulders time and betrayal,/ spray of doves and spears.”
Chrisman also observes closely the reverberations caused by different assaults to the human psyche. He comments on the limited lives of single parent women in “Mother of the Movement:” “She fight in the chains of child care, / baby sitters, no car, short money/ and the daily double commute to baby sitter and work,” or grieves for a partner stricken with terminal cancer in recalling their summer together, “I share these memories as my comfort in your hard time,/ Much as helpless people offer their finest gifts/ To capricious gods,” and probes the duplicities forced upon women by patriarchy in “Procne is Among the Slaves:” “Theirs is an epic spun in coded nocturnes/ among sisters of ravished silence:/ it does not celebrate/ a glittering sword nor homebound sails.” The foibles of the new black bourgeoisie, the talented tenth, are satirized in “Lexus Blues:” “Did you ever wake up one morning’ / and find yo’ Lexus gone? Ever wake up one mornin’ / And find yo’ Lexus gone? / My baby stole it and all my Dom Perignon.” Chrisman resolves his vision with an image of memory and rebirth: “You stand naked on your wash tub/ your family rinses your body with rain water/ your inner and outer skin are one: / The Baja breeze irradiates your groin.”
The Dirty Wars is organized into 4 parts: “The Dirty Wars,” “Letter to a Feminist,” “Letter of Reference,” and “My Father’s Mittens,” respectively. Each section commences with an eponymous elegy, in which Chrisman examines themes that filter into the accompanying poems in the section. In this respect, Chrisman draws upon the classical use of the elegy as a poem of serious meditation. The subsequent poems extend these ideas, in which Chrisman is equally at home with classical allusions, blues idiom, and song lyrics enveloped in an accentual verse that maneuvers through his subjects with astonishing meter and symmetry. Chrisman’s crafted imagery is matched by his intimate attention to detail in poems that address at once a broad and very personal audience.
As poet Melba Joyce Boyd writes, “Robert Chrisman’s cosmic vision harbors profound insight derived from the mystery of human frailties and our uncanny, liberating pursuits in love and war. The Dirty Wars evinces Chrisman’s mastery of poetics in a collection expertly crafted to convey harsh demographic and global truths in a vocabulary that is hauntingly beautiful and strangely gentle, even when posed in confrontation. His poetry lingers in the mind’s eye like ‘a wraith of light,’ ‘a spray of doves and spears,’ warning us about ‘rat-eyed maggot men,’ and ‘the incoherent hum and curse of something inside,’ as he challenges us to explore ‘deeper channels/ than the wounds of memory.’”
To purchase copies or obtain review copies contact:
Maurisa Thompson, Editorial Assistant
THE BLACK SCHOLAR PRESS
Box 399
236 West Portal Avenue
San Francisco, California 94127
blackscholarpress@gmail.com

Monday, March 11, 2013

Hurriyah Asar at Black Love Lives Conference


Hurriyah Amanuel Asar must be recognized as a founder of Black Arts West Theatre, San Francisco, 1966, along with playwright Ed Bullins, Marvin X, Carl Bossiere, Hillery Broadus and Duncan Barber. When Marvin X connected with Eldridge Cleaver after his release from Soledad Prison, and established the political/cultural center known as Black House, San Francisco, 1967, Hurriyah and Marvin X were partners in revolutionary struggle at Black House. Black House was the center of Black culture and radical activism circa 1967. From Black House came the Black Arts Movement, e.g., Amiri and Amina Baraka (pregnant with their first child Obalaji) Chicago Arts Ensemble, Sarah Webster fabio, Avotchja, Reginal Lockett, Ed Bullins, Marvin X, Eldridge Cleaver, the Black Panther Party, Samuel Napier, Emory Douglas, Eldridge Cleaver. See Marvin X's memoir Eldridge Cleaver: My friend the Devil, Black Bird Press, 2009. Any study of Bay Area Black theatre and social activist arts workers must include the role of Ethna X. Wyatt, aka Hurriyah, aka Shahidah. In later years, Hurriyah became the Chief Market Woman at the Berkeley Flea Market, the crossroads of Bay Area North American Africans. Her concept of the general store is imitated throughout the Flea Market, even thought she departed years ago to become a land owner in South Carolina's Gullahland.

Others who were critical to the Black House were Amina and Amiri Baraka, Lil Bobby Hutton, Bunchy Carter, Maulana Karenga, Samuel Napier, Norman Brown, Alonzo Batin (RIP), Sonia Sanchez, et al.

Poem for Hurriyah: The Comforter

Who is this woman
who comes to me
out of darkness
crying in the name of Allah
for me to comfort her
I have seen her before
in my dreams
I have seen her
walking through snow
eating fruit where hot winds blow
here you are again
you want my love and mercy
Here!
Do not thank me
Thank God/Allah: We feed you for Allah's pleasure only
we desire from you neither reward nor thanks!

Thank God
I am His servant
I saw you in the fog
were you man or woman
you did not know
now you know
but do not act
even the moon submits
to the morning sun
Where are you in the circle of time
Dry your eyes sweet woman
Let me rock your soul
With my Father's hands
Come
I will not be here long.

--Marvin X
from Fly to Allah, poems, Marvin X, 1967.






Ethna X. Wyatt, aka Hurriyah Asar, Queen of San Francisco's Black Arts West Theatre and the Black House. She will attend the Black Love Lives Conference with her friend of 47 years, Marvin X.
This photo appeared in Black Dialogue Magazine, San Francisco, 1966


Ethna, aka Hurriyah, designed and made this shirt (black velvet, gold trimmings) for Marvin X's production Resurrection of the Desd, a myth-ritual dance drama, Black Educational Theatre, San Francisco, 1972.