Monday, May 27, 2013

Now Available: The Video of Dr. Nathan Hare's 80th Birthday Celebration in Oakland

We are so very thankful that videographer Ken Johnson wanted to video Dr. Hare's birthday party as his gift to the Father of Black Studies. We just finished viewing the video, a two DVD set and are overwhelmed with joy at the love that was expressed by those present at Geoffery's Inner Circle in Oakland.

It is indeed therapeutic to see such expressions of Black Love Lives (Nisa Ra term). We thank all those who were present and those who shared the Open Mike for Dr. Hare. This is a video every North American African should have in their video library of conscious events.

All the participants will receive a free copy. You can order the two set DVD from Black Bird Press for $19.95.

Send your donation to Black Bird Press, 339 Lester Ave. #10, Oakland 94606 or call 510-200-4164. We will give you a money back guarantee you will love and treasure the video of this event that was an outpouring of love for one of our greatest scholars, scientists and mental health workers, in short, a revolutionary that has helped us along the road to Black Liberation, he and his dearly beloved wife Dr. Julia Hare.


Dr. Hare's 80th Birthday

 

A photo essay by Gene Hazzard


Attorney Aubrey LaBrie, one of the founders of the San Francisco State University Black Students Union, a founding editor of Black Dialogue Magazine. Aubrey taught class on Black Nationalism at SFSU. He organized student march protesting the assassination of Malcolm X. Marvin X, SFSU undergrad, was in the march, 1965.


Tureeda Mikell, Mechelle LaChaux, Dr. Ayodele Nzinga, Tarika Lewis
free styling for Dr. Hare


Mechelle LaChaux, a living legend singer/actress


 Tureeda Mikell, the preacher lady

 poet/organizer, educator Marvin X

 Earl Davis, trumpet master, performed with Marvin X at Black Arts West Theatre, SF 1966
Earl and his wife were clients of Dr. Hare. After seeing Dr. Hare, their marriage lasted twenty years.



 Marvin X's assistant, Rahim Ali, MX, Benny Stewart, SFSU BSU founder/strike leader


Bay Area media living legend, Belva Davis and husband, William V. "Bill" Moore, photo journalist extraordinaire


Mrs. Dhameera Ahmad, one of the founding SFSU BSU students and strike leaders

Nzinga Hogan, United Kingdom, studied the writings of Dr. Hare in England
Man in the back is Dr. Kenneth Monteiro, Chair, Ethnic Studies, San Francisco State University. Seated in purple dress is Dr. Ruth Love, former Superintendent of Oakland Public School.

Far left, Harpist from the Hood, Destiny Muhammad, man on right Dr. J. Vern Cromartie,
Chair, Social Science Department, Contra Costa College, former client of Dr. Hare. Next to
him is Will Ussery, leader of the Congress of Racial Equality and Director of SF Poverty Program

SFSU Professor emeritus, Dr. Oba T'Shaka, former member of C.O.R.E SF

Tahuti

Benny Stewart, BSU and SFSU strike leader

Violinist Tarika Lewis, first female member of the Black Panther Party


Queen Sister



Saadat Ahmad, photo editor of Black Dialogue Magazine

Poet Rabbani Sela

Painter Malik Seneferu

Muhammad Al Kareem, founder of the SF Bayview Newspaper. A graphic artist, he designed books for Dr. Nathan Hare and Dr. Julia Hare

UC Berkeley student, writer, Reginald James

 Unidentified African Queen

Poet Aries Jordan, a student at Marvin X's Academy of da Corner

Call for an Ad Hoc Committee of Howard University Alumni and Friends to Acquire the Dr. Nathan Hare and Dr. Julia Hare Archives









In consideration of Dr. Greg Carr's expressed desire to acquire the Dr. Nathan Hare and Dr. Julia Hare archives for Howard University, the Community Archives Project, agent for the acquisition of the Hare archives,   proposes the formation of an Ad Hoc committee of alumni and friends of Howard University to raise the necessary funds for Howard University to obtain the archives at the earliest possible date.

