Monday, April 9, 2018

Radical Islam spread at request of the West--says Saudi Crown Prince


Spread of Wahhabism was done at request of West during Cold War – Saudi crown prince


The Saudi-funded spread of Wahhabism began as a result of Western countries asking Riyadh to help counter the Soviet Union during the Cold War, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman told the Washington Post.
Speaking to the paper, bin Salman said that Saudi Arabia's Western allies urged the country to invest in mosques and madrassas overseas during the Cold War, in an effort to prevent encroachment in Muslim countries by the Soviet Union.
He added that successive Saudi governments had lost track of that effort, saying "we have to get it all back." Bin Salman also said that funding now comes mostly from Saudi-based "foundations," rather than from the government.
The crown prince’s 75-minute interview with the Washington Post took place on March 22. Another topic of discussion included a previous claim by US media that bin Salman had said that he had White House senior adviser Jared Kushner "in his pocket."
Bin Salman denied reports that when he and Kushner – who is also Donald Trump's son-in-law – met in Riyadh in October, he had sought or received a greenlight from Kushner for the massive crackdown on alleged corruption which led to widespread arrests in the kingdom shortly afterwards. According to bin Salman, the arrests were a domestic issue and had been in the works for years.
He said it would be "really insane" for him to trade classified information with Kushner, or to try to use him to advance Saudi interests within the Trump administration. He stated that their relationship was within a normal governmental context, but did acknowledge that he and Kushner "work together as friends, more than partners."He stated that he also had good relationships with Vice President Mike Pence and others within the White House.
The crown prince also spoke about the war in Yemen, where a Saudi-led coalition continues to launch a bombing campaign against Houthi rebels in an attempt to reinstate ousted Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi as president. The conflict has killed thousands, displaced many more, driven the country to the brink of famine, and led to a major cholera outbreak.
Although the coalition has been accused of a large number of civilian deaths and disregard for civilian lives - an accusation which Riyadh denies - the crown prince said his country has not passed up "any opportunity" to improve the humanitarian situation in the country. “There are not good options and bad options. The options are between bad and worse,” he said.
The interview with the crown prince was initially held off the record. However, the Saudi embassy later agreed to led the Washington Post publish specific portions of the meeting.

Paul Robeson Remembered by Norman Otis Richmond, aka Jalali


Paul Robeson, Artistic Freedom Fighter


Robeson's remembered with record and Row R

NORMAN (OTIS) RICHMOND aka Jalali
“Robeson may have joined the ancestors but his example, his intelligence, his political acumen remains as a lodestar we would all do well to study--and exemplify”. Gerald Horne

One of Dr. Gerald Horne’s latest volume is Paul Robeson: The Artist as Revolutionary. I recently walked into the Parkdale Library in Toronto and saw a huge poster celebrating the great Robeson.  
Robeson, actor, athlete, political activist and one of the greatest singers of all time, would have been 120 years old today. Thousands of words have been written about Robeson's interpretation of Jerome Kern's song, Old Man River, but little has been mentioned about his participation in a unique musical collaboration.

In 1941, Robeson joined forces with Count Basie, Richard Wright, Jimmy Rushing and John Hammond to record a song about the legendary Brown Bomber - Joe Louis. The lyrics of the song, King Joe, were written by Wright, the African-American novelist who wrote a book called Black Power in 1954. Hammond, who produced Bessie Smith and Bob Dylan, directed the session. Count Basie and his orchestra provided the music, and Robeson, who was singing the blues for the first time in his life, had blues shouter Jimmy Rushing stand by his side to beat time. Mr. Five by Five as Rushing was known was there to keep Robeson’s on the ONE.

Basie, who is was holding court at the Imperial Room in Toronto's Royal York Hotel, explained how he came to work with Robeson. "We were in a club in New York City. I was talking to John Hammond, and Paul (Robeson) was in the same club dancing. I told John, 'You know, I'd like to do a record with Paul.' John said, 'Why don't you ask him?' I said, 'Oh no, you ask him.' John asked him and Paul said, 'Gee whiz, I'd like nothing better.' We did it and, boy, it was a pleasure for me to do the record with him. For me, it's an item."

Robeson's whole life was an item. It has been argued that Robeson, who died in Philadelphia in 1976 at the age of 77, might have been elected president of the United States if he hadn't been of African ancestry and if he had named the United States, not the Soviet Union, as the centre of world freedom.

It may sound far-fetched, but Robeson was qualified for the job at the White House. Besides possessing one of the world's best bass voices and great athletic skill, Robeson was also a talented lawyer and debater. He had the looks of Harry Belafonte and the charisma of the Kennedy brothers.
For 30 years - from the First World War until after the Second World War - Robeson's extraordinary achievements kept him in the spotlight. First, he won national fame as a football superstar - the fabulous "Robeson of Rutgers," an all-time All-American. Robeson was the third black to enroll at Rutgers University.

On graduation, he entered Columbia University Law School, paying his expenses by playing professional football. Realizing there was little future in those days for a black lawyer, he made the stage and concert singing his career. He gained international renown as a concert singer and actor in starring roles on stage and screen.

But the limelight was suddenly switched off. Robeson shocked the American establishment with his advocacy of the rights of African- Americans and his praise for the Soviet Union. His constant involvement in human rights causes and left-wing movements led to his being branded a Communist. His passport was revoked by the U.S. State Department in 1950; he didn't get it back until 1958. But the boycott of Robeson by the American establishment went further: all doors to stage, screen, concert hall, radio, TV, and recording studios were locked to him. Robeson saw his income plummet from $100,000 in 1947 to approximately $6,000 by 1952. 

