Saturday, August 10, 2013

Reflections of a "Human Earthquake" Victim


Reflections of a 

"Human Earthquake" Victim



Meet Marvin X

 
Marvin X in Harlem, NY, 1968
photo Doug Harris

   I’m sure we all have those teachers from our past who have impacted our lives. Some have encouraged us to dig deep within and unleash untapped potential. Some have inspired us to think beyond our little world and reach new heights. I can’t remember, though, very many teachers who have shocked me into a dizzying stupor, made me laugh, then ultimately made me love them for their unbridled “Hootspa” (or as we were fond of saying in my hometown….“Huevos”)

Meet Marvin X

   I believe it was the fall semester of 1982 when I walked into the first day of my English class. I was attending Kings River Community College in the small, heavily Mennonite town of Reedley, CA. Our quaint little town was your typical white-bread, very conservative, farming community. So when we all took our seats and noticed that our instructor was not your typical white, middle-aged teacher with patches on his jacket sleeves, but was in fact an african american man, staring us down, we were all a bit off of our game.
   “Hello, welcome to my English class. My name is Marvin X. My legal name is Marvin Jackmon, but I don’t use that name because that was given to me by some white slave owner”! The classroom did a collective head scratching, while some more disturbed students got up and walked into the wall several times, then returned to their seats and joined the head scratching asking panically “Um…your just a sub, right??”
   Everyday in Marvin X’s class was like a field trip though a box of Cracker Jacks. There was always some prize waiting for our small town J.C. minds to grapple with. Mr. X always encouraged lively conversation and I took full advantage of that, because we all know that asking a thousand questions equals a passionate interest in the subject which equals a passing grade!!!!
   The thing I love most about him was that he loved…no, he fed on tossing little “shock and awe” bombshells our way. Which was always followed by that jubilant grin and sparkle in his eye’s. He kept taunting us that some day he would share some of his poetry with us. But he warned us, “My poetry is really “street” …so I’m not sure your ready for it”.
   Several more weeks passed, full of lively conversations, debate and complete pandemonium swirling through our young impressionable little minds. Finally, one day he came to class and announced that we were now officially ready for one of his poems. Once again, he reiterated that his poetry was pretty “street” and not for the faint of heart. We did a collective gulp and nodded our heads.
This poem is called…
(wait for it)

Confession of a Rapist”

(Oh dear Lord!!….um…uh…OK,, I can handle this! I can be street…or at least avenue)
He looked up with that sly grin and glimmer in his eyes, then proceeded with the opening line…
I took the P***Y”
(we’re not talking about sweet little kittens here, folks.)
   He just piloted his Enola Gay B-29 and dropped a bomb (a “P” bomb at that) amongst us citizens of Hiroshima Junior College!
   Visualize those old black & white films of Atomic bomb testing somewhere in the deserts of Nevada. The “Shock Wave” was so insanely intense, our faces were wobbling and contorting to the massive G-forces, that I’m pretty positive not one person heard another line from that poem. Outside, after class, we quickly and hastily put together an emergency Triage unit to asses the damages and re-attach any limbs or brain matter that may have needed attending to.
   Some fellow Christian students from the class were discussing the possibility of assembling a mob with torches and pitch forks, the likes of your typical Frankenstein movie. We soon realized that we were all fine. A little shaken, but fine.

   Oddly enough, there was maybe one complaint in class from a student, and he very patiently and lovingly discussed it with us. In the end, we all came through it like old trench buddies. Mr. X helped lift, perhaps rather firmly, us out of our little comfort zones.

   In the last few remaining weeks of class, we had several more great conversations and debates. One sunny day he even held class outside under a tree and we studied the book of Job from the Bible. I believe he said he loved it because it read like a screenplay. He had lots of great insight and challenged us daily.

   There are only a handful of teachers from my two and a half years of college (and no degree to show for it) that I have maybe a millisecond of memory of them. Mr. X, however, made such an impact on me that his memory is burned into the synapses of my brain. Was he shocking? Yes! However, even more, he loved reaching through to us. He made us think….really think!

Before I began writing this, I Googled him. Sure enough, there he was…
 

with that sly grin and glimmer in his eyes!
Thank you, Mr. X!