The asking price of two million dollars reflects not only the value of the archives (approximately 200 cartons) but also the self worth of Dr. Nathan Hare and Dr. Julia Hare who have been denied participating in American academia due to their advanced thinking and profound commitment to the North American African community, despite their centrality in the formation of the discipline known as Black Studies, especially at Howard University and later at San Francisco State University.

We therefore call upon the following to join the Ad Hoc committee to facilitate the acquisition of the Hare papers by Howard University at the earliest possible date:

Dr. Greg Carr, Professor and Chair of Afro American Studies, Howard University
Baba Lumumba, Umoja House, Washington DC
Malik Zulu Shabazz, New Black Panthers, Black Lawyers, Washington DC
Amiri Baraka, poet, playwright, activist, Newark, New Jersey
Paul Cobb, Publisher, Oakland Newspaper Group, Oakland CA
Attorney John Burris, Oakland CA
Dr. Khalid Abdullah Tariq Al Mansour, Houston TX
Muhammida El Muhajir, Sun in Leo Productions, Brooklyn NY
Eleanor Traynor, Professor Emeritus, Howard University
Sonia Sanchez, Professor Emeritus, Temple University, Philadelphia PA
Muhammad Ahmad, Professor, Temple University, Philadelphia PA
Sean Combs, producer, New York City
Ras Baraka, City Councilman, Newark NJ
Dr. Haki Madhubuti, publisher, Third World Press, Chicago ILL
Dr. Dorothy Tsuruta, Professor of Black Studies, San Francisco State University
Judge Henry Ramsey, Jr., Oakland CA
Attorney Kathleen Cleaver, Professor of Law, Emory University, Atlanta GA
Sam Hamod, Professor Emeritus, Princeton University

Dr. Nathan Hare suggests that this committee maintain a status independent of Howard University but have a trust account established that will direct all funds to Howard University for the acquisition of the Hare papers.

Please confirm your participation on this committee and send us any suggestion you feel will facilitate the fundraising effort so Howard can acquire the archives at the earliest possible date. The archives are stored in Oakland CA and are available for viewing by appointment.

Sincerely,

Marvin X, M.A.,
Director,
The Community Archives Project
510-200-4164
339 Lester Ave. #10
Oakland CA 94606
jmarvinx@yahoo.com
www.blackbirdpressnews.blogspot.com


Sunday, May 26, 2013

Howard University wants the Hare's Archives!







From: 
Dr. Greg Carr, Chair, Afro American Studies
Howard University, Washington DC

To: 
Marvin X, Agent, Community Archives Project
Oakland CA

Good Morning Brother Marvin:

Given Brother Hare's centrality in founding the field of Black Studies--and the specific debt that Howard and HBCUs owe the Hares in that and related regards--I can explore the possibility that we can provide a home for the archive. I would like to begin with a space in Afro American Studies, the department that Dr. Hare is most immediately responsible for helping initiate at Howard.  I will begin looking into possibilities immediately.  Let's talk soon.

Best,
Greg
2159006297

Dr. Nathan Hare on Howard University acquiring the Hare papers:


It’s touching, and would be poetic. Beyond the poetry, they did give Stokely Carmichael a Ph.D., though as I recall it was posthumous, but it was a start. I don’t know what they would have in  terms of financial might, especially, starting with the Department of Afroamerican Studies. I guess they could hook up with the Moreland Room of the University’s library. The Department of Sociology might add a penny.  You’re the poet. I’m a natural born sociologist, a tribe historically accused of worrying too much.

Nathan

Was Malcolm Shabazz Assassinated?



Malcolm Shabazz, grandson of Malcolm X, was murdered in Mexico recently. Before dying he voiced concerns that he was being targeted by American intelligence groups, and though he is being called a victim of crime, many questions remain about his death. Sean Stone talks to Africa/Middle East cultural consultant and friend of Malcolm's, Rozan Ahmed, and she shares startling information about possible email tampering, his link to Gaddafi, and Malcolm's continued character assassination.

GUEST BIO:
Rozan Ahmed is the editor and director of bougi. She was recently nominated as one the Middle East's most influential women and has played a pivotal role in merging artistic spheres between 'East and West' across a number of successful projects. Rozan's passion for social development and self-empowerment has also seen her speak, advocate, support and campaign for a number of capacity-building programs internationally. She is currently establishing the MEA organisation, a Middle East/Africa based initiative focused on exposing, bridging and celebrating cultural affinity between the two neighboring regions. Follow @IamRozan on twitter for updates on her works.

