Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Jackson, Mississippi Mayor Chokwe Lumumba was murdered!

County Supervisor says Chokwe Lumumba

 was Murdered – Wants Autopsy

POSTED ON MARCH 4, 2014 BY TIARA IN MEDICAL NEWS
lumumba
The death of Chokwe Lumumba was a tough blow to the civil rights community.  The Jackson, Mississippi mayor was considered to be one of the great civil rights activists of his time and was respected around the nation.  His election was also seen to be a huge step forward in the world of politics.
But Lumumba was dead before he even got a chance to get his mayoral tenure started.  While most were saying that he died of natural causes, there are others who believe that there were more sinister forces at work.  Hinds County Supervisor Kenny Stokes told the Jackson Clarion – Ledger that he believes Mayor Lumumba was killed and that he demands that doctors do a thorough autopsy in order to determine the cause of death.
“We gonna ask a question: Who killed the mayor?” He asked during an event remembering Lumumba’s legacy.   He says that he doesn’t have proof of his assertion, but believes that this could be the case. 
Hinds County Coroner Sharon Grisham-Stewart told The Clarion-Ledger that the mayor died of natural causes, but would not elaborate due to privacy laws.  The family hasn’t accused anyone of foul play either.  But Stokes isn’t backing off, stating that an autopsy would be a good way to ensure that the mayor died the way they say he did.  
“We gonna ask a question: Who killed the mayor? We’d feel a lot better if there was an autopsy,” Stokes said. “First they say it’s not a heart attack and not a stroke, then what was it? You don’t just die like that and you’re healthy.”
Stokes says that, despite what official reports are saying, many in the community are aware that the mayor’s life may have been taken.
“So many of us feel, throughout the city of Jackson, that the mayor was murderd,” Stokes told reporters. “I’m not going to sugar coat it. I’m not going to try to say it in a way where the people feel, you know, that we should have said it in another way.”
Stokes is now the supervisor for the city and spent years on the city council.  He says that he is surprised that the mayor died suddenly, given that he was in good health and his visitors claimed that he was doing just fine.
“If he was in any way kind of in trouble, people would have stayed there,” Stokes said.
There is no official cause of death stated, but members of the city leadership have proclaimed that he died of a heart attack.

The Mavin X keynote speech at BAM conf, UC Merced--that he didn't give, but talked and performed

Black Arts, Black Power, Black Studies
Time to finish the cultural revolution










The Black Arts Movement was the cultural arm of the national liberation movement. The cultural arm provided the necessary radical consciousness to awaken the people and inspire them to join the political movement, though we should not think culture and politics are separate entities, for they are not, rather they work in tandem in the holistic manner of African tradition. The body parts are all connected and cannot function except as a unified whole, each doing its part to make the whole move forward.

 When we look at the Black Arts Movement, Black Power politics and Black Studies, three components of  the national liberation movement, we see the first step was to gain cultural consciousness through the arts. This happened when young people, especially students, became workers in BAM then graduated to the political movements such as the Black Panther Party and the Nation of Islam. We must see the BPP and NOI has political, though on the surface the NOI was religious, but certainly the mission of the NOI in seeking a nation state was a political act, and surely Malcolm X pushed a political agenda, especially after his departure from the NOI.
The Nation of Islam, by definition, was a political and spiritual movement, even more, it was a consciousness raising project, i.e., Elijah Muhammad taught us our task was the raise the deaf, dumb and blind. But this consciousness raising had been persistent throughout our sojourn in the wilderness of North America as described by Elijah Muhammad. From the time Africans arrived in the American slave system, attempts were made to regain our mental stability. One need only read the socalled slave narratives, especially read the writings of those 19th century North American Africans who clearly expressed a radical cultural and political consciousness, such as David Walker, Henry Highland Garnett, Frederick Douglass, Sojourner Truth, Harriet Tubman, Ida B. Wells, W.E.B. DuBois, et al.
But by the beginning of the 20th century, Islam began to rekindle Black national consciousness, after all Marcus Garvey was mentored in London by an Egyptian Muslim and Pan Africanist, Duse Muhammad Ali, publisher of the Oriental Times and Review. It was after reading the writings of Booker T. Washington in the publication that Garvey decided to come to America to meet Booker T, who may have been of Muslim ancestry since Booker T. could be a corruption of Abubakr, a Muslim name.  And even before Garvey arrived teaching One God, One Aim, One Destiny, another Muslim Noble Drew Ali  was on the scene with his Moorish Science Temples.
Thus, Elijah Muhammad's Nation of Islam was well grounded in African Islamic consciousness, especially by the late 1950s when Malcolm X came on the scene as the chief minister and national spokesman. It had spread its version of consciousness since 1930, but Malcolm X took things to a higher level after the American media exposed the NOI with the documentary The Hate that Hate Produced by Mike Wallace.
So the seeds that grew into the Black Arts Movement were clearly sown by the NOI and Malcolm X. LeRoi Jones, aka Amiri Baraka, departed the Village for Harlem when Malcolm X was assassinated, 1965. Obviously, he had been influenced by the teachings of the NOI through Malcolm X. It was the same for us on the west coast. At Oakland's Merritt College, Huey P. Newton, Bobby Seale, Ernie Allen, Ken and Carol Freeman, myself and a host of other students were inspired by Malcolm X rather than by the Civil Rights Movement. We considered Martin Luther King, Jr. the chief boot licker of the white man and we wanted no part of non violence.
Although after Malcolm X  broke from the Nation of Islam and had no organization, we students at Merritt College considered ourselves followers of Malcolm X, we stated this in a Merritt College newspaper article, featuring Isaac Moore and myself.
And even though I did not join the NOI until 1967, my first play Flowers for the Trashman, produced by the San Francisco State College Drama department, 1965, expresses language that came from the teachings of Elijah Muhammad. So we must credit the NOI for influencing the Black Arts Movement, especially Amiri Baraka. See his play A Black Mass, based on the NOI's myth of Yacoub, the scientist who genetically engineered the birth of the white man.  See the Islamic writings of Sonia Sanchez and Askia Muhammad Toure. Dr. Mohja Kahf posits that the Black Arts Movement gave birth to the genre called  Muslim American literature.