Despite the problems at home, Robeson's star continued to shine internationally. African-American scholar W. E. B. DuBois, himself a victim of the anti-Communist witch hunt, said in a speech to a Harlem audience at the time: "Paul Robeson is without doubt today, as a person, the best known American on earth, to the largest number of human beings. His voice is known in Europe, Asia and Africa, in the West Indies and South America and in the islands of the seas. Children on the streets of Peking and Moscow, Calcutta and Jakarta greet him and send him their love. Only in his native land is he without honor and rights."

Robeson was also known and loved in Canada. His first Toronto appearance was in November, 1929. In 1942, a Toronto critic described Robeson as "the world's greatest basso since Chaliapin." On Sept. 25, 1944, he opened in Othello at the Royal Alexandra Theatre with Uta Hagen playing Desdemona and Jose Ferrer as Iago. Later appearances by Robeson in Toronto were often accompanied by controversy. In a 1946 Massey Hall appearance, he spent half his time speaking about the plight of black people and the other half singing. That July, he joined striking Chrysler workers on the picket line in Windsor. He urged them to persist until their demands were met and soothed the strikers with his bass voice. But this was not out of character for Robeson. "The hand of brotherhood - yes, I found that hand in Canada" - Robeson wrote that tribute to Canadians in the mid-fifties.

Robeson found brotherhood in Canada even after his death. A group of Torontonians and others endowed a whole row of 60 Roy Thomson Hall seats in his memory. Black stars Harry Belafonte, Lena Horne, James Earl Jones and British politician Anthony Benn were among the project's sponsors.

The campaign to raise $60,000 to contribute all the Row R seats in Robeson's name was spearheaded by social worker Leslie Webber, a long-time fan. Toronto photographer Sylvia Schwartz, psychiatrist Granville da Costa, nurse Elizabeth Plummer and the late Hazel Forbes, a one-time publicity director for the O'Keefe Centre, also served on the Row R Committee.

The project was so successful that, according to Marilyn Michener of Roy Thomson Hall, "we had to go into Row P as well." Black Theatre Canada and Third World Books and Crafts were among the organizations and people who put up $1,000 for a seat. The late Leonard Johnston, co-owner of the Third World bookstore, explained why his seat inscription read Third World and not his family name. "Paul Robeson spoke for the oppressed people of the world, most of whom are in the Third World. I think it's important that they honor him and not me as an individual."

Bio

Norman (OtisRichmond, aka Jalali, produces Diasporic Music a radio show for https://blackpower96.org/   and writes a column, Diasporic Music for the Burning Spear Newspaper monthly.

Jalali was born on March 6th the same day as Ghana’s independence.  He grew up in Los Angeles. He left Los Angles after refusing to fight in Vietnam because he felt that, like the Vietnamese, Africans in the United States were colonial subjects.

After leaving Los Angeles in the 1960s Richmond moved to Toronto, where he co-founded the Afro American Progressive Association, one of the first Black Power organizations in that part of the world. Before moving to Toronto permanently, Richmond worked with the Detroit-based League of Revolutionary Black Workers. He was the youngest member of the central staff. When the League split he joined the African People’s Party.


In 1992, Richmond received the Toronto Arts Award. In front of an audience that included the mayor of Toronto, Richmond dedicated his award to Mumia Abu-Jamal, Assata Shakur, Geronimo Pratt, the African National Congress of South Africa, and Fidel Castro and the people of Cuba.

In 1984 he co-founded the Toronto Chapter of the Black Music Association with Milton Blake. Richmond began his career in journalism at the African Canadian weekly Contrast. He went on to be published in the Toronto Star, the  Toronto Globe & Mail, the  National Post, the Jackson Advocate,  Share, the Islander, the Black American, Pan African News Wire, and Black Agenda Report. San Francisco Bay View.

Internationally he has written for the United Nations, the Jamaican Gleaner, the Nation (Barbados) the Nation (Sri Lanka, and Pambazuka News. Currently, he produces Diasporic Music a radio show for Uhuru Radio and writes a column, Diasporic Music for the Burning Spear Newspaper.

Monday, April 2, 2018

Update: Marvin X agrees to write the Untold Story of the Black student revolution at San Francisco State University


Nefertiti Jackmon will co-author this project with her father, Marvin X. Nefertiti is head of Six Square, the Black Cultural District, Austin, Texas.

She holds a B.A., English, Fresno State University, M.A., Africana Studies, New York University, Albany. Nefertiti has worked on other projects with her father, including the Kings and Queens of Black Consciousness, SFSU, 2001; the San Francisco Black Radical Book Fair, 2004, and the 50th Anniversary Celebration of the Black Arts Movement, Laney College, Oakland, 2015.



On Sunday, April 8, 2018

Great day in the morning, knowing Nefertiti, whose name  is legend -- and an apple doesn’t fall too far from the tree. Even the god that created the heaven and the earth and all therein and decided to make him a man, soon realized he needed a woman as his helpmate, i.e., to get things done because no matter how much he tilled the fields, a man couldn’t get much of anything done just on his own.

Thank you,

Nathan Hare, Ph.D.,
#PSY5202
Phone: 415-474-1707
Fax: 415-589-7983

Dr hare, one day i hope to achieve your level of poetics. For now, i am content to stand in your shadow,

As per Nefertiti, she was conceived while her parents  were exiled in Mexico City, in flight from USA imperialism and opposition to Vietnam war. She was born a few days after i was released from Terminal Island Federal Prison 1970.




Dr. Nathan Hare, first Chair of Black Studies on a major college 
campus at San Francisco State College/University,
Sociologist and Clinical Psychologist.  Dr. Nathan Hare 
and his student/associate Marvin X. Marvin X was part of
the initial visionary students at SFSU. He was a TA in the
English/Creative Writing Department, later taught in Black Studies
and Radio/TV Writing in the Broadcasting Department.