ADD'L LINKS:
https://twitter.com/IamRozan
http://rozanahmed.com/
http://bougilife.blogspot.com/

Buzzsaw Full Episdoes Playlist:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NaZgXq...
Buzzsaw Shorts Playlist:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W1p9Ju...
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Buzzsa...

EPISODE BREAKDOWN:
00:01 Welcome to Buzzsaw.
01:50 Introducing Rozan Ahmed.
02:50 Reaction to conflicting reports of Malcolm's passing.
04:20 Sabotage and surveillance by the FBI.
05:20 The death of his grandmother, Betty Shabazz.
07:55 Col.Gaddafi as a father figure in Pan-Africanism.
11:20 Malcolm tries to leave American and his vanished memoirs.
14:07 Confusion over some of Malcolm's actions and his attempts at travel.
16:30 Language, rhetoric and media lynching.
18:35 Nation of Islam, Sunni and Shia distinctions.
21:20 Final words.

Friday, May 24, 2013

Honor Student, 14, Shot on a Bus in Queens, New York


As long as America maintains its trillion dollar military budget and remains the number one arms merchant of the world, the blowback shall be slaughter in the hoods and suburbs of America.
Again, Baldwin, "The murder of my child will not make your child safe." Imagine, your president maintains a list of people to murder around the world and we expect peace in America. Poppycock!
--Marvin X

Recalling a Girl, 14, Laughing, Before She Was Shot on a Bus


Suzanne DeChillo/The New York Times
D’aja Robinson’s mother, Shadia Sands, in sunglasses. The police say D’aja was an unintended victim of a gang shooting; no arrests have been made.



Standing before hundreds of mourners at a church in Jamaica, Queens, on Friday, Shaquanna Almonds told the family and friends of 14-year-old D’aja Robinson about her last moments.

Suzanne DeChillo/The New York Times
At D’aja’s funeral in Jamaica, Queens, on Friday, friends wore pictures of her and remembered her as an honor roll student who liked to sing and dance.
“We had so much fun, laughing, dancing, taking pictures,” she said of the birthday party that the two attended last Saturday night. But just after the party, as D’aja was sitting on a Q6 bus at the corner of Rockaway and Sutphin Boulevards about 8:30 p.m., nine bullets were fired at the bus, and one hit D’aja in the head.
The police said they believed she was an unintended victim of a gang dispute.
“Who could have known walking down the block would have been my last time with my best friend?” Shaquanna said. “Who could have known when I was holding her in my arms?”
“D’aja,” she called out, sobbing as she turned toward the white coffin a few feet away. “I miss you so much.”
While the police continued their investigation into the killing, mourners at the Greater Allen A.M.E. Cathedral of New York remembered D’aja as an honor roll student with a bright smile who liked to sing and dance.
The police this week questioned a 16-year-old boy in connection with the killing, but released him to the custody of his mother on Friday. No arrests have been made.
During D’aja’s funeral, a minister urged witnesses to come forward.
“Someone knows who did this,” he said. “God knows who it is. And my prayer is there will be no sleep until justice is served.”
In his eulogy, the Rev. Alfonso Wyatt spoke against retaliation, declaring Friday “D’aja Day.” A call to action, a call for change.
“If you want to fight,” Mr. Wyatt said, addressing the young people among the mourners, “fight the mentality that says you don’t have a destiny. You were created in God’s image, not to die for a piece of concrete, a street that will never know your name. You ain’t Sutphin Boulevard!”
“D’aja Day means no more business as usual,” he said. “That would dishonor her day.”
D’aja’s mother, Shadia Sands, dressed in white, sat in the second pew. Sunglasses covered her eyes. A few times she left the room, buckling with grief. D’aja is also survived by her father, Steven Robinson, three siblings and other relatives, including great-grandparents.
Next to her coffin was a heart of pink and white flowers with a teddy bear. Photos of D’aja, who lived about a mile from the site of the shooting and attended a Campus Magnet High School in Cambria Heights, looped on a giant screen: a toddler posing with giant crayons; a girl grinning on her mother’s lap; then laughing in her father’s arms; a teenager with a big smile and almond-shaped eyes.
In between the photos, words describing D’aja were displayed: always daddy’s girl; beloved sister; grandma’s baby.
Before the service, mourners walked by the coffin in a slow procession to pay their respects.
“Oh my God, she’s gone,” one young woman wailed as she leaned on a friend. “She’s really gone.”