 Those who say BAM was short-lived (Dr. Henry Louis Gates) need to be reminded that Jesus only lived 33 years but look at his impact; MLK, JR. and Malcolm X only lived 39 years but look at their impact,  so it is not how long a movement lasts but what was accomplished in the time it existed. What did BAM accomplish? BAM developed into a national movement of cultural workers, i.e., east coast, west coast, Midwest, south, creating a plethora of cultural workers in the arts, writers, poets, artists, musicians, dancers, actors; magazines, venues, theatres, all contributing to the cultural revolution that allowed the masses to gain radical consciousness and then seek to address the myriad issues facing an oppressed people.

 BAM must be seen as a revolutionary movement that not only changed the Black Nation but awakened other ethnic and gender groups to establish cultural sovereignty and recognition in the American cultural landscape.  For sure, we accepted the notions expressed by ancestor Langston Hughes in his essay on the Artist and the Racial Mountain, i.e., that we were going to do our thing no matter what, no matter if whites or blacks liked what we were doing, for we were on a mission possible. And no matter how briefly BAM lasted, the impact was made in the Black is Beautiful expressions and statements; the impact was revealed in how other ethnic groups began to express their cultural sovereignty, and finally how the white supremacy society came to realize some degree of multil-cultural inclusion was necessary if white supremacy was to survive.
For sure, white supremacy America, only reluctantly  and with great struggle decided to include other ethnicities in the cultural pie, especially in academia.  And if anything was short lived it was the inclusion of radical Black cultural expression in the curriculum known as Black Studies. Radical BAM expressions and personalities were quickly disposed of and only a weakened Black Studies was allowed until now.  Radical BAM expressions and personalities were purged from Black Studies nationwide, from UC Berkeley to San Francisco State University to east coast, Midwest and southern academic institutions, including purges at socalled Negro or Black colleges and universities. BAM founder Haki Madhubuti, aka Don L. Lee, was recently purged from his position at a university in the Midwest.  As we speak, two radical black professors (Dr. Anthony Montiero and Dr. Muhammad Ahmed (Max Stanford) are being terminated at Temple University in Philadelphia.  In the central valley, Fresno City College professor Kehindi Solwazi claims every attempt was made to silence and/or remove him, including the filing of criminal charges that were reduced to a $100.00 tax evasion.

The classic example is the treatment of Dr. Nathan Hare who was removed from the faculty at Howard University and San Francisco State University. This writer was removed from Fresno State University on orders from Gov. Ronald Reagan who simultaneously removed Angela Davis from UCLA. The reasons in each case was radical political consciousness: Hare, Marvin X and Angela Davis.

 So fifty years later American academia is still purging radical black thought and thinkers, although it is gratifying UC Merced made this conference possible. And we thank them for having the courage to do so, although we are aware the purge continues with the attempted dismantling of Black Studies programs nationwide, often by denying funds or tenure to professors of a black radical persuasion.

 Again, please do not make a distinction between BAM and Black Studies for we see them as one and the same. Without BAM what would be the curriculum of Black Studies, although BAM expressions was, of necessity, largely not taught in order for a Miller Lite Black Studies to be acceptable. In truth, it is difficult for American white supremacy society and/or institutions to tolerate a moderate, e.g., Martin Luther King, Jr., or a radical, e.g., Malcolm X. Richard Wright told us in his classic novel Native Son, "Our very presence is a crime against the state, every glance of the eye is a threat!...."

