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Stop and Frisk photo StopandFriskACLUreportcovergraphic_zps28437357.jpg

Commentary by Black Kos Editor Denise Oliver Velez


It’s great to have some good news to report. Though the ruling on Monday by Federal Justice Shira Scheindlin doesn’t end the racist and discriminatory policy in New York City, this is being declared a victory for people fighting back against a racist system.

Here’s the statement from the ACLU, and a link to the Center for Constitutional Rightswho have been waging the legal battle.

NEW YORK – Today in Floyd v. City of New York, a federal judge ruled that the New York City Police Department’s stop-and-frisk practices are unconstitutional.Ezekiel Edwards, director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s Criminal Law Reform Project, said, “The ACLU celebrates today’s decision by Federal Justice Shira Scheindlin declaring the NYPD’s longstanding and widespread stop and frisk practices unconstitutional.

“As the decision exhaustively documents, the NYPD’s stop and frisk policy clearly violated the 4th and 14th Amendments, subjecting millions of innocent New Yorkers – overwhelmingly Black and Latino – to unlawful searches through systemic racial profiling. We hope that today’s decision, and the robust remedies the court has put in place, will mark the end to this dark chapter in the NYPD’s history.”

Judge Scheindlin ruled that the New York City Police Department (NYPD) application of stop and frisk in NYC is unconstitutional, and constituted “indirect racial profiling”.  

Her ruling was 195 pages in length. The NY Times coverage has extensive quotes from her decision.

The judge found that the New York police were too quick to deem suspicious behavior that was perfectly innocent, in effect watering down the legal standard required for a stop. “Blacks are likely targeted for stops based on a lesser degree of objectively founded suspicion than whites,” she wrote. She noted that officers routinely stopped people partly on the basis of “furtive movements,” a category that officers have testified might encompass any of the following: being fidgety, changing directions, walking in a certain way, grabbing at a pocket or looking over one’s shoulder. “If officers believe that the behavior described above constitutes furtive movement that justifies a stop, then it is no surprise that stops so rarely produce evidence of criminal activity,” Judge Scheindlin wrote.She found that in their zeal to identify concealed weapons, officers sometimes stopped people on the grounds that the officer observed a bulge in the person’s pocket; often it turned out that the bulge was caused not by a gun but by a wallet. “The outline of a commonly carried object such as a wallet or cellphone does not justify a stop or frisk, nor does feeling such an object during a frisk justify a search,” she ruled.

She emphasized what she called the “human toll of unconstitutional stops,” noting that some of the plaintiffs testified that their encounters with the police left them feeling that they did not belong in certain areas of the city. She characterized each stop as “a demeaning and humiliating experience.” “No one should live in fear of being stopped whenever he leaves his home to go about the activities of daily life,” she wrote.

This was breaking news in New York City, and has implications for other cities in the U.S. that have similar policies in place.

Grassroots groups in NYC have been conducting protests and marches against racial profiling by the NYPD for years.

 photo veiledmarch_zpsa75be4b4.jpg

Loud squawking about the ruling came immediately from NYC Mayor Bloomberg:

Mr. Bloomberg pledged that lawyers for the city, in appealing to the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, would argue that the judge was biased against the police. As evidence, he cited the fact that the judge, who has overseen numerous stop-and-frisk cases over the last decade, had encouraged the plaintiffs to steer the Floyd case into her courtroom by marking it as related to an earlier case she had overseen.The mayor said the judge did “not understand how policing works” and had misinterpreted what the Constitution allowed.

This also has direct connections to the current NYC mayoral race. Candidates are alreadyweighing in on the ruling.

International news agencies have also been following this case closely. Here’s a report from AlJazeera:

I just want to give a shout out to everyone who has marched, petitioned, protested and organized to stop “stop and frisk” and remind folks that though we’ve won a battle, we haven’t yet won the war.

The struggle continues, and we’ll keep fighting back.

 

>via: http://www.dailykos.com/story/2013/08/13/1230433/-Black-Kos-Tuesday-s-Chile

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August 13, 2013


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VmfMpRV9AeE

 

Carl Dix co-founder of Stop "Stop and Frisk,"speaks with reporter Meghan Lopez from RTAmerica (Unconstitutional: Federal judge slams 'stop and frisk'). Still Photos of Carl Dix provided by Sopiphotography.com (RTAmerica)

Carl Dix co-founder of Stop “Stop and Frisk,”speaks with reporter Meghan Lopez from RTAmerica (Unconstitutional: Federal judge slams ‘stop and frisk’). Still Photos of Carl Dix provided by Sopiphotography.com (RTAmerica)

 

Revolutionary Carl Dix

Speaks out on

Stop-And-Frisk ruling

Carl Dix, the revolutionary communist and national leader of the Stop Mass Incarceration Network, issued an immediate statement in regards to JudgeShira Scheindlin’s ruling on Monday, that the controversial policy “Stop and Frisk” practiced by the NYPD for years unconstitutionally singled out minorities.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg says he will appeal the court’s ruling that would require the city to place a federal monitor to oversee the program the “Stop-and-Frisk” NYPD program.

Carl Dix has been a longtime Human Rights activist and supporter of abolishing the “Stop and Frisk” policy because of its dehumanizing and stereotypical practices towards Blacks and Latinos in the United States.

Mr. Dix co-issued with Cornel West a call for a campaign of civil disobedience to STOP “Stop-and-Frisk.” This campaign changed the discourse in NYC around the racist stop-and-frisk program. Mr. Dix released the following statement yesterday after the Judge’s ruling:

This Ruling Didn’t Go Far Enough!

You don’t need a law degree to tell that Stop-and-Frisk comes down to criminalizing Black and Latino people. The numbers make that clear: more than 5 million people stopped since the police was adopted, more than 85% of them Black or Latino AND more than 90% of them found to be doing nothing wrong.

