Wow! With SAG and the Golden Globes under her belt, it’s clear who the Best Supporting Actress Oscar belongs.
Monthly Archives: January 2014
Lupita Nyong’o Wins Critics’ Choice Film Award For “Best Supporting Actress” Last Night
I’m glad she won this award, especially after what she had to do for it (think: the worst of “Glory” merged with the famous scene from “Monster’s Ball” that all Black people know). While watching “12 Years a Slave,” all I thought of when I saw her was this moment. đ It was a very sincere and heartwarming speech.
Hell Hath Frozen Over, And The Earth Is Coming To An End! (“Batman” TV show on DVD)
Fanboys have called for this FOREVER!
(And I thought the above was hilarious when I found it on Youtube. đ )
JANUARY 27th UPDATE: I’ve posted “The Dark Knight” version of the 1966 intro before, and now I just found this! LOL! đ
MARCH 31st UPDATE: Smart idea!
Amiri Baraka, Cont’d (From The Village Voice Archives: Baraka vs. Stanley Crouch)
Amiri Baraka, Cont’d (Black Agenda Report’s Take……)
Amiri Baraka, Cont’d, (Greg Tate’s Take)
There are writers, and then there is Greg Tate, writing for Ebony.com.
Amiri Baraka, Cont’d (More From “Democracy Now!”)
Happy about this discussion continuing! This hour is MUCH more interesting the first!
AMY GOODMAN: This is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org, The War and Peace Report. Iâm Amy Goodman, with Juan GonzĂĄlez.
JUAN GONZĂLEZ: We are continuing our special on the life and legacy of the poet, playwright, and political organizer Amiri Baraka. He died on Thursday in Newark, New Jersey, at the age of 79. Baraka was a leading force in the Black Arts Movement of the 1960s and 1970s.And to talk more about Amiri Barakaâs legacy, weâre joined by four guests. In Philadelphia, Sonia Sanchez us, the renowned writer, poet, playwright, activist and one of the foremost leaders of the black studies movement. Sheâs the author of over a dozen books, including Morning Haiku, Shake Loose My Skin and Homegirls and Handgrenades. Sanchez is a poet laureate of Philadelphia and a longtime friend and colleague of Amiri Baraka.
And here in the studio, weâre joined by three guests: Felipe Luciano, poet, activist, journalist and writer. He knew Amiri Baraka for 43 years. Heâs a former chairman of the Young Lords and was an original group of the poetry and musical group The Last Poets.
Komozi Woodard is a professor of history at Sarah Lawrence College, the author of A Nation Within a Nation: Amiri Baraka and Black Power Politics.
And Larry Hamm is with us, chairman of the Peopleâs Organization for Progress. He was named Adhimu by Amiri Baraka. And you were talking about namesâ
LARRY HAMM: Yes.
JUAN GONZĂLEZ: âjust when we were on break, Larry. Could youâ
LARRY HAMM: Well, just a littleâyou know, I donât want to get metaphysical, but… Baraka gave me the African name Adhimu in March of 1972. I asked him for it after attending the National Black Political Convention.
AMY GOODMAN: What was that convention, that he helped organize?
LARRY HAMM: Well, that was probably one of the most historical events in contemporary African-American history. Thousands of delegates were elected from all 50 states to attend the National Black Political Convention, which was co-convened by Congressman Charles Diggs from Detroit, by Mayor Richard Hatcher of Gary, Indiana, and by Amiri Baraka. And I would sayâand maybe Komozi can critique itâI would say that Baraka probably was at his peak of political influence during the Gary convention. And I can remember what an uplifting experience it was for me, because I had come under vehement condemnation as a school board member because I had made a motionâ
AMY GOODMAN: A school board member at the age of 17.
LARRY HAMM: Yes, yesâthat students should be able to bring in the red-black-and-green flag to their classroom.
FELIPE LUCIANO: Oh, no, you didnât.
LARRY HAMM: Oh, yes, I did.
FELIPE LUCIANO: Oh, no, you didnât.
LARRY HAMM: And when I got to Gary for the National Black Political Convention, Dick Hatcher had red-black-and-green flags flying from every street streetlamp.
FELIPE LUCIANO: Oh, my lord.
LARRY HAMM: So it was enlightening for me. But I had asked Baraka for an African name after that, and he gave me the name Adhimu Chunga, which means “exalted youth.” But many years later, at the age of 44, I learned that I was adopted. And I have since met my birth mother. And my birth name, I found out at the age of 44, was Anthony LeRoi Burton [phon.].
FELIPE LUCIANO: Isnât this something?