And so here we are almost fifty years later, attempting to celebrate BAM and its counterparts Black Power and Black Studies, strangely, in a little country town in the center of California, and we see the residue of white power thinking in the resistance of a few who are simply unable to recover from their addiction to white supremacy. We certainly hope by the end of this conference that all of us, those suffering the addiction to white supremacy type I and type II, will have inched forward to acknowledge the need not fear BAM, Black Power or Black Studies since we are only exercising our human right to self-determination and national sovereignty.

It is indeed time now to pass the baton to the next generation, yes, the conscious hip hop youth who are the inheritors of the BAM tradition. This is not to say that BAM was all positive for it was not, there were indeed reactionary elements that perhaps led to the abortion of the BAM, and reactionary elements are doing the same in hip hop. But we should see as Ishmael Reed has said, “Without BAM Black culture would be extinct.” So let us indeed pass the baton to the BAM babies and Black Power babies who may find in the positive aspects  of BAM the very necessary tools needed to infuse Hip Hop with the ingredients to move Black Culture and in the process global culture forward in the present era.


Before I conclude, allow me to speak on what I call the Psycholinguistic Crisis of the North American African. As a result of the Euro-Arab-American slave system, "...the proud African was beaten down from Kunta Kinte to Toby, perhaps the first level in his psycho-linguistic crisis: who am I, what is my name? Once in the Americas, especially after the breaking in, the psycho-physical deprogramming,  he was no longer Yoruba, Hausa, Ibo, Congo, Ashante but Negro, and according to Grimm's law (the consonants C,K, and G being interchangeable) he was a dead, from the Greek Necro, something dead, lifeless, without motion and spirit. Of course, he retained some of his African consciousness in the deep structure of his mind, in the bowels of his soul and he expressed it in his dance, his love life, his work habits, his songs and shouts, but basically he was a trumatized victim of kidnapping, rape and mass murder--genocide, for after all, when it was all said and done, between 50 and 100 million of his brothers and sisters were lost in the Middle Passage, the voyage between Africa and the Americas, thrown to the sharks that trailed slave ships, one of which was named Jesus, perhaps the same one whose captain had the miraculous conversion and wrote the song Amazing Grace! But changing the African into Negro was a primary problem in terms of identity which persists until today, even as we speak a new generation is now in crisis trying to decide whether they shall be called by Christian, Muslim or traditional African names, trying to decide whether they are Americans, Afro-Americans, African-Americans, Bilalians, Kemites, Sudanese, or North American Africans.

With this term I've tried to emphasize our cultural roots by making Africa the noun rather than the adjective. Also, I wanted to identify us geo-politically: we are Africans on the continent of North America, as opposed to Africans in Central and South America, the Caribbean, Europe, Asia or the Motherland. As such, we are unique and have created an original African Culture in North America, imitated throughout the world, and yet, as Franz Fanon noted, the colonized man is disoriented, doesn't know where he's at, the Whispers said we were lost and turned out on the way to grandmother's house. But even in our wretchedness, the whole world wants to talk like us, dance like us, sing like us, dress like us: we have the highest standard of living of any Africans in the world and are thus in the position of leadership even though we lack any degree of National sovereignty, are yet a defacto Nation, albeit captive and colonized, exploited 24/7 by any pimp fearless enough to enter the ghetto, and there are many from around the world, including Asians, Arabs, Jews, Africans, West Indians, and Latins......"



From a writer's perspective, a poet, much of endgame in the psycholinguistic crisis is censorship, pure and simple, a violation of First Amendment rights and human rights. I have a right to say what I want to say the way I want to say it. This is an old tired discussion we encountered fifty years ago in the Black Arts/Black Culture revolution of the 60s: shall we define ourselves or the shall the masters and their pitiful bourgeoisie imps impose their definitions, their hypocritical, perverted moral standards. If a bitch is bitch call her a bitch. If yo mama is a bitch call her a bitch. If your wife is a bitch call it, your daughters call it. The worse bitch in the world is the bitch in denial. And as I've said, men are known to be bitches too!

There was a time when we were kings and queens, in Africa and during the 60s in America, but this was B.C., before crack. With the coming of crack, we reduced ourselves beyond slavery. We returned to the auction block of the crack house, and indeed, in fact, became bitches and hoes. With crack, the sexual etiquette of North American Africans has been forever altered and whether we will again reach the level of kings and queens depends more on the success of our total liberation than our correct grammatical structure, after all, we see Asians, Arabs, Latins, come to America and get rich speaking no English, yet we are being deluded by our leaders into believing we must speak the Kings English in order to be successful. If nothing else, the rappers have shown us they can make millions for themselves and billions for the white man utilizing three words: bitch, hoe and motherfucker. The tragic reality is that the black bourgeoisie failed to teach inner city youth proper English or anything proper for that matter, so the upper and middle classes must reap the reward of neglect, in the form of their children enraptured by rap and thus incomprehensible to the middle-class parents--as my daughter has said, You might not like rap, but if you want to understand me, you better try to understand rap. To paraphrase Eryka Badu, the psycholinguistic crisis goes on and on......on and on....."