Comment Marvin X:

Let me thank all those beautiful students who attended my English class at Kings River College, 1982. I had the time of my life, but my academic career ended there, even though I received a 97% retention rate. I simply no longer desired to teach again. It is indeed ironic that my career ended not far from where my life began in Fowler, Ca., a few miles down the road from Reedley. My mother was also born in Fowler but never went to Reedley because the town was too racist. 

But during my brief tenure at Reedley, the students treated me royally, bringing me gifts of fruits, vegetables and herbs from their farms. Two of my greatest poems were written during this time, i.e., For the Women and Black History is World History. My students, nearly all White and/or Chicano, did research papers on Black History is World History. One of my Black students was from an Alabama town that hanged  his friend from a light post during the semester. Yes, the more things change, the more they stay the same. But I am humbled by the reflections of my student from Reedley Community College, aka Kings River College.

Save the Date!

In March, 2014, Marvin X will give the keynote address at the Black Arts Movement Conference at University of California, Merced, produced by Kim Macmillan, PhD candidate. Marvin X is the senior consultant for the conference, featuring Sonia Sanchez, Amiri Baraka, Ishmael Reed, and others. The conference will highlight the works of Central Valley writer Sherley A. Williams, critic, novelist, playwright and professor at the Fresno State University and University of California, San Diego. Marvin X and Sherley were lovers and budding writers at Edison High School, both member of the Drama Club and Life Members in CSF or the Honors Society. Sherley's critical work Give Birth to Brightness is an examination of the Black Arts Movement and how the Blues influenced the radical BAM tradition.

Marvin X turned away from academia to teach on the street corners of America, although he still speaks to university stude

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Wellness Day in Hunters Point/Bayview



The most revolutionary thing a Black man can do is lose 30 pounds!
--Geoffery Grier, SF Recovery Theatre





August 5, 2013

Dear Community Members:

On behalf of the Bayview Y, I want to extend a huge THANK YOU for participating in our First Men’s Health Summit held at Joe Lee Gym on July 25, 2013.  We were thrilled to have had such a great turnout from our D10 community.  Thanks to your participation and the contributions of our community partners, the Health Summit featuring a day of physical fitness activities, blood pressure testing, a nutritional lunch, a guest speaker and health information workshops, was a huge success.  

We were very fortunate to have had distinguished guest speaker, Dr. Albirda Rose’s father, share with us his life experience and information about African American health issues.  We owe special thanks to Joe Lee Gym for providing space for the event.  We also want to express our gratitude to the American Heart Association for conducting free blood pressure screenings for all participants and to Goodwill Industries for providing job training referrals and information.  Finally, we’d like to thank Jason Bell and Project Rebound for attending and providing information on opportunities for higher education at San Francisco State University for the formerly incarcerated; Marvin X of the Academy of da Corner for giving out complimentary copies of his books, and Geoffrey Grier of Recovery Theatre for leading the nutrition workshop on eating with diabetes.  It was a beneficial, educational, uplifting and wonderful event for our D10 community, thanks to your participation and the collaborative efforts of our community partners.

With the Summer winding down, we are planning a special event –an End of Summer Healthy Community Day Celebration:
           
End of Summer Healthy Community Day Celebration
Wednesday, August 14, 2013
MLK Pool and Playground
10 am – 2 pm

We look forward to seeing you on August 14 for our End of Summer Healthy Community Day celebration.  More information on that event to follow.  Your participation with the Bayview Y and the D10 Health and Wellness program is invaluable and greatly appreciated. 
                                                                             
Sincerely,


Michael Bennett, Bayview Y
Director of Material Activities and Nutritional Wellness


Brothers softball team at Wellness boot camp

Women's aerobics class at the Wellness boot camp

Marvin X setting up Academy of da Corner booth at Black Men's Wellness Day

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

SCULPTOR SON OF ELIZABETH CATTLETT MORA PROPOSES SOJOURNER STATUE FOR OAKLAND


catlett 3catlett 4



Dear Marvin:

Hope you and your loved ones are doing fine. I wanted to clarify a situation about the sculpture in Sacramento: The people from the "Sacramento Metropolitan Arts Commission" bought the "Sojourner"
sculpture in 1998, for an irresistible price from my Mother. Legally they can do what ever they want with the sculpture as it belongs to them ( not to the State of Californianot the Federal Government, not the Mayor of Sacramento). Morally they have a compromise with the public (they say they are fixing it).