This ruling doesn’t go far enough. It sets in motion a reform of the policy of Stop-and-Frisk when what’s need is to get rid of this racist and illegitimate policy. Stop-and-Frisk was never about getting guns off the street or fighting crime.

It was always about criminalizing Blacks and Latinos, treating them as guilty until proven innocent, if they could survive to prove their innocence. Ramarley Graham and many others didn’t survive to get a chance to prove they were innocent.

This policy has been a part of the white supremacist logic of Amerikkka that was underscored by the verdict in the Trayvon Martin case and the grand jury ruling to not indict the cop who murdered Ramarley Graham: that Black people have no rights that white people are bound to respect.

It is woven into the history of this country; running thru slavery, Jim Crow segregation and lynch mob terror, and it’s still in effect today in the mass incarceration, police terror and enforced inequality that Black people continue to suffer under.

This ruling is no reason to declare victory and wait for justice to be done. Why should we expect a federal monitor to end the way Blacks and Latinos are mistreated by the NYPD, when the Department of Justice is fighting people sentenced under the 100-1 sentencing disparity for crack cocaine possession who are trying to get those sentences reduced.

This racial profiling and the whole way the criminal “injustice” system in this country targets oppressed people is unacceptable and illegitimate. It must be stopped. It will take revolution–nothing less to end this horror and all the other horrors this system brings down on the people. And everyone who has an ounce of justice in their hearts needs to join the fight to stop mass incarceration and all its consequences.

 

>via: http://www.examiner.com/article/revolutionary-carl-dix-speaks-out-on-stop-and-frisk-ruling

 

 

 

MARCH 7TH, 2013

 

 

MARCUS GARVEY’S AFRICA

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BY DAN MAGAZINER 

Late last year I had the opportunity to review College of William and Mary History Professor Robert Vinson’s remarkable new book, The Americans Are Coming! Dreams of African American Liberation in Segregationist South Africa. Vinson details both physical and intellectual journeys between South Africa and the United States in the decades before apartheid. His characters are sailors and preachers, political leaders, teachers and conmen. His work reveals the intellectual history of the African diaspora during critical years that saw the tightening of white supremacy, massive dislocation and urbanization and remarkable political creativity in both the United States and South Africa. Over the course of February, Vinson and I exchanged emails about his book, beginning with a discussion about the man who was perhaps the era’s most important black political leader, Marcus Garvey.

How was Marcus Garvey important in African history?

Vinson: Marcus Garvey was important to African history in several ways. He led the largest black-led political movement in world history, and his movement’s “Africa for the Africans” slogan exemplified its primary mission of African politico-economic independence, black control of religious, educational and cultural institutions and an audacious worldview that linked the destinies of Africa and its diasporas. Of course, Garvey was part of a centuries-long history of diasporic blacks that sought re-connection with, and return to, the African continent. For continental Africans, Garveyism became a vehicle to express popular discontent with white rule, to animate and, in some cases, reinvigorate their political organizations, their trade unions, etc., to create and control black-led churches and schools and to spark a prophetic liberationist Christianity that placed godly black people at the center of a divinely-ordained historical drama that would lead to African redemption. It is so ironic that Garvey’s extensive travels throughout the Atlantic World did not include Africa (though it should be noted several colonial states in Africa banned him), since Garveyism became such a vital ideology that linked continental Africans with diasporic blacks as they constructed transnational racial identities in their attempts to eliminate the global color line. Garveyism was also an important bridge between the post-1890 African resistance movements and nascent Pan-African movements associated with diasporic blacks like Henry Sylvester Williams and the post World War Two anti-colonial and Pan-Africanist movements exemplified by future African leaders like Kwame Nkrumah, Nnamdi Azikiwe and Jomo Kenyatta, all of whom were influenced by Garvey and Garveyism in their respective youths. For historians of African history, Marcus Garvey and Garveyism illustrates how African history can be fruitfully studied beyond continental borders, how Africa and Africans should be more central in African Diaspora Studies and how African American and Caribbean history remained linked to African history long after the Atlantic Slave Trade.

It’s notable that Africanist scholarship has generally failed to note the vitality your book reveals, and that you’ve sketched here. Why do you think this is? And how do you explain the contrast with African American history, which, as Robin Kelley and others have long argued, has always been attuned to Atlantic crossings? Is this simply a matter of diaspora vs. homeland? Or does it speak to the political culture of African history and politics?