Finally, we are calling for a BAM/Hip hop  tour of the 27 cities ancestor Amiri Baraka spoke about so often. We must hurry to put this BAM/Hip Hop tour together since so many BAM pioneers are making their transitions. This should be in the BAM tradition of a nationwide project that will be consciousness raising, educational, and spiritually healing, a tour that will indeed teach that Black is Beautiful, Powerful and Global! Thank you.

--Marvin X

2/10/14

Umar Bin Hassan of the Last Poets at Eastside Cultural Center, Thursday, March 6, 2014



Thursday, March 6, 2014
UMAR BIN HASSAN  (of The Last Poets)
At EastSide Cultural Center
2277 International Blvd
Oakland, CA  94601


4-6pm – Workshop on the roots of hip-hop
(with KEV and Don Juan from ESAA Beats Flows)
Youth 14-25 are invited.

8-10pm – Poetry reading at Holla Back
DONATIONS REQUESTED

Umar Bin Hassan from the legendary Last Poets will be at EastSide Cultural Center to conduct a poetry/hip hop workshop and also to be featured at EastSide’s weekly open mic poetry reading Holla Back.

In the early 70’s, Umar Bin Hassan was a member of the street-poet godfathers of rap, the Last Poets, a group of Black poets spreading a militant political message akin to that of the Black Panthers and Malcolm X.  He joined the group in 1969 after seeing them perform in his native Ohio.  With Hassan, the Poets released The Last Poets, This is Madness, and The Last Poets at Last.  In mid-1993, he released his first solo album, Bebop or Be Dead, Hassan combined rap, house, and jazz elements on the record. Umar recently recorded with Common on his latest hit, On the Corner.

Monday, March 3, 2014

Marvin X proposes a Black Arts Movement 27 City National Tour in honor of Amiri Baraka

The Black Arts Movement Poet's Choir

First row: Eugene Redman, Marshall Trammell, Tarika Lewis, Aries Jordan, Zena Allen, Avotcha
Back row: Marvin X, Kalamu Chache', Juan Felipe Herrera, Tacuma King, Lakiba Pittman, Askia Toure, Genny Lim, Umar Bin Hassan, Ayodele Nzinga

During a session of the Black Arts Movement Conference this past weekend at University of California, Merced, Marvin X proposed a 27 city tour in memory of Amiri Baraka, who often spoke about the 27 cities in America with large North American African populations. At $100, 000 per city, the estimated cost would be $2.7 million. After watching the BAM poets perform with musicians, a young rapper in Merced told Marvin X  the concert tickets should be in the $400.00 range. The young man was simply overwhelmed with the beauty and truth of the BAM poets and musicians.

Marvin X is known for drafting people into his projects, so although Kim McMillan, chief producer of the UC Merced BAM conf, says she will never do another event like this, Marvin X says Kim must continue to stand tall on the shoulders of the ancestors and be a critical factor in the success of the national BAM tour. It was the consensus of the BAM poets and musicians that this national tour should happen. Although we are elders and in various states of health, we yet have enough energy to make this project a reality, says Marvin X. We will begin organizing the tour ASAP. Community support will make this project a success, so send us your ideas and generous donations. 

This is an educational and consciousness  raising affair in the tradition of the Black Arts Movement, a spiritual and healing myth/ritual. If you support this project, please contact me at 510-200-4164; email jmarvinx@yahoo.com. To keep informed of our progress, stay tuned to www.blackbirdpressnews.blogspot.com. 




poet Lakiba Pittman

 Poet Kalamu Chache'


 Poet/musician Avotcha

 Poet Juan Felipe Herrera


 BAM godfather Askia Toure


 Avotcha, Marvin X and Askia Toure

 MC Marvin X reading

 Poet Aries Jordan, Black Arts Movement Baby 2.0

 Eugene Redman of East St. Louis, MO

 Ishmael Reed gave the Sunday Keynote Address

 Poet Genny Lim with drummer Marshall Trammell

 Avotcha
 Zena Allen on the Kora. She accompanied Marvin X with his Again the Kora poems. 

 Tarika Lewis, living legend artist/activist.

 Earl Davis was a member of Marvin X's Black Arts West Theatre, Fillmore District, San Francisco, 1966. He also performed with Sun Ra's Arkestra.

Friday, February 28, 2014

Marvin X rocks University of California, Black Arts Movement Conference

Marvin X told the audience at the BAM reception to lighten up on conference planner Kim McMillan.  He first declared BAM is a revolutionary movement and must be seen in this light, not as some art for art sake or Negro Renaissance that patronized white people. He thanked UC Merced for having the nerve to bring a group of uppity Blacks to the little country town of Merced. This was a bold move on their part and we congratulate them but they put too much pressure on Kim. He told how other sisters were destroyed by the hostile environment of the UC system, including, e.g., UC professors VeVe Clark, Barbara Christian, June Jordan and Sherley Ann Williams, all deceased. So don't mess with Kim, he told the mostly white audience. Don't make me bring the BAM army back to UC Merced.
While in Harlem for a reception in his honor, Marvin X told the folks that UC was stressing out Kim. We got Kim on the phone and a brother told her to stand tall because she was standing on the shoulders of the ancestors. The BAM conference begins at 9am on Saturday and runs through Sunday afternoon.