Marvin X and Actor/activist Danny Glover were fellow students at SFSU. Danny also performed at
Marvin X's Black Arts West Theatre, Fillmore District, San Francisco, 1966.

After a lunch meeting with San Francisco State University former student leaders in the struggle for human rights that led to the longest student strike in American academic history, 1968, Marvin X agreed to write the long awaited untold story. Former student leaders Bernard Stringer, the first to graduate with a degree in Black Studies and Black Students/Third World Strike leader, Benny Stewart, said Marvin was chosen not only for his writing ability but because he is an alumni of San Francisco State College/University, 1964-66, 1972-74, B.A., M.A. English/Creative Writer. As a student, he was part of the transition of the Negro Students Association into the Black Students Union that eventually led to the Black and Third World Strike for the establishment of Black and Ethnic Studies, the first on the campus of a major American university.

The Untold Story is a long awaited project of the SFSU/BSU leaders and strikers. Part of the delay has been due to an attempt to keep the mission of Black Students hidden after the Tenured Negroes or Neo-colonial elite took power in conspiracy with their academic masters, resulting in the critical concept of Black Studies connected with the Black Community being eliminated. At San Francisco State University the radical faculty was removed, most importantly,  the first Chair of Black and Ethnic Studies, Dr. Nathan Hare who possessed a PhD in Sociology and today a PhD in Clinical Psychology, acquired after he was white-listed from American academia because of his radical Black consciousness.

Marvin X says the Untold Story is an awesome task because while the focus will be on the student struggle at San Francisco State University, it cannot be disconnected from the National Black Liberation Movement, the Black Arts Movement, the Black Panther Party and other cultural formations such as the US organization, which grew out of the Oakland African American Association founded by Attorneys Donald Warden, Donald Hopkins, activist Paul Cobb, entrepreneur Ed Howard, et al.

Much of the research has been done by Bernard Stringer, strike leader, body guard of Dr. Nathan Hare, and, again, the first student to receive a degree in Black Studies at SFSU. Bernard has many archival materials from the SFSU Black student struggle. Marvin X also has the archives of Dr. Nathan Hare who was the focus of the strike for Black and Ethnic Studies that caused the SFPD to violently attempt to crush the strike, at the invitation of SFSU President S.I. Hayakawa, a Semanticist described by Muslim linguist Aaron Ali as, "An oriental with an occidental mind!"

Sunday, April 1, 2018

Love Song of Dr. Nathan Hare to his Wife Dr. Julia Hare; Marvin X Notes on Dr. Hare's 85th B day






Marvin X Poem on the 85th B DAY OF Nathan Hare

I wish I knew more beauty in the world
beyond true love
nathan and julia love
beyond time forever love
death do us part love
wow
who knows such
only ephemeral love rules the day
not love beyond love
Sun Ra love
other side of time love
infinity love
Sunny said what is this today love
who are these people who claim love
ain't the people I used to know
Alabama love
Chicago love
love for life and beyond time and space love
Nathan said
I don't know how to put the woman I love in confinement
After 56 years of marriage
I don't know how
We vowed death do us part love
She stood by me
I shall stand by her
til death do us part
--mx
4/1/18

SHE ALWAYS STOOD BY ME: IN PRAISE OF JULIA 

By Dr. Nathan Hare


I had seen her singing and dancing but didn’t know her – call her Julia, the name I gave her, her mother named her Julia Ann – when my high school principal took our senior class to the Tulsa, Oklahoma Booker T. Washington High School’s legendary annual production of “Hijinx.” I remember I was sitting in the upper balcony, far out of reach of her, and didn’t pay her that much mind. It was all a dream world. White folks called the balcony “Nigger Heaven,” but there were no whites around in those days of Jim Crow segregation, Hijinx was nevertheless put on downtown in the city of Tulsa’s Convention Hall, the place where the state militia less than three decades earlier had detained over six thousand black men for their safety, after more than 800 were hospitalized and an estimated 300 killed during the bombing of Black Wall Street, the only time whites have bombed blacks from the air in American history.

But, two years after I saw her for the first time, I was walking across the all-black campus of Oklahoma’s Langston University with a friend one afternoon when I suddenly stopped and told him: “There’s that l’il ol’ skinny girl who was playing that piano last night, and won first prize in the Freshman Talent Show; I think I’ll take her to the movie.” And he laughed and bet me a dollar she wouldn’t go to no motion picture show with me, but he didn’t know she had made eye contact with me in the Dining Hall the year before when she came to visit her pal sister for Homecoming Week and, no sooner than she left to go back home, her sister slipped me a note from her, and I answered it, telling her I would like to get to know her better too; but my letter somehow fell into the hands of her over-protective mother, who was hoping to save her from the unhappy experiences with men that had befallen her older sisters. So that was the end of that.

I myself was just a country boy, at the top of my class scholastically but born and raised on a farm forty miles from Black Wall Street, outside of Slick, Oklahoma, while Julia Ann Reed (eventually Dr. Julia Hare) was a city girl with personality and sass. So when we took up with each other, everybody said our relationship wouldn’t last, that even our sun signs didn’t match.

But in less than two months I had given her a birthday gift of a recording of Nat King Cole’s hit song, “Unforgettable,” because I had seen she liked it so. I could see that she was thrilled to high heaven that I had even given it to her; and she would play it over and over on the juke box, and she and I would sometimes slow-dance together. But, while I could slow dance alright, especially in dark and familiar but unchaperoned places, and halfway jitterbug -- I didn’t know how to huckle buck at all, let alone to Suzie Q -- but Julia was a dancing queen.