You showed interest on this piece for the city of Oakland. What we could do is make a new one for  the city of Oakland. It would cost approximately $280, 000.00 $ US, that would be for production and transport. setting in location,  producing a platform and mounting the piece, it would have to be payed by the people in Oakland.


It would be beautiful if this project could lift off. It would have to be organised on your side as I do not know the contacts. Let me know what you think.
Peace Brother and a warm hug.


David Mora Catlett

Thursday, August 1, 2013

From the archives: Marvin X--Man Without a Country

Man Without a Country
From Marvin X Court Speech, September 9, 1970

The United States of America has no right to try me as I am not a citizen of the United States, having renounced my so-called citizenship December 7, 1967, before the US Consulate in Toronto, Canada, because the USA has, by action and inaction, deprived me and my brothers and sisters, the 30 to 60 million so-called Negroes, better known as Asiatic Black People, of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.

I say I renounced my so-called citizenship, for just as wood may remain in the water for ten years, but never become a crocodile, even though I was born in these hells of North America, it was never my desire to be a U.S. citizen. My U.S. citizenship was forced upon me and my people by the 14th Amendment to the U.S. constitution which made us U.S. citizens in name only, the right of self-determination was not given to us, consequently, we have enjoyed the status of free slaves ever since--the world knows we have never been treated as first class citizens.

Now the U.S.A. has the arrogance to find me guilty of refusing induction into the racist, fascist army of America-to fight in most savage war in history, as U.N. Secretary-General U Thant has described it.

Not only is it against my nature and religion to fight someone who has not attacked me, but even asking me to serve, with prison as the consequence of not serving, is a violation of the 13th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution which supposedly abolished slavery and involuntary servitude except under imprisonment.

I also maintain that the U.S. Government has no right or authority to try me since I was kidnapped in a conspiracy between the U.S.A. and the British Colony of Honduras and brought within the jurisdiction of the U.S. courts, against my will and in violation of international law.

Finally, since I am not a U.S. citizen, in fact, never was a U.S. citizen, and have no desire to be a U.S. citizen, I demand that the U.S.A. deport me at the earliest possible date to the country of my choice, either to the Cooperative Republic of Guyana, S.A., the Republic of the Sudan, the United Arab Republic of Egypt, the Democratic Republic of North Vietnam, the People's Republic of North Korea, the People's Republic of China or the Republic of Cuba.

I further demand the immediate release of all political prisoners held in the numerous jails and prisons of America.

All Black prisoners are political prisoners--Blackness is the most profound political reality in America!

Peace through prolonged struggle!

Marvin X. (Jackmon)
San Francisco County Jail
September 9, 1970




From the archives of Marvin X: Al Fitnah Muhajir















Al Fitnah Muhajir

When you enter
Strange cities
Be silent
In the streets
But speak
With all
You meet
And you will see
As the people see
The poor people
Are very rich.

When you enter
Their homes
Eat with them
Or they will hate you
But eat not
That which will kill you
Even if they insist
For you have been taught
By the Great Teacher
And they know Him not
May even mock Him
To your face
But cool your voice
They will submit
When they meet Him
When they see Him
In you.

When you love
Peoples of the world
Rivers are nothing
Between you
And strange tongues
A soulful tune.
Salaam, salaam.
--Marvin X

published in Negro Digest/Black World, Sept/Oct 1968



















Thursday, July 25, 2013

Marvin X at Wellness Boot Camp, Hunters Point, San Francisco



Wellness Coach Alfredo Ennis assists Marvin X and woman work out. On Thursday Marvin X participates in the BV/Hunters Point Black Men's Wellness Day. He will discuss Transcending Black Rage.

photo Michael Bennett, Wellness Director, BV/Hunters Point YMCA

"The most revolutionary thing a Black man can do is lose 30lbs!"
--Geoffery Grier, San Francisco Recovery Theatre