On one level there is a diaspora vs. homeland dynamic at work here, complemented by, and related to, how the fields of African American history and African history have developed in the academy. In many ways, African American history has been informed and animated by centuries-long African American engagement with Africa. These include cultural, linguistic retentions, spiritual and naming practices, etc., the gradual transition from ethnic to racial identities and the making of a people known now as African Americans, the perpetual search for ancestral rootedness in Africa (including continual African American journeys to West African slave dungeons/castles) while buffeted about in an often hostile American homeland, back-to-Africa movements, and a general sense among some African Americans that the general fate of African Americans is tied in some fashion to the perceived state of Africa (oftentimes hostile whites justified slavery and Jim Crow by claiming blacks came from ‘barbaric’ Africa, are thus inferior and should be grateful to slaveholding/dominant whites for ‘civilizing’ them). Of course, Robin Kelley, Earl Lewis and others rightly pointed out in the 1990s that the then increasing interest in African Diasporas were part of a much longer popular and academic African American engagement with Africa (that included the work and practice of people like W.E.B. Du Bois, Carter Woodson, J.A. Rogers, Katherine Dunham, George Washington Williams, Lorenzo Turner, William Leo Hansberry, etc.) were attuned to African history, both on its own terms, and as an essential component to African American history, culture and politics. Garvey and others simultaneously exhorted diasporic blacks to lead the charge in ‘redeeming’ contemporary Africa, to restore the continent to its former glories. So, yes, Africa was central to the identity of diasporic blacks, particularly African Americans. Instead of being peripheral, inferior 2nd class citizens in hostile homelands, they were leaders of a divinely ordained mission to restore Africa to its former glories. Oftentimes, part of that mission involved actual return to Africa. In the 1950s and 1960s, African Americans reveled in the newly independent African nations; African independence helped fuel black freedom fighters, including King (his Birth of a New Nation speech after his return from Ghanaian independence celebrations is my favorite speech of his), Malcolm X (his African tours and the formation of his OAAU, patterned after the OAU), or those, like Pauli Murray, who offered tangible skills to the African nation-building project. African American multi-level engagement with Nyerere’s Tanzania and with anti-colonial and anti-apartheid movements in southern Africa also show that Africa has loomed large in African American consciousness than diasporic blacks in the consciousness of Africans in the era of the Atlantic Slave Trade. So all of this history has informed African American historical scholarship that has often been organically transnational (without using that trendy word) in outlook, particularly with Africa. It is why in the 1990s, I could go to Howard for graduate school to study Africa and the African Diaspora and African American history in an integrated, holistic way whereas at other schools that had a firmer sense of separation between Africa and other parts of the world, I would have been trained very well as an Africanist, and might have had African American history as a cursory secondary field, but l would have had to declare very clearly where my allegiances truly were-Africa or African American. Jim Campbell has talked about his graduate student days when senior scholars expressed incomprehension that he wanted to build a bridge between African and African American history. Fortunately for me, I studied with Joseph Harris, oft-cited as the godfather of modern African Diaspora studies, who himself had been a student of Hansberry’s. At Howard, an African American institution, there was a wide open space, resulting from all that I described above, that accepted as normal and natural that I would want to write integrated histories of Africa and Afro-America.

Conversely, I think African history/studies has been borne from experiences of continental Africans who had their own particular concerns in the Atlantic Slave Trade era that they often did not perceive as having direct connection with African Americans. Though continental Africans who lost loved ones in the Atlantic Slave Trade never forgot their kin, most of course could not know where those loved ones ended up, much less have a sense of the Americas and the people eventually known as African Americans. This is not to deny that some diasporic enslaved folk and their descendants did find their way back to the continent, helping to establish Liberia and Sierra Leone while others were engaged in Atlantic World Trade, etc., but it was not until the colonial period that there would be sustained African engagement with diasporic blacks, particularly African Americans. And even then, African kin, ethnic, local, or regional identities, their general political fortunes and their sense of rootedness were not tied to African Americans to the same extent that African Americans felt linked to Africa. Of course, as my work, and the work of others show, African identification with African Americans could be very strong — here too is the supreme importance of Garvey and the UNIA in fostering these linkages –, particularly as the 20th century progressed and African American cultural production and general achievement is beamed around the world in print media, oral transmission, film, television and other forms of mass entertainment. But Africa obviously is a huge continent that dwarfs the US and there are so many local, regional, national and continental issues that draw people’s attention. I understand some Africanists who resist the diasporic turn by noting correctly that Africa has such a varied and dynamic history on its own terms, that it remains understudied in its own right, and that funding, publications, and general institutional support should not be unduly influenced by the level of engagement with diasporic peoples. Nor should African Studies Centers find themselves competing for scarce funds with African American / African Diaspora / Africana programs that tend to elide Africa and Africans themselves.

Marcus Garvey-inspired IC Union (1920s Natal, South Africa)

Marcus Garvey-inspired IC Union (1920s Natal, South Africa)

The different levels of engagement of African Americans with Africans vis-a-vis African engagement with Africa is illustrated well in Saidiya Hartman’s book, Lose Your Mother. She discusses the coastal Ghanaians who were obviously aware of the streams of African Americans coming back to the slave dungeons, but she noted that many were puzzled by the desire to remember slavery or their slave histories. Some local Africans were alternately offended and amused by what they considered African American self-absorption and victimization when they — Africans — had very pressing immediate concerns and could not imagine having the material wealth needed to travel back across the Atlantic and stay in five star hotels.

Unlike the genesis of African American history, modern academic African historical scholarship derived largely from the works of early 20th century anthropologists, colonial officials and scholars of empire and colonialism, some of whom relied on collected oral histories of African peoples or travel narrative of European explorers, slave traders, missionaries, adventurers, etc. Most of this work was continental based. But as the vast post-1965 African Diaspora continues to fan out across the globe, the academics within this diasporic stream will lead the charge in placing Africa and Africans at the center of African Diasporic studies and placing African history in dynamic global contexts.

US-based Africans like Emmanuel Akyeampong and Paul Zeleza write extensively about the experiences of the post-1965 African diasporic communities outside of Africa. These scholars are obviously well placed to write about processes that reflect their own experiences-this personal interest animates their scholarly interests in ways very similar to African Americans writing about Africa. These scholars, defined by the processes of diaspora apparent in Atlantic Slave Trade diaspora, and aided by the hegemonic nature of the US, the US academy, and publishing industry, will be the vanguard of these new dynamic histories.

It’s remarkable the extent to which Garveyism was able to build these intellectual bridges across the Atlantic. How do you explain its apparent success? Was it a matter of context — it took root here, but not there? Or was it the content of Garvey’s (and others’) ideas? The confluence of events at the end of the 1910s and World War I?