AMY GOODMAN: So, Sonia saying you have the eyes of Amiri Baraka might not be so far off.
FELIPE LUCIANO: Iâm telling you, thereâs somethingâthereâs something going on here. Heâs got Amiriâs eyes.
LARRY HAMM: Itâs scary. Itâs scary. Itâs scary, right?
KOMOZI WOODARD: He was prolific.
AMY GOODMAN: But letâs let Sonia get a word in there.
SONIA SANCHEZ: I thinkâI think what youâre saying is that we all, at some time in our lives, have had the eyes of LeRoi, Brother Baraka. You know, I think thatâs really relevant, you know, because he made us see what we were not seeing at some particular point. He made us take a second look, a second glance. He made us say, “Come on, youâre not really using that intellect. You know, you know thereâs got to be something better than what weâve got here.”
And so, yes, Iâm sure you had those eyes and that name, LeRoi, because we understand thatâyou know, the joy of having met Brother Baraka was that I wasâhad graduated from Hunter and was going to NYU doing some grad classes and trying to get a degree, and I studied with Louise Bogan. And after I studied with her and I got published for the first time in her class, we met in the Village on Charles Street, a bunch of us, and one dayâwe would go down to one of the jazz places there in the Village. And one day we walked in, and someone said in the group, “Thatâs LeRoi Jones!” And I said, “Yes.” Well, Iâm an ex-stutterer, so I walked behind, and this voice said, “Sanchez!” And I jumped, and I literally jumped and turned around. He said, “Send me some of your poetry. Iâm doing a journal out of Paris, France.” And I said, “Y-y-y-y-y-y-yes.” And I went and sat down. The stutters came out. And they said, “Oh, oh, youâre going to do that.” I said, “Oh, no. I mean, he doesnât want my poetry.” Three weeks later, we come back into the Blue Note. Heâs sitting there drinking a boilermaker, smoking the French cigarettes. And he says, “I guess you donât want to be in the journal, huh, Sanchez.” And I said, “You were serious?” And he said, “Yes.” I jumped in my Volkswagen, drove up the West Side Highway in five minutes to my Riverside Drive apartment, pulled down my Olivetti, typed up some poems, came back out that night, took it down to the post office that night. Three weeks later, heâs sent me a letter: “Dear Sonia Sanchez, Yeah!” Just “Yeah,” thatâs all. Just “Yeah,” exclamation point, you know?
And the point is that the joy of that, this personâyou know, weâas a professor for 40 years, right, and as a person involved with the Black Arts, you know, Movement also, too, the joy was that we taught, and every place we go, we haveâwe have students. Youâre with Brother Baraka, and people come up and say, “Oh, remember? I was in your class, right?” You know, people come up to me, “You remember? I was in your class.” And you donât always remember the faces, or you do, but you remember the names, or you donât. But what we are saying, 40 years of being involved with activism and teaching in universities and teaching from the stages of America, all of these are our children. They have all our eyes. And they have Brother Barakaâs eyes. I mean, he has shown young people how to look at the world, you know. This is this man, you know, who showed us exactly how to remove the garbage out of our eyes and our lives and how to be human.
FELIPE LUCIANO: And to that endâ
AMY GOODMAN: Felipe Luciano.
FELIPE LUCIANO: Iâd like to add that his African aesthetic, his Black Arts Movement basically said this: You donât need to validate yourself by Western liberal ideas. We hear music differently. Our auditory nerve is different. Our optical nerve is different. And so, to sit with him, for example, and listen to Freddie Hubbard, to sit with him and listen to Trane, Sun Ra, to listen to a Grady Tate, toâhe loved Ellingtonâone would think that with his advanced sense of harmonics, with his advance sense of improvisation, he would be into Anthony Braxton. But he loved the classics. He loved tradition. And not only that, but he loved inclusion. And so, Miguel AlgarĂn, who was his contemporary at Rutgers University, heâs directly responsible. Heâs the foment of the Nuyorican poets. Imagine, this guy, brought up in Newark, who gave us an entire encyclopedia on American poetry and told us to take the stuff that was in front of our eyes and make it into poetry. Tato Laviera, Miguel PiĂąero, all of these people who have now passed on, are a result of Amiri Baraka, not to mention myself.
JUAN GONZĂLEZ: And, Felipe, now, youâre talking about his relationship to music. And in August of 2007, Amiri Baraka spoke at the funeral for another legendary figure, jazz drummer Max Roach, at Riverside Church in New York City. Letâs listen to what he said about Max Roach.
AMIRI BARAKA: I wrote a poem for Max on his seventy-fifth birthday. This is a picture of Max and I in Paris. And this is called “Digging Max.”