FREE One-Day Health Day for Men
sponsored by the BVHP YMCA Physical Activity and Nutritional Wellness Program
Thursday, July 25, 2013


All Adult African American Men are invited to attend
Joe Lee Recreation Center and Gymnasium
1395 Mendell Street, San Francisco
10:00 am to 2:00 pm
10:00 am – Sign-In and Fitness Activities in the Gymnasium
·        basketball
·        gym boot camp
11:15 am – 12:00 pm – Healthy Lunch,  Guest Speaker 
12:00 – 2:00 pm – Discussion:
·        Transcending Black Rage to Black Wellness
·        Ten steps to being a Man and Finding Spiritual Balance
·        Health screenings’ for high blood pressure
·        What to eat (and not eat) as a diabetic
·        Preventing prostate cancer
PLEASE JOIN US Ã   and Bring a Friend Ã  Come and participate in this Wonderful Opportunityà Benefits include Male Camaraderie, Healthy Lunch and Invaluable Health Tips that May Save Your Life

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Healing and Hope, Friday at Geoffrey's Inner Circle


 
Dear Friends and Family,
Please join us on Friday, July 26th, 6pm at Geoffrey's Inner Circle, 410-14th Street, Oakland for an opportunity to share your feelings and get involved in addressing the crisis of our time.
 

Let your friends and family know about this event...Bring information about actions and initiatives that you are working on that address education, housing, jobs, spiritual practice and any other solution to what is tearing our community apart. Blessings to you!
 
As the nation and Oakland demand justice for Trayvon Martin, The Brotherhood of Elders, an Oakland-based inter-generational cadre of Black men (from 18 to 80) working for social justice and empowerment, is sponsoring a very special community forum & healing circle about solutions to gun violence in our community. Tragic and senseless violence in our communities MUST stop and we are the ones to stop it.

The evening will feature youth & elder voices, spoken word performances, short films, and a specific Anti-Violence Action Steps to transform our community.

Let's turn this moment into our movement!

CONTACT:
Gregory Hodge
KHEPERA consulting

Saturday, July 20, 2013

I Am Oscar Grant: Marvin X reviews the film Fruitvale




I did not attend the Oakland rally for Trayvon Martin, instead I set up Academy of da Corner at the Berkeley Flea Market. I'm getting old now and marches and rallies never attracted me, no matter that so much has happened in Oakland at the very site of my classroom, 14th and Broadway, downtown Oakland. I began Academy of da Corner around 2005, occupying the corner in spite of police harassment until they realized I wasn't going anywhere, only then did they leave me alone, maybe after they realized they were dealing with a personality who was associated with the Black Panther Party, Nation of Islam and the Black Arts Movement, someone who knew North American Africans had shed blood to be on the streets of Oakland.

Even though people have told me my presence at 14th and Broadway has made things better, I have not been in my official classroom for months, not since my east coast book tour of late last year and early this year. And too my Community Archives Project has taken much of my time, so I've been content to let my classroom "students" do peer teaching. Actually, I have now expanded my peripatetic academy to the homes. I've long said we must, in the manner of Master Fard Muhammad, knock on the doors of the people, in a kinder/gentler manner than when the police go door to door looking for suspects, kicking in doors. My model is to be invited into the homes and very diplomatically go about teaching, yes, somewhat in the manner of the Platonic dialogues. People have recognized my method as being ministerial, especially after I have them read passages from my work then explain or comment on it. I have been invited into their bedrooms and when I say I am tired and would like to stop the conversation, they insist that I not depart to my room but continue talking. At this point I have had to get loud and say, "Nigguhs, class is over. I want to go to bed. Good night!"

At the Berkeley Flea Market today, I was asked by several people, what must be done because they are highly upset and want to do something beside attend a rally and march. My response was to call upon them to organize  secret societies to defend North American Africans. I told one brother to Google If We Must Die by Claude McKay, that 1920s poem from the Black Renaissance that inspired Winston Churchill in WWII and was the poetic national anthem of the Black Power Movement. The brother Googled the poem on his cell phone and thanked me, then scraped up enough money for a used copy of the 60s bible Black Fire, which he had no knowledge about.