Garveyism was successful because it was within a longer geneology of black-nationalist and Pan-African intellectual exchange, and organizational activity as well as a general black mobility around the Atlantic World, from enslaved people to labor migrants, to sailors, missionaries, students, entertainers etc. Garvey’s eloquent articulation of an African antiquity that disseminated ‘civilization’ beyond the African continent, his vision for a regenerated, redeemed independent Africa, and his claim that diasporic blacks, linked with western educated Africans, were a providentially designed liberationist vanguard, his fierce assertion that Egypt and biblical Ethiopia represented classical African antiquity, and his prophetic jeremiads that warned of an imminent apocalypse for white racists for their profoundly un-Christian behavior were familiar ideas for so many of his followers around the world. Most Garveyites had some familiarity with the ideas that became associated with Garveyism, particularly the emphasis on black psychological liberation as a necessary precursor racial advancement and the importance of building autonomous black religious, cultural, educational, fraternal, and socio-economic (particularly mutual aid) institutions. As Wilson Moses shows in much of his work, all of these ideas had circulated, albeit unevenly, around the black world. I am thinking now of David Walker’s Appeal, the prophetic religiosity (i.e. Nat Turner) and broad diasporic nature of slave revolts (i.e. Denmark Vesey), in Harriet Tubman leading hundreds of black out of slavery to the Promised Land, among Caribbean-born intellectuals like Edward Blyden and many diasporic religious leaders like Henry McNeal Turner, in the fierce anti-lynching campaigns of Ida Wells in the U.S. and England, in the pioneering Pan-African activity of the Trinidadian Henry Sylvester Williams and in the writings of West African intellectuals like James Africanus Horton and J. Casely Hayford.

So, it was the enduring attractiveness of these ideals, made more so by the many manifestations of brutal racism along the global color line, that is one factor in Garvey’s success.

A Garveyite family in Michigan, U.S. (1920s)


But there was something about Garvey himself that mattered — otherwise anyone else could have harnessed these same ideas to similar effect. Garvey’s unique genius was to take familiar ideas, and repackage them to fit the immediate post World War I world — and having the good sense to radicalize a rather staid initial UNIA program that centered on a Jamaica Tuskegee, and to instead build on the more aggressive political program of mentors like Hubert Harrison so that he and the UNIA became the political vanguard of the transnational New Negro movement. Garvey’s personal charisma, passionate oratory, visionary boldness, and unerring ability to articulate the deepest fears and highest aspirations of his listeners mattered. More so than anyone else of his era, he crystallized and channeled the frustrations, the despair, the anger and the dreams of so many blacks who had hoped that the close of World War I would usher in a more racially and economically egalitarian world, where American Jim Crowism and European colonialism in Africa and the Caribbean would end. That envisioned world had motivated many blacks to participate in the war effort. That envisioned world was one reason the Japanese pushed for a racial equality clause in the League of Nations charter. What the denial of that clause meant, what the continuance of European colonialism meant, what Red Summer and the resurgence of the Ku Klux Klan meant to blacks was a firm denial of their individual and collective freedom dreams. So 1919, as Barbara Foley notes, was an explosive year and Garvey seized this moment better than any of his more learned and more experienced peers like W.E.B. Du Bois, Ida B. Wells and Hubert Harrison. With righteous indignation, he framed white supremacy in global terms and moved beyond the language of protest to be bold enough to offer an institutional solution to the global color line and the problem of presumed black inferiority.

An underrated quality of Garvey was his use of history, not just for his personal knowledge, but also for the projection of a usable past that provided context, lessons and inspiration to his followers. Because he had some sense of relevant historical precedents-including a fascination with the historical development of European empire-building — he used the language of nationalism, empire and racial destiny to imbue his movement with a sense of dynamic progress and promise that electrified his followers. He learned from his mentor Robert Love many things, but particularly the importance of printing a newspaper to disseminate his views widely and to use as a common site where his far-flung followers could be in conversation and collaboration. His multi-languageNegro World traveled throughout the world particularly by black sailors, and young Africans memorized its contents and spread the word orally. Again, within the longstanding tradition of ships being central to back-to-Africa movements (i.e. Paul Cuffee, Chief Sam) the Black Star Line stood for a while as a powerful symbol of black economic power and as a tangible vehicle for diasporic blacks to return to and regenerate Africa. It failed, yes, but part of the reason it failed is because Garvey ordered the BSL ships to stop frequently in ports so that it could be the effective propaganda vehicle it was, to sell more stock, to enroll more members and to encourage the idea among many followers that Garvey was the new Moses primed to lead blacks to the Promised Land, either in Africa or in improved conditions in their respective homelands. Even as some followers melted away after the Black Star Line fiasco, Garvey’s conviction and jailing and the interminable UNIA infighting, Garvey intimate understanding of the importance of propaganda was part of his effective portrayal of himself as a Christ-like martyr; notions that his followers in particularly Central and Southern Africa came up with on their own as well. And even though Garvey was not as deeply religious as some of his followers, he adroitly understood the importance of religion, particularly biblical prophetic language and imagery, and the central place of African sites like Ethiopia and Egypt in the minds of so many blacks worldwide. This prophetic religiosity was another key component for bringing so many diverse constituencies in the black world under the broad Garvey/UNIA tent.

 

What do you want readers to take away from The Americans Are Coming!?

For one, that Garvey and the UNIA presided over the largest black-led movement in world history, bigger than the American Civil Rights movement. The book demonstrates the influence of African Americans and Caribbean peoples in energizing African politics, religions, trade unionism, education and print media AND the crucial facts that Africa was the primary site of the action and Africans were the active agents in adapting malleable Garveyist ideas to varied local contexts. The book places African, African American and Caribbean history in transnational contexts, seeks to re-center Africa and Africans in African Diaspora studies, and demonstrates that Garvey and Caribbean-born maritime communities in South African port cities were part of an important Caribbean diaspora as well. I hope readers see The Americans Are Coming! as a tangible example of truly transnational history that highlights the circulation and connection of people, ideas, institutions across national borders and thus moves beyond comparative history that often separates historical subjects in abstract parallel universes instead of in dynamic, interactive connection with each other.