Joseph Goldstein contributed reporting.

Community Archives Project Seeks Acquisition of Archives by Middle Eastern Academic Institutions






Dr. M, aka Marvin X, Dr. Julia Hare, Dr. Nathan Hare, Attorney Amira Jackmon



Marvin X and his "fish" for the Nation of Islam Brother Nadar Ali, aka Bobby Jones, Educator, International Business Representative of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad and Imam Warithdeen Muhammad



Marvin X, director of the Community Archives Projects, is seeking Middle Eastern Academic institutions with interest in North American African culture for possible acquisition of the archives
of Dr. Nathan Hare and Dr. Julia Hare, Nadar Ali and Paul Cobb. Dr. Nathan Hare is the father of Black Studies, a sociologist and psychologist. He is the founding publisher of Black Scholar Magazine. His wife Julia Hare is an educator and internationally known speaker. A London newspaper called her the female Malcolm X. Nadar Ali served as director of the Nation of Islam's University of Islam and as director  of Imports, heading the Whiting fish project. Paul Cobb is a civil rights leader and publisher of the Oakland Post News Group. The archives are being offered separately and as a package.



Paul Cobb, Publisher of the Oakland Post Newspaper Group and Marvin X at Marvin's Academy of da Corner, 14th and Broadway, downtown Oakland. The Community Archive Project is a project of
Academy of da Corner.

If you are interested in the archives, please contact Marvin X at 510-200-4164; email jmarvinx@yahoo.com.


Space Is The Place [Sun Ra Film 1974]



Marvin X and Sun Ra, his mentor and associate outside Marvin's Black Educational Theatre, San Francisco, 1972. Sun Ra's Arkestra performed the musical version of Flowers for the Trashman, retitled Take Care of Business at the Harding Theatre, a five hour concert without intermission with a cast of fifty, including the Raymond Sawyer dancers and the Ellendar Barnes dancers.

Thursday, May 23, 2013

UK Soldier Beheaded on London Street



May 22, 2013 BBC News
http://MOXNews.com


Marvin X reviews the film My Son the Fanatic




Understanding London--And Boston!



 

“If they are going to kill him. I don’t care. My oldest son is killed, so I don’t care. I don’t care if my youngest son is going to be killed today. I want the world to hear this. And, I don’t care if I am going to get killed too. And I will say Allahu Akbar!“--Mother of Boston Bombers

My Son the Fanatic
a film review
by 
Marvin X

In light of recent events in London (and now Boston), I thought it would be important for a clearer understanding of London's Muslim community (and America's) to resend this review of the film My Son The Fanatic. Most western politicians, media spooks and experts refuse to address the root cause of young men and women willing to self destruct as suicide bombers or why they choose to become fundamentalist Muslims. Westerners and the moderate Muslim experts continue in denial that white supremacy is the root cause of their former colonial subjects desire to remove the last vestiges of the disease of cultural imperialism.

White supremacy has spread hopelessness in young Muslims in Europe and cultural imperialism has spread it to the former colonies, now neo-colonial regimes best described by journalist Ayman Al Amir, who recently said, “Terrorism is the consequence of political ostracism, not religious fanaticism. It is fermented not in the mosques of Egypt or the madrassas of Pakistan but in solitary confinement cells, torture chambers, and the environment of fear wielded by dictatorial regimes.”

The film reveals that Muslims in Europe, and London in particular, are not only politically disenfranchised but culturally, economically, and spirituality alienated as well.

This alienation is simply the nature of the beast, the Mother Country, that devours the little people from the colonies who seek comfort in the Mother but are rejected for being less than human, thus in a twist of the Oedipus complex, they seek to destroy the Mother who has all but destroyed them, stunted their personalities and possibilities for human and spiritual development. (President Obama described the Boston bombers as stunted men!