UC Professor/author Sherley Ann Williams, deceased

 UC Professor VeVe Clark, deceased

UC Professor Barbara Christian, deceased

UC Professor/BAM poet June Jordan, deceased



 UC Merced graduate student and BAM project director, Kim McMillan


Wednesday, February 26, 2014

The Holloway Series in Poetry - Amiri Baraka joined by Marvin X


Black Bird Press News & Review: Safi interviews Marvin X onthe upcoming Black Arts Movement Conference, KPOO radio

Black Bird Press News & Review: Safi interviews Marvin X onthe upcoming Black Arts Movement Conference, KPOO radio

Black Bird Press News & Review: Davey D interviews Marvin X on the Black Arts Movement, Tuesday, February 25, 8am, KPFA, Berkeley, 94.1FM, www.kpfa.org

Black Bird Press News & Review: Davey D interviews Marvin X on the Black Arts Movement, Tuesday, February 25, 8am, KPFA, Berkeley, 94.1FM, www.kpfa.org

Black Bird Press News & Review: Voices of the Black Arts Movement Gala, Friday, Feb 28, 2014, University of California, Merced

Black Bird Press News & Review: Voices of the Black Arts Movement Gala, Friday, Feb 28, 2014, University of California, Merced

Black Bird Press News & Review: Black Arts Movement Conference Program Highlights, UC Merced, Feb 28 thru March 2, 2014

Black Bird Press News & Review: Black Arts Movement Conference Program Highlights, UC Merced, Feb 28 thru March 2, 2014

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Jackson, Mississippi Mayor Chokwe Lumumba makes transition to ancestors

Jackson Mayor Chokwe Lumumba has died.

 

 
He was admitted to St. Dominic Hospital Tuesday morning with chest pains. 
Hinds County Coroner Sharon Grisham Stewart says he was pronounced dead around 4:55 p.m. 
Lumumba won the Mayor's office in June 4, 2013, pulling 86% of the vote and defeating independent candidates Francis P. Smith, Jr. , Richard C. Williams and Cornelius Griggs.
Mayor Lumumba was born August 2, 1947 in Detroit, Michigan. He is the second of eight children born to Lucien and Priscilla Francis Taliaferro.
Mayor Lumumba earned his Bachelor's degree in Political Science from Kalamazoo College in Kalamazoo, Michigan. 

He later finished first in his law school freshman class before graduating cum laude from Wayne State University Law School.

Prior to his election as Mayor, Mr. Lumumba served as Jackson City Councilman for Ward 2. 
Mississippi Governor Phil Bryant released this statement: 

"Deborah and I are shocked and saddened by the news of Mayor Lumumba's passing and are praying for his loved ones. Just a short time ago, I had the opportunity to join the mayor in a church pew as we welcomed a new development to the city. His enthusiasm for Jackson will be deeply missed."
Visit The Harambee Radio & Television Network at: http://harambeeradio.ning.com/?

Davey D interviews Marvin X on the Black Arts Movement, Tuesday, February 25, 8am, KPFA, Berkeley, 94.1FM, www.kpfa.org

Marvin X interviewed in Philadelphia at the Black Power Babies Conference produced by his daughter, Muhammida El Muhajir. This morning, Pacifica radio's Davey D will talk with the poet on the upcoming Black Arts Movement Conference at the University of California, Merced and his friendship with ancestor poet Amiri Baraka.

Monday, February 24, 2014

Herman Fergusn: 49 years ago at the Audubon Ballroom when Malcolm X was assassinated


Herman Ferguson: 49 years ago at the Audubon Ballroom

Amsterdam News story   

Herman Ferguson Nosayaba Odesanya Photo
In an exclusive AmNews interview, Baba Herman Ferguson, an original member of the Organization of Afro-American Unity (OAAU), detailed witnessing the Feb. 21, 1965, assassination of Malcolm X at the Audubon Ballroom.
“A number of people in the Nation of Islam followed Malcolm into the OAAU. There was a lot of strain the last part of Malcolm’s life,” reflected the 93-years-young activist. “It was a dangerous situation on both sides. There were other forces at work stirring up turmoil—the police, FBI, CIA—all trying to remove Malcolm from the scene. It was difficult to know who to trust.

“Malcolm knew that Thomas Johnson and Norman Butler were FOI [Fruit of Islam, the security force of the Nation of Islam] enforcers. He told us, ‘These are dangerous brothers … if either of them comes to our affairs, they are not to be admitted in!’ He was specific about them. At Malcolm’s assassination, there were brothers who would’ve recognized them. I did not recognize them as the men that I saw as part of the assassination team.