I hope readers see the importance of Africa to Garvey and Garveyites. We see that importance, for example, in prophetic Garveyist thought, as in the Psalms 68:31 quote that appeared on the Negro World masthead, “Princes Shall Come Out of Egypt and Ethiopia Shall Stretch Forth Her Hands Unto God,” in the passionate assertions of ancient Egyptian and Ethiopian civilization, in the clarion calls for African redemption, the persistent attempts for diasporic re-settlement in Liberia and present-day Namibia and the vigorous and sustained correspondence between diasporic Garveyites and Africans. While many are aware of Garvey’s engagement with Liberia, I hope my book reminds us of Garvey’s extraordinary reach throughout the African continent, in southern Africa surely, but also throughout central Africa and East Africa as well. While it remains important to pay close attention to the rapidly shifting fortunes of the remarkable Garvey and the American UNIA, we can better appreciate the kaleidoscopic nature of the many articulated Garveyisms by looking carefully how Africans used Garveyism as a perceived common language to forge Pan-Africanist ties to diasporic blacks and to fight against a global color line, and also adapt Garveyist thought and action to local contexts. The Americans Are Coming! is part of a recent wave of exciting scholarship on the Garvey movement written by a newer generation of scholars like Claudrena Harold, Mary Rolinson, Ramla Bandele, Natanya Duncan, Adam Ewing, and others, but none of us could have done much without the foundational work and mentorship of pioneering Garvey scholars like Rupert Lewis, the recently deceased Tony Martin, and the incomparable Robert A. Hill, whose multi-volume Marcus Garvey and UNIA papers represents only a fraction of his global pursuit and collection of Garvey-related primary documents.

Do you see a role for Pan-Africanist ideas like Garvey’s today?

Yes, certainly. Just as Garvey drew upon pre-existing Pan-Africanist ideas to forge his UNIA, African anti-colonial leaders like Nkrumah, Azikiwe and Kenyatta drew inspiration from this Pan-Africanist geneology to help forge new African nation-states, which in turn inspired diasporic Pan-Africanists like Malcolm X. As you know in expert detail, Pan-African ideas animated both the South African anti-apartheid struggle and the global anti-apartheid movement. But Pan African ideas are particularly relevant today because many of the political, socio-economic, educational, penal, etc. conditions that have historically generated Pan-Africanist thought and action are still in existence. There is tremendous movement and interaction among diverse groups of black peoples today, from the post-1965 African diaspora, and the continuing Caribbean diaspora particularly to the United States and Europe, and a growing African American diaspora in Africa, all of which facilitates deeper interactions, connections (and conflicts) between diverse black peoples who often share, along with their many other identities, a heightened racial consciousness borne from broadly similar historical and contemporary experiences with various forms of white supremacy. Despite very demonstrable examples of black advancement and achievement, black institutions like my alma mater Howard, which has been such an important crossroads for black peoples worldwide, and as an incubator of Pan-Africanist thought, are struggling to stay afloat financially. In some ways, Howard is a metaphor for the black world; a symbol of black achievement and pride against the odds, but also reflective of the very fragile state of much of the black world today. True, the vast majority of the world is in struggle mode. But as long as black peoples collectively remain in such perilous conditions, and there remain substantive evidence that at least some of this fragility is due to historic and contemporary racial exclusion, discrimination, hostility and indifference, there will be a role for Pan-Africanist ideas as a generative ideology to seek the alleviation of these conditions on a global scale.

 

++++++++++++++++

Dan Magaziner

I’m a historian of 20th century Africa, specializing in South African intellectual, religious and cultural history. I’m the author of The Law and the Prophets: Black Consciousness in South Africa, 1968 – 1977 (2010), which grew out of my PhD dissertation at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. I’m currently working on my second book, an intellectual history of art education in South Africa from the 1910s – 1980s, tentatively titled The Art of Life in 20th Century South Africa. I’m from Philadelphia, USA and currently live in Brooklyn, three blocks from the AIAC home base.

 

>via: http://africasacountry.com/marcus-garveys-africa/

 

marcus garvey 01

MARCUS GARVEY

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Published: Saturday | August 17, 2013

 

Garvey’s Birthday Present

Garvey in the custody of US Marshalls en route to Atlanta federal prison, 1925. - File

Garvey in the custody of US Marshalls en route to Atlanta federal prison, 1925. – File

By Collin Greenland, Contributor

Today is Marcus Garvey’s birthday. The long-standing debate on whether Jamaica’s first (and greatest) national hero, the Right Honourable Marcus Mosiah Garvey, should be pardoned and/or exonerated resurfaces annually around this time of year when many disingenuously celebrate his birthday (August 17) but do little to address the travesty of justice perpetrated against one of the greatest men of colour ever to walk this Earth.

An examination of the facts surrounding Garvey’s incarceration suggests that he was innocent. Innocent persons wrongly convicted should be exonerated and their conviction records expunged! Many countries would be proud to claim Garvey as their own and would have moved for his exoneration long ago.

I cannot think of a better birthday gift that we as a people could offer this great man when his birthday comes around again in August next year than to secure his exoneration since he is still recorded in the records of the United States (US) Department of Justice and the Federal Courts as “ex-convict number 19359”.

Before discussing the issue of exoneration, one must acknowledge that some proponents – many of whom do not think exoneration is either possible or necessary (or both) – argue simply for Marcus Garvey to be pardoned. Notwithstanding the technical and legal distinctions between exoneration and a pardon, the moral consideration is far more compelling. You do not pardon an innocent person, only a guilty one. Examination of the facts surrounding Garvey’s incarceration suggests that he was innocent. Innocent persons wrongly convicted should be exonerated and their conviction records expunged!