The Review of the film My Son the Fanatic

…Essentially, it is about the colonized man, the colonized family and its attempt at de-colonization. Ironically, we are challenged to decide who is the fanatic, the father or the son, for both are battling their supposed demons. For the son, it is western culture—the father fights to escape eastern culture, i.e., his Pakistani roots. The son wants to return to his religious roots, Islamic fundamentalism. The father is fanatically in love with secularism—he is non-religious, in love with jazz, blues, alcohol and whores, one in particular.

What if Osama Bin Laden and his band of devils came to your house at the invitation of your son? When his son comes under the influence of fundamental Islam, he get his father to allow a Muslim teacher to visit from Lahore, Pakistan, turning the house into an Islamic center, which the father reluctantly allows because of his deep love for his son. Although he arranges for his son to marry a London policeman’s daughter, the son rejects his father’s request, opting for Islam, claiming the girl represents the worst of western culture. Couldn’t he see how the policeman abhorred him, the son asks the father.

The father is blind: his loveless job as a London taxi driver exposes him to street life and he succumbs, falling seriously in love with a whore, rejecting his homely wife who has failed to inspire him, perhaps because she doesn’t represent the decadent western culture he loves, symbolized and summarized in the whore. For him, the whore has life, love, tenderness, and freedom. Why can’t he get this at home? Is it because the wife represents the old world he rejects so totally?  …After his son and comrades attack the whores for being whores—the son actually attacks his father’s whore, spitting on her, and striking her in a violent anti-prostitution riot, forcing the father to expel the imam, with the son departing in disgust.
…In the German trick Mr. Schitz, we see the arrogance of western man who derides the father for being the “little man.” What can the little man from the East do with the white whore, the symbol of western civilization? The little man is inferior by nature, with defects, genetic of course, which disqualifies him from being on par with western man.

Mr. Schitz can pat the “little man” or eastern man on the head, kick him to the ground and apply any number of verbal insults, until eastern man finds a bat in the truck of his car and threatens to use it. Of course, this is the colonized man fighting back, regaining his manhood. The father fights on a personal level, the son on a politico-religious level, but both are fighting colonialism.

Their misunderstanding each other’s fight is symbolic of the tension between moderate and fundamental Muslims. We know we cannot go back to Islam of the Prophet’s day, but nor can we accept the passivity of the moderates. There is no excuse for one billion Muslims being humiliated by a few million Jews in Israel. This is not a question of hatred, but the result of political backwardness, the non-use of power. With Muslim unity, the Palestinian problem could be resolved tomorrow morning. 
Until contradictions between moderate and fundamental Muslims are resolved, eastern man will not be able to successfully challenge western man. This, of course, will necessitate revolution because moderate Muslims control most Islamic societies and have no plans to give up power without a struggle—those who struggle against them being described as terrorists to disqualify legitimate freedom fighters who will ultimately challenge the corrupt, undemocratic, secular Muslim nations.

The final question is what will be the nature of the new Nation of Islam. Can fundamentalism function in the modern era or is it antithetical? Will it be repressive, will it be democratic in any sense, not necessarily in the western democratic sense? Will Iran be an example? Tunisia? Turkey? For sure, the motion in the Muslim world will lead to a synthesis of the best of the old and the new. 

Let us understand clearly, if the reactionary secular regimes cannot or do not eradicate ignorance, poverty and disease, they will be replaced.

The father’s love of the whore was real. She represented the poor underclass that even the revolutionary son could not accept because of his moral myopia. If the father had married her (another wife being acceptable in Islam), perhaps the son would have respected him and the tension between the old and new would have eased, allowing the possibility of a better day.

After the present convolutions, look for a marriage between old Islam and the new, between East and West. We will either come together or go to hell together. For all his attempts to claim allegiance to the Islamic past, Osama Bin Laden is the most modern of men, using modern technology, modern weapons, modern financial systems, and modern media techniques to the best of his ability.
*   *   *   *   *
This film review appears in Marvin X's book of essays, In the Crazy House Called America, Black Bird Press, 2002. 
posted 5 August 2005