“Malcolm ordered that nobody bring guns to OAAU meetings and nobody be searched … shortly after that, Malcolm was assassinated. The police had to have told the assassins: ‘We can guarantee to get you out of there … nothing will happen to you.’ [It was] only because Rueben Francis [Malcolm’s bodyguard] disobeyed Malcolm and brought his pistol that the getaway was thwarted.
“During the assassination, the first thing that happened was … a commotion broke out in the crowd, a chair was heard thrown to the floor, the scuffling of feet … Right across from where I was sitting, these two fellas, one of them said … ‘Get your hand outta my pocket, n—r!’ … The other guy was backing off from him.
“Malcolm was standing behind the rostrum, having greeted the audience: ‘As-salaam-alaikum brothers and sisters!’ Malcolm stepped forward, totally exposed, raised his hand and said, ‘Cool it!’ Then there was a boom … a shotgun rang out, and Malcolm straightened up. Then other shots rang out, a whole fusillade … his hand still up in the air. Finally, he toppled over backward; the back of his head hit the floor with a thud.

“Then the gunfire stopped; it got quiet. Before that, you could hear people screaming, shouting and scrambling to take cover … I was still watching.

“Three men stood right across from me. You could see a gun’s barrel, possibly a shotgun one was carrying under his coat … the other two stood quietly. Then suddenly, as if someone had signaled to them, they ran toward the back of the ballroom.

“Gunfire broke out again. I learned later that that was Rueben trying to stop these guys … shooting one in the leg [Thomas Hagan]. That guy reached the head of the stairs, bumped into someone, falling down the stairs. Outside, the crowd grabbed him … the wound in his leg prevented him from getting away … they were pulling him apart. The police fired a shot [and] the crowd fell back. The police put him in a squad car and drove away.

“I saw the second person that Rueben shot … Within seconds, another police car came from around the corner, turned onto 166th Street, passed the Audubon, part of it still on Broadway. There had been no police presence during all this time.

“Within seconds, this policeman came back, supporting someone who was obviously in great pain, holding his midsection. The policeman brought him to the car, opened the rear door, put him in, slammed the door, got in the front seat [and] told the driver; ‘Get out of here!’ They drove past the Audubon, down the hill, out of sight. I never found out who that guy was. The police were in a hurry to get him out of there.

Sunday, February 23, 2014

Professor Anthony Monteiro re-ignites protests within African American Studies

Ousted professor re-ignites protests within department

Anthony Monteiro, protesting his contract not being renewed, involves union, community.
The employment of one instructor is again the subject of controversy within the African American studies department after Anthony Monteiro, a non-tenured professor in the department, issued a letter of grievance against Dean of the College of Liberal Arts Teresa Soufas for choosing not to renew his contract. 
Monteiro delivered a statement to the press at the 1199C Hospital Worker’s Union on Feb. 12, calling on President Theobald to reverse Soufas’ decision and renew his annual contract. Monteiro alleged that the decision not to renew his contract was an act of revenge – a direct response from Soufas to his outspokenness during heated discussions last year between the dean and department faculty and students over the filling of the department chairmanship.

Soufas said Monteiro’s allegations had “no truth whatsoever,” adding that the decision not to renew Monteiro’s contract was made by Department Chairman Molefi Asante based on the changing structure of the department.

“The African American studies department right now is rethinking and making new plans for the curriculum,” Soufas said.

Asante declined to comment, citing ongoing discussions between the groups.

Monteiro was a supporter of Kariamu Welsh, a tenured member of the dance department at the Boyer College of Music and Dance. Welsh’s nomination for chair of the African American studies department by the department’s faculty was rejected by Soufas in Spring 2012 on the grounds that she was not a member of the department. 

More than a year of controversy followed when, instead of appointing Welsh, Soufas appointed then-Vice Dean Jayne Drake, a white woman, to a one-year interim term. Students of the department, community activists and faculty members then rallied behind Asante, who chaired the department from 1984 to 1997, advocating that he should return to head the program.

After several public protests and a formal nomination by the department faculty in April 2013, Soufas confirmed Asante as department chair. Monteiro said he and other members of the department have been continually harassed in a racist manner by Soufas.

“It is her getting back at me for my standing up to her bullying, pointing fingers at black men,” Monteiro said in a statement.

Soufas said Monteiro has not approached her to discuss the matter, but “would be happy to talk with him.” Non-tenured and non-tenured-track faculty members are hired by the university and their respective departments on a contract basis that must be renewed every year.

Senior political science major and African American studies minor Sabrina Sample, a former student of Monteiro’s who took his Black Intellectual History in the 20th Century course, said she thinks it would be “a really big mistake” for the university to let go of Monteiro.