Sometimes when everybody was on the dancing floor in the Student Union Building, a gay artistic dancer, say, might take her hand and they would do the tango around the edge of the crowded dancing hall while we all stopped what we were doing and watched them go. And she was equally adept at the ballroom and the waltz. Students eventually voted her “Best Girl Dancer” campus-wide, as well as “Most Popular Girl”; and “Most Talented Girl.” For, not only was she one of the best piano players on the campus, in time she would become the regular university organist.

When I graduated and left Langston on a Danforth Fellowship to study for the Ph.D. at the University of Chicago, a pretty big thing there in those days, Julia soon went to California in her childhood dream of someday making it in the music and entertainment world, and to help her older sister, an impregnated high school dropout with five children, whose husband had gone down to the drug store one night to get some medicine for one of their sick children and just kept going, never to be heard from until he turned up trying to make it in the jazz world in New York.

Suffice it to say it was after considerable agony and ambivalence that Julia tabled her dreams for fame and fortune and rendezvoused with me in Tulsa and we were married in her mother’s house two days after Christmas when we were all of 23. Then in Chicago, rather than get by on my budgeted fellowship and a part-time job as a statistical clerk, Julia got a job as a substitute teacher.

I used to feel sorry for her when she would get up winter mornings and cook me eggs and waffles and pancakes and bacon in time for her to be ready when her teachers van came in the cold to take her from the Southside of Chicago to teach unruly children in the Westside slums on the other side of the windy city.
Soon her girlfriends and female coworkers began to cock their heads to the side and crow that they “wouldn’t work while no man went to school.” The reason I know she wasn’t lying is one of my sisters and her teacher friend upstairs told her that in my presence, to my face. They quipped that I was getting a Ph.D. while she was getting a PHT (Putting Hubby Through) and then go on to warn her that as soon as I got the Ph.D., I was going to leave her for a younger woman -- never mind that we were still in our twenties.
But Julia stuck by me and persevered. Julia was the kind of woman who would stand by her man until he was headed in a better direction and she could get in front of him.

I got the idea of persuading her to study for a master’s degree herself, so they would be jealous of both of us and by the time I got the Ph.D. she had earned an M.M.ED. from the music department of what is now Roosevelt University’s College of the Performing Arts. Although she would later also pick up a doctorate in educational psychology, an Ed.D., she was always fond of saying that she was proudest of her MRS, allowing that she had had to work so much harder for the MRS.

When we left for Washington D.C., in part so I could join with E. Franklin Frazier, though he would end up dying before the end of the school year. Julia still had her own ambitions on hold, and she was taken aback when we got to D.C. and, in spite of her years of teaching experience in Chicago, plus one year each in Virginia and Oklahoma, the Board said she wasn’t qualified to be a substitute teacher in D.C., compelling her to commute in winter weather to teach in a white school in Maryland for a year before the black Board in D.C. deigned to hire her to teach in the black schools in the slums of the District.

Yet In just four years, she would go on to win the Outstanding Young Educator Award (teachers 35 years old and under) from the Junior Chamber of Commerce collaborating with World Book Encyclopedia, with the expert judgment of the Department of Education at American University to recognize her as the most commendable teacher thirty-five and under for every grade level for all of the city of Washington, D.C.
But the following year, I myself was fired from Howard University, along with another black professor and five white ones, for so-called “Black Power activities.” I returned to boxing, this time under my own name – I had quit before when two world champions were killed in the ring one year apart and she had already been getting the heebie-jeebies over the boxing, making big mirations over some cut lip or bloody nose. I’d tell her you ought to see the other guy. Then, after promising her I was going to quit, and did, two weeks later on All Fools Day, I took a shot or two of vodka and went down to the old Capitol Arena to see a friend fight, and was visiting in the dressing room, when somebody’s opponent didn’t show up and ,I agreed to take the fight, which was an easy win, but two deans recognized me fighting under the name of Nat Harris, and the top dean called me in in a day or two and gave me an ultimatum which almost motivated me to return if I hadn’t promised Julia. Anyway, I had one fight in the comeback under the name of Nathan Hare, winning by a knockout in the first round, before I was asked to become the Coordinator of Black Studies at San Francisco State University.

Now Julia was not a conscious herself at that point, but a bourgeois lady suddenly challenged to become a revolutionary’s wife and drown her dreams in a revolutionary life. But San Francisco had always been her favorite city, and her two older sisters were still living in the Bay Area, and her school teacher coworkers had sometimes been snide to her about the things they read in the newspaper about me and Howard, and she had never wanted me to box anyway, let alone under my own name and everybody was waiting to see me on my back on the front page of the Washington Post with my feet sticking up -- so she pushed me, like most other people did, to accept the offer from San Francisco State.

After closing out our apartment and her job as a laboratory teacher headed for the Board of Education, she came to San Francisco and went down to the Board of Education here, armed with the citywide award from Washington, D.C. and thirty units beyond the master’s degree and a passing score on the National Teachers Exam, only to be told that in order to be a substitute teacher in San Francisco, she would have to take a course in Teacher’s Arithmetic and another in California History.
Makes you wanna holler.

She declined the psychotic suggestion and within a couple of months the Director of the Oakland Museum preparing to reopen happened to be in the audience when she, unemployed, was speaking on a panel at the Black Today conference I was chairing at San Francisco State, and the museum director recruited her as Director of Education. She had worked the previous summer in a program directed by one of the bigtime museums in New York City.