I implore all parties concerned – especially the US and Jamaican governments – to edify themselves by revisiting not only the historical setting at the time, but even more important, the facts of the case. Ten of the most salient facts to consider are as follows:

1 From the inception of his sojourn in the United States, documents that can be retrieved even today reveal that various governmental, police, quasi-official, and corporate agencies determined that Garvey was a dangerous character and subjected him and his Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) to constant surveillance of international proportions.

2 Garvey, along with three other executives of his Black Star Line shipping company, in the promotion of the Black Star Line and UNIA, was indicted for using the mail system to defraud. They were tried on two indictments, each of which contained counts charging conspiracy to commit the substantive charge. There was not a scintilla of evidence, competent or otherwise, that Garvey placed, or caused to be placed in the mail, the circular or letter described or referred to in his indictment.

3 Examination of the actions of the judge, prosecutor, and overall proceedings pointed to Garvey’s conviction as contrived and engineered by officialdom at the time in a kangaroo court ideally suited for his crucifixion. There were, for example, 94 errors contained in the Bill of Exceptions filed on Garvey’s behalf after the trial. Many of them could have been sufficient to declare a mistrial, retrial, or dismissal of the case.

4 The judge, Julian W. Mack, for example, was openly and constantly hostile to Garvey. The situation was also exacerbated by Garvey’s application to the trial judge to declare himself disqualified to try the indictments since he was part of an organisation in which some members were opposed to the UNIA, which Garvey headed. The judge admitted his connection to the organisation but denied bias. Garvey’s motion was denied on the grounds that the affidavit did not comply with the statute.

5 The prosecutor, Assistant US Prosecutor, Mr Mattuck, also overtly displayed his hostility and contempt for Garvey throughout the proceedings. For example, his focus and bias against Garvey were highlighted when he asked the jury, “GENTLEMEN, WILL YOU LET THE TIGER LOOSE?” This was despite the fact that there were FOUR defendants, not ONE.

6 The jury itself, which by no stretch of the imagination could be considered “peers” of Garvey, was also compromised. During the trial, there was open fraternisation between one member of the jury and the judge. The verdict of the jury appeared induced by passion and prejudice with disregard for evidence. Garvey was given the maximum punishment under the law – five years in the Atlanta Penitentiary, $1,000, and ordered to pay the entire cost of the suit.7 Another shocking revelation was that it was brought to the court’s attention that the judge, prosecutor, and jury were threatened that harm would be done to them unless Garvey was convicted.

8 Even sections of the white-owned-and-controlled press such as theNew York Evening Bulletin and the Buffalo Evening Times that resisted Garvey’s policies found the trial a mockery and a perversion of justice.

9 Many legal scholars at the time, and since then, have dismissed the trial as a travesty of justice. For example, noted legal scholar at the time, Professor W. H. Hart of the Howard University Law School, on March 18, 1925, commented in the New York Amsterdam News that Garvey was wrongly incarcerated.

10 Every legal system has some mechanism to have a look at new evidence or a new look at old evidence in order to resolve a vexatious issue. The Jamaican Government could approach the US Government with a view to having this case revisited, all the facts researched and presented in any relevant fora, with the specific intention of exonerating the Right Honourable Marcus Mosiah Garvey.

Why bother?

It pains me that some of our brothers and sisters do not understand why Garvey must be exonerated. Some say, what does it matter if the US or others have him recorded as a fraudster if we love him and revere him as a great man, national hero, and even prophet? It has even been preposterously postulated that his US conviction is actually a “badge of honour” as many great men in history persecuted by officialdom are usually labelled by some form of stigma – rebel, revolutionary, terrorist, etc.

It does matter because a fraud conviction is a demarcation of a thief, cheat, deceiver and is characterised by dishonesty. How do we explain to our children that our first and greatest hero is not a cheat, thief, and dishonest person? In fact, while we debate, procrastinate, and vacillate, the world is doing our job. In 2003, Ian Adams, honorary fellow of the University of Durham, and his colleague R. W. Dyson, director of the Centre for the History of Political Thought, jointly prepared and published50 Major Political Thinkers. This publication listed Garvey among colossal giant thinkers and well-known philosophers over a 2,000-year span, starting with Plato, Aristotle, and continuing through to St Thomas Aquinas, Nicholas Machiavelli, Karl Marx, etc.

Jamaica, when August comes around again, let us present Marcus with the gift of exoneration!

Send comments to columns@gleanerjm.com or cgreeny.collin@gmail.com.

 

>via: http://jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20130817/cleisure/cleisure2.html

 

photo by Alex Lear

photo by Alex Lear

 

 

Aft/er

 

 

aft

er we’ve

(or should

i say

i’d)

made

love

 

i wanted to hold you, but you have bound up from our bed & are gone from my grasp well before i am sufficiently recomposed to open and clasp my arms, so i hold the thought of you

 

i have just shuddered, exploded myself, funneled liquid missled into your moistness, am still gasping, only partially aware, sight is fuzzy, my thoughts are louder than anything in the air, i’ll be all right in a moment

 

i hear you running the shower in the hall bath, the morning water covering your nakedness where moments earlier i joyfully was

 

outside the open windows a crow caws in the near distance, two streets away a dog desultorily barks, the wind moves a few leaves

 

our floors are terrazzo in some rooms, light colored carpet in others, overhead fans, enough wall space to hang art and photographs, rooms full of comfortable places to read

 

music floats from the small system, most of the time you punch up billie holiday, etta james singing billie holiday, nina simone mournful as billie holiday, or grover washington interpreting pop tunes of his day like billie holiday did for hers, and those sounds wind softly through the house, gently seeking and unerringly finding the ear, the soul