I departed the Flea Market early to attend a viewing of Fruitvale, the film about the murder of Oscar Grant by the BART police on New Year's Day. I attended the film with my friend and her 9 year old twin boys. After stopping for dinner, we got inside the theatre a few minutes after the movie started.

After it was over, we all decided we didn't need to wait around to see the little part we had missed. We exited the theatre in a somber mood, as the film intended us to do, or shall we say as the story would have us do.

Although we are thankful to those who made the movie possible, it seems to me it deleted a powerful element in the Oscar Grant story which is the masses of people who mobilized, marched and rallied, yes, at my classroom, 14th and Broadway, and Frank Ogawa Plaza, renamed Oscar Grant Plaza by the
people.

Although I appreciated the focus on Oscar Grant, leaving out the mass response was like leaving
out the chorus in a classic Greek play. After all, it was the people, the masses, who came alive after his murder by the white racist BART police, who spent eleven months in jail for killing a Black man while America was happy to see quarterback Mike Vick spend five years in prison for killing dogs! Alas, America has always cared for and  treated its dogs, animals and pets better than it has treated North American Africans. During slavery we were fed a diet of animal food now called Soul Food that is the cause of our obesity and resulting diseases such as high blood pressure, strokes, heart attacks, diabetes and a host of other illnesses.

The film let us know Oscar Grant was not a Boy Scout, that he had a criminal past, yet he was trying to uplift himself and be a responsible father of a half Latina daughter. The depiction of Afro-Latina relations should help ease some of the tension between Blacks and Latinos. The new demographics suggest a more positive relationship is possible between individuals in these two ethnic groups while tension may remain in the political/economic arena. We are not so romantic as to think because there are interracial marriages or relationships between Blacks and Latinos that all is well or shall be well, just as interracial marriages between Blacks and Whites has not fundamentally changed racial disparities or
racial harmony. Alas, my sister married a white man who called her his "Nigger bitch."

We know those same so called liberal whites who marched and rallied for Trayvon Martin in Oakland today and across the country will simultaneously cause gentrification or "Negro Removal" from San Francisco to Harlem and have no shame about it! Remember Martin Luther King's Letter from a Birmingham Jail, "I'd rather be with the KKK than phony white liberals!"

After we departed the Grand Lake Theatre and stopped by Lake Merritt for a much needed breath of air, one of the nine year twins said Oscar Grant should not have resisted. His mother chided her son for seemingly taking the side of the police or right wingers. But I told his mother, on one level, her son is right because it's about the Tone Test when stopped by the police, not to mention when in a situation with another Black man as well. But as per the police, the Tone Test says one of three things can happen when a Black man is stopped by the police: (1) killed, (2) arrested, (3) released. All this is determined by the Black man's tone of voice. Years ago, an Oakland police officer revealed there was a tone test in the Oakland Police Department. The officer, a former student of mine at Mills College stated this in the Oakland Tribune, but the Chief (Hart) denied it.

The murder of Oscar Grant and Trayvon Martin are clear indicators that North American Africans are at war with America and until this battle is resolved there shall be thousands of Oscars and Trayvons, after all, they are casualties in a war, not about drugs, but about human beings who have every right to live as full human beings, to pursue happiness, freedom and, most of justice!

We appreciate the producers of this film, although it was not all that we wanted, but it is most certainly better than nothing and it brings Oscar Grant out of the dustbin of history, while so many other Oscar's shall languish there, yes, the many thousands gone that we shall never hear about.

Let us end with the mystical: Oscar Grant died on New Year's Day, the most dreaded day in the life of a North American African slave: it was the day slaves were auctioned, bought and sold, separated from mother, father, family, a day of horror and dread. Thus this is a day North American Africans should never celebrate but should sing sorrow songs for our ancestors who were bought and sold on this day.

On the other hand, the metaphysical had a answer for the New Year's Day murder of Oscar Grant. On March 23 or the Spring Equinox, i.e., the African New Year's Day, that same year of Oscar's murder,
Novell Mixon killed four Oakland police in a shootout that took his own life. Fritz Pointer, brother of Oakland's famed Pointer Sisters, said on the Mixon shootout, Oakland masses received an "obscene pride" after years of police abuse under the color of law. I AM OSCAR GRANT!
--Marvin X
7/20/13
Oakland