Julia was in her element at the Museum, and got on well with the society set. Aside from her interest in the arts, she was in her dream world social element, as she had come to admire Jackie Kennedy and was always studying the women’s and the fashion magazines, even before she worked at the Oakland Museum, and had a Saks card but was not a spendthrift and loved to shop anywhere, including the thrift stores, using Jackie Kennedy once more as an inspiration. She knew how to put what little clothes she had together. Sometimes her affluent friends would be affronted when they would throw down big money for something they saw in a clothing store window, then get to an occasion and everybody would be praising Julia’s outfit from the thrift shop, though, like I said, she was not averse to using her Saks card. One night we wound up at a high level reception where a blue collar woman I happened to know was also taken with thrift stores and also appeared to me to be an unusually creative dresser. I determined to introduce them to each other, but before I could do so, they had spied each other from across the room, though total strangers, and introduced themselves to each other.

But that was the way she was.

She worked at the Oakland Museum maybe a year while it was preparing to reopen and she and the white multimillionaire Director got the idea of making it a people’s museum and carry the art like Meals on Wheels to the people in the community. This horrified he museum’s docents, who had discovered her connection to me and hence the five-month strike for Black Studies raging at San Francisco State. For instance, one night Julia sat with the Director and his wife waiting for me for dinner at a downtown restaurant when they looked up and saw me getting arrested on the Walter Cronkite CBS Evening News, along with five hundred and fifty seven predominantly white Black Studies strikers at San Francisco State. The Oakland Museum Director was fired and eventually became President of the California Historical Society, but meanwhile I backed Julia’s wish to resign.

Julia’s black consciousness also took a leap when James Baldwin’s sister, Dr. Rena Karefa Smart, invited me to speak to the Conference on Racism put on by the World Council of Churches in London in the spring of 1969, and I took Julia with me, stopping at St. Louis University on the way to pick up her fare, impressing her at the Custom’s window by nonchalantly counting and talking of pounds and shillings. She enjoyed the week in London, where I also took part in a demonstration with the daughters of Richad Wright, Rachel and Julia Wright. When we returned to San Francisco, Julia announced to me that she was going to start wearing an Afro.

Her next job was as Public Information Director of the West tern Regional Office of the National Association Against Discrimination in Housing. Then, after two years she beat out seventy finalists for Community Affairs Director of Cowboy Gene Autry’s radio station in San Francisco, KSFO, where she flourished for all of ten years, including eventually some on-air broadcasting time in a sidekick role in the morning drive, until she ran into trouble with a new manager and took a part-time job as a talk show host with the number one talk show station in San Francisco. ABC’s KGO. However, in spite of the fact that she appeared to be one of the very best they had, they would not give her air time in the day time on weekdays, so she eventually sued the station for harassment and her three year contract was not renewed.

Despite picking up a course for a while in the broadcasting department at the City College of San Francisco, unemployment at forty-eight was her darkest hour. Plus she was a people’s person, a performer, and didn’t like sitting at home, while I was a thinker and a writer and would have loved to change places with her as it was no accident that she became a radio talk show host and had married a psychotherapist, for whom listening had achieved the status of both an art form and a healing art.

It hurt me to see how hard she was taking her fate. At the time, I was going around the country on the chitlin college lecture circuit pushing a male/female relationships movement on the wind of an incredibly popular editorial I had written for Ebony magazine, speaking out for a better black family based on Kupenda (Swahili for “to love”) black love groups I had been experimenting with at the time. I thought that it would be natural and nice to have a couple speaking on black male/female relationships instead of a solo spouse. I also was inspired by the fact that we had made our own poem rhyme as a couple, and wanted to share the love, so I asked her to come with me, and she agreed, and I named her “National Executive Director” of the Black Think Tank I was running at the time.

Julia had always been a very good speaker – she’d won the award in “Auditorium” in the third grade in Tulsa, and the experience as a radio broadcaster and talk show host also seemed to augment her impromptu facility. Plus, people didn’t know she was farsighted and could see the copy standing back from the podium while also exploiting her radio broadcaster’s ability to read-talk off of next to nothing, causing it to appear that she wasn’t using any notes or anything at all.

Having time all day, she used the time and worked hard learning the sociological material and preparing and practicing her speeches and was soon being hailed as “one of the most sought after motivational speakers in the country.” She spoke to most of all of the black women’s groups and even men’s groups, especially the mentoring conferences and began to be included in selections of distinguished black women. For instance she became a regular at the annual Essence Cultural Festival in New Orleans, but she spoke to all the leading black women’s groups and they all seemed to think a lot of her.

Then, though not at her best when she appeared on the Tavis Smiley’s State of the Black Race Conference at Plymouth Rock in 2008, her comments went viral and seemingly all at once she got more than a million hits from around the world; but later, I stood perplexed after the widest circulating newspaper in Great Britain, “Black Voices,” gave her the two-page centerfold, under the headline, “The Female Malcolm X,” and offered to bring her for a tour of Europe, but she declined, saying she was afraid to fly over the ocean.
Then, she began to forget and lose important and familiar things; which should have alerted me, but I was blinded by psychological denial as well as a lack of knowledge and familiarity with Alzheimer’s, up close and face to face. I should have been alerted because she had never gotten over the fact that her mother put her father in the rest home after he went and got a rifle to her and her mother fell and injured her foot and couldn’t keep up with him.

But I was not there, though I visited him with her briefly in the rest home, but he always had a quiet and retiring disposition, a man of very few words, and I had no idea of the difficulties a demented elder can present, how unmanageable some can be, and how to relate to them and manage their behavior.
But by 2011, it was clear that something was wrong with Dr. J, despite her trying to hide it, and such a good actor at that. Her mother didn’t know that and drove her to play the piano, but her talent was more in her voice box and her being than her fingers. Plus, she had always relied on me for information, seeing me as a fountainhead of knowledge (she said she thought I was a “genius”). So I continued to play the role, but she wound up in confinement, with me duped by the medical establishment and conventional wisdom and custom.