“For the African American studies department [especially], I know a lot of students come to Temple in particular to hear Monteiro lecture,” Sample said.

Senior media studies and production major Ryan Hallas, another former student of Monteiro’s, said that while he generally found Monteiro’s Race in America class enjoyable, he found the lectures unorganized and didn’t leave the class with “any new knowledge.”

“I also [believe] that he was trying to come off as a pretentious person by the way he would pronounce his words,” Hallas said. “I believe he even made some words up.”

Monteiro has made several demands along with his reinstatement, including the end of the alleged harassment and a formal apology from Dean Soufas.

John Moritz and Erin Edinger-Turoff can be reached at news@temple-news.com

Marvin X performs at the BAM Conferece, UC Merced, with Tarika Lewis, violin, Earl Davis, trumpet, Tacuma King, percussion

 


 
 Marvin X and violinist Tarika Lewis
 


 
 
 Earl Davis, trumpet master, performed in Marvin X's Black Arts West Theatre, San Francisco, 1966

Tacuma King, percussionist

♫ Time after time / Miles Davis Group



I wanna be like Miles Davis
I wanna tell a motherfucka to kiss my black ass
like Baraka in the Dutchman, kiss my black unruly ass
but like Miles I want to say, Padna, git out of my face
and take that silly bitch witcha!--MARVIN X

Saturday, February 22, 2014

Miles Davis Kind Of Blue Full Album


Lecture by His Holiness the Dalai Lama

Watch the USTREAM link Sunday February 23rd 9:15-11am

http://www.ustream.tv/channel/bcm-presents-the-dalai-lama-at-the-
berkeley-community-theatre




 
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Marvin X returns home to West Fresno



 Marvin X was removed from teaching Black Studies at Fresno State University, 1969, because he refused to fight in Vietnam. He eventually served time in Terminal Island Federal Prison.
 


 

 
West Fresno residents left the Hinton Community Center inspired and motivated after hearing Marvin X reading and in conversation with Fresno City College professor emeritus Kehindi Solwazi. Marvin X was raised in West Fresno and reunited with many of his childhood friends at the event sponsored by the local NAACP, headed by his longtime friend Pamela Young-King, president. The event opened with prayers by a Christian minister and the local Imam who recited in Arabic but explained in English. Many had never head the Muslim prayer explained and they appreciated the imam's remarks. A young African dance troop performed and the audience joined. A young lady sang the Black national anthem, Lift Every Voice and Sing.

Marvin X was introduced by Professor Solwazi who praised the poet's classic Black History is World History and his book How to Recover from the Addiction to White Supremacy. "Marvin's poem is one of the best ever written on Black History. And his How to Recover from the Addiction to White Supremacy is awesome! I read it on the plane to Mississippi and was blown away."

Marvin gave out copies of Black History is World History and asked the audience to read along with him. He also asked them to repeat the lines when he read his pantheistic What If, a poem that suggests that the Divine force is in all things, which is consistent with African religion or spirituality.
For the older residents of West Fresno, he recited a poem about the Hole in the Wall, a hang out at Plumas and Whitesbridge.

Professor Solwazi and Marvin X engaged in dialogue on such issues as the low intensity war against  North American Africans, youth behavior, male/female relations. "As per youth, if you tell them to pull their pants up, 99% will do so, only 1% will respond in the negative. We cannot allow children to terrorize adults in our community. We must be brave enough to stand up to them and guide those who have lost their way."

On male/female relations, he said, "My mother told me I would never have good luck as long as I abused women, especially the mothers of my children. I think I have changed my behavior and my luck has changed. Most of the persons who helped me on my recent visit to the east coast were women. Women are in charge of a lot of things these days so we men better be nice to them so we can receive our blessings."

On Monday, Feb 24, 11am, X will read at Fresno City College and dialogue with Professor Solwazi.
He will participate in the Black Arts Movement Conference at University of California, Merced, Friday, Feb 28 thru March 2. You are invited! Call 510-200-4164 for more information. On Monday, Marvin X will be interviewed on Berkeley's Pacifica station, KPFA, 8am, by Davey D, on his role in the Black Arts Movement and his 47 year friendship with poet Amiri Baraka.


 
 

Mrs. Solwazi, 72 year old athlete, brings more medals home to Fresno CA

72-Year-Old Local Athlete Brings More Medals Home to Fresno

Kemisole Solwazi Looks Back at Unexpected Start in U.S. Olympics

By Kyra Jenkins
The California Advocate —
Kemisole Solwazi Above, Kemisole Solwazi is shown with Olympic medals. As a 54-year-old exercise amateur in training, Kemisole Solwazi wasn't looking to be anything more than 'healthy' when a group of Olympic athletes approached her at the YMCA. They asked if she would be interested in training to be a sprint runner, something Solwazi thought was a joke, but she accepted their offer reasoning she had nothing to lose because at least she would get fit. Now over 16 years later with 10 world medals and too many U.S. medals to count, it seems the joke was on her. (Photo by California Advocate)
 