 

every breath costs some amount of air, sometimes the breathing is painfully evident like the labor of inhaling while running three miles atop the levee five or six mornings out of the week, other times the dues is less obvious: like we can’t enjoy our separate lives and simultaneously be together all the time, sometimes i like to read in the same room you are sitting in doing whatever you’re doing, other times i’m far away, far, far, away

 

i could never have written a poem like this twenty years ago, not enough distance to look back and see that the horizon is not just an ever receding, unreachable horizontal line in front of me but also a lengthy, spherical curve that wraps behind, knotted by contraditions and smoothed by the resolution of holding what i can grasp and of letting go what i can’t hold

 

—kalamu ya salaam

 

 

 

 

 

africa is a country

| AUGUST 16TH, 2013

 

 

Weekend Music Break 50

 

SEAN JACOBS

image

As the OG of #Musicbreaks I’m responsible for stuff like jazz, leaving the more energetic genres (hip hop, global base, kwaito and Naija derivative pop) to the much younger AIAC co-conspirators. So here’s 10 tunes/artists I’ve been checking out for a minute.  ♦

 

The hip hop collective Odd Future’s public profile is largely built around Tyler the Creator, Earl Sweatshirt and Frank Ocean. (BTW, both Tyler and Earl are children of African immigrants.) Less prominent has been the group’s main DJ, singer, producer and only female member, Syd tha kid, as well as producer and illustrator Matt Martians. These two also run their own band, self-described as playing “soul funk.” Here’s a 22 minute set of them playing live on LA radio station KEXP’s Street Sounds show in November 2012:

 

Then there’s Cecile Mclorin Salvant, the Miami-born singer (mother French; father Haitian) with a political science degree, who reinterprets jazz and blues standards. Her album “Woman Child” (2013) is worth checking out. In the video below, recorded at the Detroit Jazz Festival, she performs first a song by Bert Williams, who is considered the best selling black artist before the 1920s and who performed in blackface. Then she does “Yesterdays” by Jerome Kern.

 

 

Njabulo Madlala, a South African opera singer who lives and performs in London. Here he performs a Miriam Makeba standard “Qongqothwane,” live for Classical Kicks, a series geared to classical music started by violonist Lizzie Ball (she played with Nigel Kennedy) at Ronnie Scotts in London:

 

 

I always return to Tutu Puoane, the South African-born, Belgium-based singer. Here’s two tunes. First “Love Ends”:

 

 

And “Alone at last” has Puoane performing with the Royal Flemish Philharmonic in Antwerp. The song features Bert Joris (he is trumpet and composed the song) and Puoane’s husband, Ewout Pierreux. Live @ de Roma, Antwerp, 24 march 2013:

 

 

In April–along with fellow AIAC’ers Elliot Ross, Ben Talton, Dan Magaziner, and Derica Shields–I went to see Christian aTunde Adjuah (the former Christian Scott) at the Jazz Standard in New York City. Scott spent the evening alternating between talking and playing (with a little too much emphasis on the former). One highlight (for me at least) was his remix of Jay Z and Kanye West’s “No Church in the Wild.” Here’s a link to the original, and here’s a video of Scott and his band performing the song live in Amsterdam:

 

 

The Cape Town singer Melanie Scholtz decided to put poet James Matthews’ work to music. The result is the album “Freedom Child.” Here’s a live performance of one of the songs, “Black I Am”:

 

 

My children love this Gregory Porter tune and the video. I am their dad, so I like it too:

 

 

Then there’s the much older Mike Gibbs (actually born in the then Southern Rhodesia in 1937) and the Kinetic Jazz Orchestra performing an old standard, “Sadie Sadie” by Horace Silver:

 

 

Finally, in honor of the 34 miners of Marikana murdered by police one year ago today in South Africa, here’s Charlie Haden and his Liberation Music Orchestra performing the South African national anthem (and no, not that version sung by rugby teams):

 

 

++++++++++++++

Sean Jacobs

Sean Jacobs, a native of Cape Town, is on the faculty of The New School in New York City. He founded Africa is a Country.

 

 

 

consequence

The Consequence Prize in Poetry

Celebrated poet BRIAN TURNER, author of Here Bullet and Phantom Noise, will select the winner of this year’s Consequence Prize in Poetry. No entry fee is required. The prize recognizes exceptional work addressing the culture and consequences of war. It includes a cash prize of $200 for the best poem. The winning poet and three finalists will have their work published in the Spring 2014 issue of CONSEQUENCE Magazine, and online at www.Consequencemagazine.org. The deadline for submissions is October 1st. To enter, please click on the link below and then scroll down to The Consequence Prize in Poetry.

Enter the 2013 Poetry Contest

 

>via: http://www.consequencemagazine.org/poetry_contest.html

 

sociolingo africa

Africa – Morland Writing Scholarship

It can be difficult for writers in the early stages of their career to write and to earn a living outside writing at the same time. To help fill this need the MMF has established up to three Morland Writing Scholarships every year. The Scholarships will be open to anyone who has been born in Africa or both of whose parents were born in Africa.

Grant
The Scholars will receive a grant of £18,000, paid monthly over the course of one year.

Scholar’s Undertaking
In return for this the Scholars will agree that 20% of whatever they subsequently receive from what they write during the year of the Scholarship will be paid to the MMF which may be used to support other promising writers and possibly to expand the Scholarship scheme in later years.

Qualifications
To qualify for the Scholarship a candidate must submit a piece of published work, or an excerpt from a piece of published work, of between two and seven thousand words to be evaluated by a panel set up by the MMF which will include MMF trustees and past participants in the Caine Prize. The Scholarships will be awarded based on these submissions although the Foundation may also wish to question certain candidates or ask for other work.