First it was 72 hours for her safety and mine, then it’s two weeks for hers when I opt out, then a month. They told me I’d have to have a “power of attorney” to make any decisions over her niece and them, but by then I had seen how oppressive involuntary confinement was to her: involuntary because most people will stay and just be bored and lonely, because after a while people don’t visit that much. Sometimes I would leave the office for visiting hours and be the only one there visiting anybody in the “Acute Psychiatric Ward,” for they have a mixture, which is demoralizing in itself to be in a place of the openly and acutely insane – like how did I come to this? – and people bellowing and moaning, sometimes in a different language, so you don’t know what they’re saying they will do to you, all day long. One night the house psychiatrist came out unsolicited by me and opined that I shouldn’t visit so often, but I paid her no mind.

And yet, I admired how the staff could handle her, though she was the hardest patient of all for them to handle in a locked up condition. They liked her nevertheless and brought in a portable piano and allowed her to to entertain the other inmates anytime she wanted to. One night in casual conversation with me, she referred to her situation as “incarceration.” I knew for a fact she had never read Psychiatrist Thomas Ssazz, though I had, but even I hadn’t read his “The Medicalizaton of Everyday Life,” in which he independently called involuntary confinement of patients “incarceration.”

Each night when the visiting hour was over, I would have to conspire with the staff to distract her while I sneaked out the door without her; but, by the time I would hear the ominous prison-like click of the closing of the door, the nonchalant staff would have turned her loose and I would hear her sorrowfully knocking on the door and desperately calling out my name to help her, like Maria calling Roberto at the end of “For Whom the Bells Toll.”

I thought of the marital vows when I had stood with my hand on a Bible and promised to love her and protect her until death do us part. I also wondered and imagined what she would have done if they would lock me up against my will for medical treatment of a condition they admit they can’t cure or rightly treat and don’t really even know what causes it.

What would she have done if I was the one on the other side of the door of sanity in an insane world, where the most powerful man in existence is collectively described as mentally ill by thirty top psychiatrists and such. I recalled how she would sometimes say in other random but serious circumstances and idle speculation: “If anybody ever bothers you [or do harm in any way], no telling what I would do; I will tear up this town.”

The next morning I woke up early from a largely sleepless night and called some of the San Francisco State College BSU leaders from the 1960s Black and Ethnic Studies Strike: including a physician who consults worldwide on Alzheimer’s, a retired judge, a retired lawyer or two, a community organizer in San Francisco and another visiting from the East Coast, and went out and brought her home.

That was almost six years ago, when she was diagnosed in the late moderate stage. However, my collaborators had noted and remarked on Julia’s visible improvement after an hour of freedom. But later she would develop a bed sore and go through hospice, at home under a visiting clinic, indeed two, as the one who refused before now wanted to come in under new Medicare guidelines from Obamacare. They brought in the death apparatus and stored it in the apartment in full anticipation. A physician sat for at least twenty minutes explaining to me why the bedsore wouldn’t heal, but it did, though I do believe that if Julia had been confined again she would have died, literally, under categorizing and caring staff prescript.

Mind you, they’re good in what they do, they just need to do it in the home and community.. We have the technology to do so: computers, internet and social networks, cars. S.U,B’s, bicycles, scooters, cellphones with cameras in the back while pointed at you. It would be cheaper as well, for people in their home are already paying rent.

In any event, I did what I had to do: stand by my wife who had stood by me; but more than that, it just seems there is something wrong with incarcerating a proud and dignified lady in the final stage of her life cycle, against her will, don’t care if she has never had so much as a parking ticket in her life.
Mental Health Is Tied to Social Health

I have learned on a deeper level that mental health is tied to social health, and I am gratified and impressed by the way people are getting behind the movement to deal with the Alzheimer’s epidemic and coming pandemic. I liked it when Barack Obama called for a cure by 2025, and it looks to me if interest keeps mounting as it has in recent years, we will meet that goal; but though it would be a blessing to so many others, it won’t do Julia any good or mend a broken heart.

I want to acknowledge that I could not have stood by Julia in her present ordeal, if so many people hadn’t stood by me, or the few hadn’t stood by me so well. While it is true, and has been said, that most people, especially the ones you’d most expect, will not lift a finger to help a flea, I have been amazed by the quality and the quantity of help and the quantity of the quality of help Julia and I have received from too many to mention. I must find a way some day to thank them in a circumstance that might prevent leaving somebody out.

When I jumped out with promises and parachutes that didn’t open or got snagged, I didn’t know where to go or what to do. I was so ignorant of Alzheimer’s it’s a shame. Partly because people had been prone to hide the demented in the closet, so to speak, or put them away altogether, lock them away if necessary.
I often stand and look back now and realize how many people I encountered in the past who had Alzheimer’s and I didn’t know it: we just lumped them in the loose category of “senile,” a net big enough to encompass almost anybody elderly individual. Two things people think about an old person they meet: they are senile and got some money or something of value under the mattress or somewhere, and the young person is going to try to get it if they can; not that they necessarily need it, just so they can get it and have it.
As for Julia, I regret to say that at this point she is going down slow, fast. She is doing well in her physical health and emotionally but Alzheimer’s is a progressively deteriorating disease, and you can see her going down in a cognitive way, something like month by month.

She has lost much of her ability to speak and function by now, but I can tell that she knows more than she can say.

People ask me if she still remembers me, if she knows who I am, and I am compelled to quibble, but I say yes, on her current level, she has forgotten much of the old me but she knows me as she knows me now, and of course what is more important, is I know who she is.