As a 54-year-old exercise amateur in training, Kemisole Solwazi wasn't looking to be anything more than 'healthy' when a group of Olympic athletes approached her at the YMCA.
They asked if she would be interested in training to be a sprint runner, something Solwazi thought was a joke, but she accepted their offer reasoning she had nothing to lose because at least she would get fit. Now over 16 years later with 10 world medals and too many U.S. medals to count, it seems the joke was on her.
"I knew nothing about distance, how to come out of the blocks [block training], I knew nothing.
I was what my coach considered to be 'raw talent on a junior high school level.' He decided to enroll me at city college, so the coach there could train me. I earnestly started working out…they said she's fast enough she can probably go to the master's competition."
Solwazi said after her Coach Randy Huntington saw she was competition, he put her on a track and distance running team called Kaiser Olympic. She first competed in the Central Valley Conference against women distance athletes and came in 10th out of over 200 runners back in 1996. "It was natural; I'm what they call a 'genetic athlete.'"
"My friend said genetic athletes are built by nature to do what they are capable of doing, it might be tennis, or running but by genes they are given an ability; mine was at a late stage," said Solwazi.
Within months, she competed at the U.S. national competition in New York where 82 countries were represented and she received gold medals in her first major competition.
Once she began to seriously train and compete against professional athletes who were in the running longer than she was, her family couldn't help but question her decision.
"I didn't think I was going to be a professional runner…some thought I was having a mid-life crisis."
Now 72-year-old Solwazi said she made the decision for her well-being and let the awards speak for themselves. She believes all things are designed to move and when you stop moving you're like a car sitting on blocks and you rust.
"I always tell people, it's not [the] medal or any kind of accolades, it's about my health. If it becomes unhealthy for me I will stop. If I don't do this I will be like my siblings with diabetes…the medals just come along with it. It's not ego or anything like that, it's a side line," said Solwazi.
Solwazi recently returned from Indiana where she competed in the U.S. Track & Field national competition. She returned in March with one gold medal and five other silver medals. She received silver medals for the 60 meter race, 2 mile race, one mile race, 200 meter race and 800 meter race. But the gold medal she proudly carried home was from the 400 meter race.
"The best race I had was the 400 meter because it was first and that's when I almost broke the record."
The competition presented a new challenge because she had never run indoors before; her coach told her in the past it was too steep.
"It did take an adjustment because of the curves and it slowed me down a bit but I came in second and that was OK. My specialty is 200 and 400 but this coach stretched me out. It was the first time I ran indoors ever. I ran from a 60 meter to 2 mile. I ran 60 meters in 10 seconds, but I can run it faster."
She was so excited during the competition that she received a yellow flag for starting too quickly. Solwazi said her feet just carried her to the finish line before she could realize it. "I calmed down and popped out and before I knew it I was at the finish line. The cameramen were right up on me, I had to jump to miss them."
She came in second place in the one-mile race against competitors in her age group.
Solwazi said she feels nervous before competing but she doesn't allow it to impact her performance.
"I feel a little nervous but I have a tendency to calm down right at the start, it's a focus. It's not the nerves that people talk about. It's more of a determination, kind of a fire, a strength..and I feel like I do whatever I have to do."
To Solwazi, competition does not have a face, name or place in the race; the only competition she faces is time because that's what decides the win. She said pure determination pushes her forward.
"No one else is important, there's just me and the clock. I have been trained to run 200 [meters] in 33 seconds, and make it in 32 seconds. Let me see if I can beat that clock. I don't see anyone."
The retired teacher from the west Fresno School District spends her time gardening and training when not not competing.
When back home her regimen consists of working out 5 days a week.
"I work out five times a week in distance running and track, and then two days at the gym. I try and give myself one or two days to rest in between."
Solwazi trains all over Fresno at a site called Killer Hill in Woodward Park.
"Once you run it you know what I'm talking about. You can start at the bottom of the hill and go straight up, even the high school goes there for training. It's called 'Killer Hill' because it almost kills you when you get up there."
Solwazi said she has been a runner all her life but was searching for an opportunity to live out her potential because she recognized it at a young age.
"There were tracks at Black high schools in Saint Louis where I grew up, but when I got to a white school they were hesitant about women running, so there wasn't a track team."
But nothing could keep her from competing in street races and also racing against her dog.
"I would beat the guys. Barry Minson never forgave me, he thought he was fast. He stayed mad at me for a long time."
Although Solwazi started her athletic career later in life she doesn't look back or wish she became an Olympic runner any sooner than the age of 54.
"I don't have any regrets, it [your dreams] may not be when you want it but it's right on time…I've learned your only as strong as your spirit and mind. Your body you can work with but what you are in your spirit and mind, nothing surpasses that," said Solwazi.
Solwazi is now looking forward to her upcoming competition in August