Proposed Work
The candidates will be expected to submit a brief description of the work they intend to write (ideally 200 – 500 words). It should be a new work, not a work in progress. The proposed work must be in English as must all candidacy submissions. Please also tell us in fewer than 100 words something about yourself and your background.

It is not the intention of the MMF to give editorial or publishing advice to Scholars. They will have to find their own agents and publishers although it is to be hoped that over the years the Morland Scholarships will come to be recognised as an incubator of talent. Works which relate to Africa are likely to be preferred by the judges.

Scholarship Requirement
The only condition imposed on the Scholars during the year of their Scholarship is that they must write. They will be asked to submit by e-mail at least 10,000 new words every month until they have finished their book. The Scholarship will terminate if a Scholar fails to submit the required work on time unless prior authorisation has been received. The Foundation is happy to support fiction or non-fiction but not poetry, plays or screen-plays. The Scholarship is intended for writers who want to write a full-length book of 80,000 words or more.

The closing date for submissions for the first series of Writing Scholarships will be October 31st 2013. The Scholarships will be announced in December 2013 and will run for the whole of calendar 2014. The Trustees reserve the right to vary the terms and requirements of the Scholarships at their discretion.

Please go to FAQs about the Morland Writing Scholarships to answer any further questions.

All enquiries and submissions relating to the Morland Scholarships should be directed toMMF@blakman.com.

 

>via: http://www.sociolingo.com/africa-morland-writing-scholarship/

 

 

 

myholidayshorts01

What’s a summer holiday without ice cream, big hats, sunglasses, parties, a braai, the beach or adventure and a great book?

What’s a summer holiday without shorts!? Well, we’re talking about short stories!

Short short stories to entertain, regale, thrill, excite, startle, and tickle book lovers over the holidays.

Are you a writer who loves short stories? are you a writer who has never been published? are you a writer who specialises in short stories and has been published before? do you have dreams of being a writer and think you could give this call a try?

Well, this is for you.

Black Letter Media presents MY HOLIDAY SHORTS and other adventures:

Black Letter Media will publish a collection of short short stories that can be read in one sitting while relaxing during the holidays. This is a collection of short stories that fit comfortably into a book lover’s fun-time holiday schedule.

These are stories of adventure and fantasy. The kind of stories that one can enjoy while chilling at the beach, at a side walk restaurant, enjoying a braai with friends or on a road trip to see family. We’re looking for stories that are thrilling, hilarious and romantic. We’re looking for exciting stories that will take readers on a fun adventure. No serious stories please.

This collection, My Holiday Shorts, will be published in print and digital formats as well as be made available on a dedicated website.

Criteria:

  • This call is for South Africa-based writers only.
  • Story length must be no shorter than 300 and no longer than 1000 words
  • Only unpublished short stories may be submitted.
  • Submit your story in any South African language.
  • This call is open for writers of all ages

DEADLINE: 9 OCTOBER 2013, 11:59PM (23:59)

To submit you must use the form on www.blackletterm.com/submissions.html

Follow us on Facebook/My Holiday Shorts and Facebook/Black Letter Media

– See more at: http://bookloversmarket.net/call-for-submissions-my-holiday-shorts/#sthash.GPBiku91.dpuf

 

>via: http://bookloversmarket.net/call-for-submissions-my-holiday-shorts/

 

 

 

AUGUST 16, 2013

 

Watch All 5 Episodes Of

Lennie James’ Hard-Hitting,

Cat-And-Mouse BBC Thriller

‘Line Of Duty’

 


BY TAMBAY A. OBENSON

 

 

I have to keep reminded myself that Hulu exists, as silly as that sounds. I’m on NetflixAmazon and YouTubemost often, and rarely visit Hulu for content. But Hulu does have its own share of worthwhile content, including exclusive rights to non-American TV series like this one… the Lennie James police drama series, Line Of Duty, made for and broadcast on BBC2 in the UK last year.

It’s actually been available on Hulu since August of 2012, but I’m only just now finding out that it’s there, so I’m assuming many of you also weren’t aware that it’s been available on Hulu.

All 5 episodes of season 1 of the hour-long crime drama are on Hulu for you to watch, so take advantage. I most certainly will. 

The series apparently did well enough in the UK that the BBC ordered a second season.

Described as a hard-hitting, cat-and-mouse thriller which takes a probing look into modern policing, with Lennie James starring as a charismatic but controversial copper, the full synopsis for Line Of Duty reads:

Following one multi-stranded investigation over five hours, Line Of Duty sees Detective Sergeant Steve Arnott (Martin Compston) transferred to AC-12, a fictional anti-corruption unit, after a mistaken shooting during a counter-terrorist operation. Alongside Detective Constable Kate Fleming (Vicky McClure), they are assigned to lead an investigation into the alleged corruption by a popular and successful officer, Detective Chief Inspector Tony Tate (Lennie James). While Tate cleverly manipulates his unit’s figures, DS Arnott questions whether Tate’s being made a scapegoat for a culture of institutionalized spin, or is guilty of darker corruption?

Creator of the show Jed Mercurio had this to add regarding James’ role and the series’ plot:

“Lennie James is electric as DCI Tony Tate, a complex and elusive anti-hero, and a formidable antagonist for two of the most exciting young talents in British TV – Martin Compston and Vicky McClure – who play the relentless anti-corruption officers on his trail.”

That’s right, you read that correctly – antagonist – a formidable one too! But expect some twists and turns, as I’m sure all isn’t exactly as we think it is.

I’ll watch it this weekend – at least the first episode.

I’ve embedded episode 1 below so check it out:

 

>via: http://blogs.indiewire.com/shadowandact/watch-all-5-episodes-of-lennie-james-hard-hitting-cat-and-mouse-bbc-thriller-line-of-duty