She still knows herself well enough to answer to her name, if you are trying to get her attention, though you can usually get her attention without calling her name, say by simply using the remote to raise or modulate the volume on the cablevision, or by playing her one of her favorite songs on the computer, something I do for an hour or two on many an evening after the sun goes down, and you can tell she is exceedingly gratified, just to have the attention but she will use her hand to direct the music in the air. When we were 24 years old and I was teaching for a year at Virginia State College in Petersburg, Virginia, she was the Minister of Music, including choir director, for the oldest black Baptist church in America, the Harrison Street First Baptist Church, which still exists. At one point, needing more male voices, she even recruited me to sing in the choir and once gave me a solo part to sing. I just acted like I was in the shower.

So I know there will inevitably come a time when she will have forgotten me altogether without a doubt, but I will remember her: that she sometimes gave me a hard time in good times but always stood by me in times of trouble, always took my side.

She continues to live at home with Alzheimer’s and find exquisite enjoyment in the instrumental music on 24/7 cablevision, as she was a pianist by background and training and by temperament a dramatist but became a scholar primarily as my longest and most continual student. Though going down slow these days in a cognitive sense, she is doing well physically and emotionally, enjoying interacting with her caregivers and me and the special attention I try to give her because maybe I didn’t always love her quite as often as I could have when times were good, little things I should have said and done but didn’t take the time. So I just try to fill her life with whatever joy I can and always love her all the time.

So, even when it comes to the point that she no longer remembers me, I will remember her, and I will recall that she was unforgettable and thought I was unforgettable too.


photo Johnnie Burrell

The San Francisco Bay Area humbly celebrated, in a private ceremony, the 85th B Day of our most esteemed scholar and African healer, Dr. Nathan Hare, father of Black and Ethnic Studies, the intellectual warrior who has been Black, or rather White listed, and confined to house arrest over half a century for simply thinking black, loving black and sacrificing his life for black in the world of white supremacy and multiculturalism that his wife, Dr. Julia Hare said, "Multiculturalism is but another term for failed integration." 

I say, "If multiculturalism is so great, why are we yet on the bottom rung of the multicultural ladder?" Further, what are we bringing to the multicultural table? The Latinos come with their agenda, Asians with theirs, whites with theirs, LGBT with theirs, so what is our agenda? A job, job, job? Whites are seizing land and property, Latinos, Asians, LGBT the same, so what is our priority agenda item beyond a motherfuckin, goddamn punk ass job that was described by one of our elders as an indirect welfare handout called JOB?

Meanwhile, we are gentrified into tents and out of town, state and country, yes, have you heard of Blaxit, the current move of North American Africans to Ghana? But with the recent US military agreement with Ghana, how can we be sure Ghana is the panacea for the psycho-social issues of North American Africans or even Continental Africans? 

Furthermore, we are told North American Africans are the cause of gentrification in Ghana! So we cannot be sure if and when tribalism resurfaces as it did in South Africa with Zimbabwean refugees, also in Guyana, South America, when North American Africans got jobs in key government ministries that caused jealousy and envy among the native population, especially when the opposition leader married a North American African woman. 

Minister Farrakhan said, "No matter where I traveled throughout the world, whether Christian, Muslim, Jewish, Communist, Socialist or Capitalist country, the black man and woman were on the bottom!" 

I say check out America: blacks fill the jails, go to Israel, Africans fill the jails. Go to Brazil, a black woman politician was recently assassinated fighting for African Brazilian human rights. 

Oakland Poet Paradise Jah Love's poem is a classic, "They Love Everything About Me But Me!" 

They can call each other nigga around the world in hip hop culture but still hate niggas. And for sure, niggas still hate niggas, yet denounce the N word even though it is a billion dollar word we should capitalize on instead protest its usage. If we had a billion dollar word, wouldn't it be common sense for us to take advantage of it instead of protesting? 

With Black Panther, we have a billion dollar film, whether we got pimped as per usual, or totally agree with it or not,but shouldn't we want to examine how we as Africans and North American Africans can benefit from its success, even if we don't like it, including the fact that the only  North American Africans in the film were villains, a black man and woman, despite the overwhelming historical fact that Africans sold us to the Europeans and both Africans and Europeans enjoyed 400 years of surplus capital from the slave trade, minus the cost of human labor.  Thus, North American Africans have nothing to feel guilty about. For sure, we resisted and protested every day of our 400 year trauma, grief and genocide. See Negro Slave Revolts by Melville Herskovitts. See the Historical Channel's Slave Catchers and Resisters, the best documentary of African resistance to the American Slave System (Ed Howard term).

A segment of North American Africans identify with the socalled villain Killmonger, especially when he said before his death at the hands of the Wakandan's, "My ancestors are those who jumped off the slave ships rather than be victims of the eternal slave system in the Americas."
The Qur'an says, "Persecution is worse than slaughter." So many of us conscious North Americans departed the cinemas shouting Killmonger for Life!" Yes, no matter a majority of Africans, North American Africans and Africans in the Diaspora saluted the mythical kingdom of Wakanda in their romantic notion of the African kings and queens who benefited in their enslavement, just as the low information vibration celebrate the Obamas even though they were globalists and imperialists in black face, no different from the plethora black face neo-colonial African leaders on the continent and throughout the Pan African Diaspora.

Rainbow flag Racism and White Supremacy



Long ago,  the LBGT community informed me the rainbow flag does not represent them, that it is but another symbol of racism and white supremacy. Joe Hawkine s, founder of the Oakland LGBT Center has partnered with our forthcoming Teach-In and Testimonial: Racism and White Supremacy in the Bay Area. FYI, a brother traveled to Peru and told me the LGBT was stolen from Peru. White supremacists, no matter what gender, religion or political persuasion are still white supremacists and we suspect they, in the words of Mao, will never put down their butcher knives and turn into Buddha heads, unless they agree to go into long term recovery to address their severe condition of addiction to white supremacy.

As a straight man, after over a half century in the Black Arts Movement and the BAM coast to coast, I have "had no choice but to appreciate the genius and extraordinarily talent of artists beyond the socially acceptable heterosexual gender. Gay brothers have portrayed my son who was a straight man. Lesbian women have portrayed straight women in my dramas. Alas, if you are an actor, for sure, you must adapt, understand all personas in the human and sexual spectrum. Alas, as a writer, I must comprehend and appreciate the human dilemma no matter what sexual orientation. If I can't, it would be wise for me to give up the art of writing!

Yes, Dr. Nathan Hare was/is too black for the pseudo black conscious intellectuals in perpetual crisis (see Harold Cruse, Crisis of the Negro Intellectual) and academic negroes, including the Kemetic, Pan African Youtube scholars of today that he says live in the Kingdom of Afrikanna or shall we say Wakanda, the mythical kingdom of make believe, best described Sociologist Dr. E. Franklin Frazier in his classic Black Bourgeoisie. 

but especially those tenured niggas who obtained neo-colonial elite jobs for life from their vampiric sucking of his black intellectual and edrevolutionary blood. Dr. Nathan Hare shares the honored tradition of intellectual resistance fighters from David Walker, Henry Highland Garnett, W.E.B. DuBois, Paul Robeson, et al, including women like Harriett Tubman, 

Saturday, March 31, 2018




Marvin X and his Master Teacher, Dr. Nathan Hare, father of Black and Ethnic Studies. He holds PhDs in Sociology and Clinical Psychology, founder of Black Scholar Magazine. Black academia, i.e., Howard University, and white academia, San Francisco State University, kicked him out because of his unapologetic Black revolutionary consciousness. He and his wife, Julia, were a formidable couple who preached Black Power/Black Love. A London, England newspaper called Julia the female Malcolm X! See her speech at Tavis Smiley's State of the Black Nation, Youtube. See below Dr. Nathan Hare's Love Song to Julia: "She Stood By Me" that appeared in The Movement Newspaper, published by Marvin X. Nathan is Senior Writer. 


After spending 45 minutes stalled in traffic before we got to the San Francisco Bay Bridge toll gate and another 20 or 30 minutes at the light before the bridge, (an effort we pray never to repeat, which may mean we will never drive a car to San Francisco) we made it to San Francisco to the Russian Hill apartment building Drs. Julia and Nathan Hare have occupied since 1973. Only rent control saves them from the gentrified high rent prices. As I entered, our beloved African Queen Dr. Julia Hare was being taken from the living room to the bedroom. Apparently she had fallen asleep. Alzheimers has taken its toll on her but she came back from hospice a few years ago and has been under the tender loving care of her husband of sixty plus years. Many of us can't stay married sixty days!

This afternoon Dr. Nathan Hare celebrated his 85th B day early at his home with friends and relatives  who discovered him through DNA. Two relatives flew into San Francisco from Chicago and Florida. He was happy and honored his DNA relatives came to town. He said to me that other blood relatives never come or call! Such is the state of the loving black family. 

 
photo Johnnie Burrell

As you see in the pic above, women were the majority in attendance, but most were women of power and authority. One said she was the only Black on her block of Divisadero Street. A life long San Francisco resident, in her retirement as an educator, she has traveled the world. She was present at my 2004 SF Tenderloin Black Radical Book Fair and wanted to know when I was going to do another. I told her it takes grant funds but I'm not in the begging mood these days. 

Besides her, there were several San Francisco "Negroes" present. My own San Francisco days go back to 1964 when I enrolled at San Francisco State Collegey, now University, and even before, 1963, when I was a researcher at UC Berkeley's School of Criminology under the famed Chicago Sociologist Dean Lohman. I was still enrolled at Oakland's Merritt College, along with my comrades Huey P. Newton, Bobby Seale, and a host of other Black Nationalists under the influence of the African American Association, headed by Attorney Donald Warden, aka, Khalid Abdullah Tariq Al Mansour, including the Los Angeles representative of the AAA, Ron Karenga, who, I was informed, got the Kwanza from Oakland's AAA, that also inspired the Black Panther Party and the West Coast or Northern California Black Arts Movement.

One was a low income housing advocate  who is part of a non-profit that has 35 buildings in San Francisco with subsidized housing available now. Another sister was a retired SF Police Officer (and she let me know that when people see her with her natural, they know what's she's about), but more importantly, she informed me she is in a group of women with disabilities who lost their homes after working to achieve the American dream of home ownership. She said many of her comrades are homeless and living on the street after not being able to maintain home ownership. Furthermore, she is a descendant of the first North American African who owned a barber shop in San Francisco and was the first Black bail bondsman in California. She wants to know why there is no historical monument or any mention to her ancestor. She said former Mayor Willie Brown could help her but hasn't. I told her to contact Mayor Willie Brown's best friend, Bentley  driving Charlie Walker, de facto Mayor of Hunters Point. 
Nothing happens in Hunters Point that Charlie doesn't know about. When youth are killed by each other or the police, families come to Charlie Walker for burial expenses. He once told me, "Marvin, I will help my people but these young brothers can't come in my house with pants hanging off their behinds. I have extra belts for them!"

Food was catered and there was so much left over, I took home enough for Easter dinner, including fried chicken, baked chicken, turkey, dressing, greens, Mac and cheese, cheesecake, banana pudding, peach cobbler.