(At Seventy Five, All The Way Live!) Max is the highest The outest the Largest, the greatest The fastest, the hippest, The all the way past which There cannot be
When we say MAX, thatâs what We mean, hip always Clean. Thatâs our word For Artist, Djali, Nzuri Ngoma, Senor Congero, Leader, Mwalimu, Scientist of Sound, Sonic Designer, Trappist Definer, Composer, Revolutionary Democrat, Birdâs Black Injun Engine, Brownieâs Other Half, Abbeyâs Djeli-ya-Graph Who bakes the Western industrial singing machine Into temperatures of syncopated beyondness
Out Sharp Mean
Papa Joeâs Successor Philly Joeâs Confessor ATâs mentor, Roy Haynesâ Inventor, Steve McCallâs Trainer, Ask Buhainia. Jimmy Cobb, Elvin or Klook Or even Sunny Murray, when he aint in a hurry. Milford is down and Roy Brooks Is one of his cooks. Tony Williams, Jack DeJohnette, Andrew Cyrille can tell you or youngish Pheeroan Beaver and Blackwell and my man, Dennis Charles. Theyâll run it down, ask them the next time they in town.
Ask any or all of the rhythmân. Shadow cd tell you, so could Shelly Manne, Chico Hamilton. Rashid knows, Billy Hart. Eddie Crawford From Newark has split, but he and Eddie Gladden could speak on it. Mtume, if he will. Big Black can speak. Let Tito Puente run it down, He and Max were tight since they were babies in this town.
Frankie Dunlop cd tell you and he speak a long time. Pretty Purdy is hip. Max hit with Duke at Eighteen He played with Benny Carter when he first made the scene. Dig the heavy learning that went with that. Newk knows, And McCoy. CT would agree. Hey, ask me or Archie or Michael Carvin Percy Heath, Jackie Mc are all hip to the Max Attack.
Barry Harris can tell you. You in touch with Monk or Bird? Ask Bud if you see him, You know he know, even after the cops Beat him Un Poco Loco. I mean you can ask Pharaoh or David Or Dizzy, when he come out of hiding, its a trick Diz just outta sight. I heard Con Alma and Diz and Max In Paris, just the other night.
But ask anybody conscious, who Max Roach be. Miles certainly knew And Coltrane too. All the cats who know the science of Drum, know where our Last dispensation come from. Thatâs why we call him, MAX, the ultimate, The Furthest Star. The eternal internal, the visible invisible, the message From afar.
All Hail, MAX, from On to Dignataria to Serious and even beyond! He is the mighty SCARAB, Roach the SCARAB, immortal as our music, world without end. Great artist Universal Teacher, and for any Digger One of our deepest friends! Hey MAX! MAX! MAX!
JUAN GONZĂLEZ: Amiri Baraka delivering a poem about the jazz pioneer Max Roach. Baraka wrote Max Roachâs biography. I want to talk, Komozi, about theâwe were talking earlier about names, and Amiri gave you a name, as well. Yourâcould you talk about that?
KOMOZI WOODARD: Oh, yeah. I was named Komozi in the movement there. That was a part of the process, is you applied for a name. I wanted a nameâI put down that I wanted to liberate black people.
LARRY HAMM: Wow!
KOMOZI WOODARD: And I forget what that name would have been in Swahili.
LARRY HAMM: And how old were you when you said that you wanted to liberateâ
KOMOZI WOODARD: I think I was 18 or 19. Soâ
AMY GOODMAN: Where were you born, Komozi.
KOMOZI WOODARD: Newark, New Jersey, yeah. And instead, he gave me a spiritual name, which is Komozi, which is “redeemer.” So Iâve been trying to live up to that part of it for a long time, but I guess he saw that in me, that I needed to work on my spiritual development.
AMY GOODMAN: How did Amiri react to you writing a biography about him?
KOMOZI WOODARD: Itâs a funny story. Now, he asked for two boxes of the books. And the next thing I heard, he was selling them on street corners. So I guess thatâsâ
FELIPE LUCIANO: Komozi, you know that he studiedâhe started in philosophy and religion.
KOMOZI WOODARD: Yeah.
FELIPE LUCIANO: And quiet as itâs kept, he was much moreâ
AMY GOODMAN: Felipe.
FELIPE LUCIANO: âspiritual than people give him credit for.
KOMOZI WOODARD: Oh, yeah. Well, when Iâ
SONIA SANCHEZ: Oh, no, he had a spirituality in his poetry.
KOMOZI WOODARD: Baraka used to have this tinyâ
AMY GOODMAN: Let Sonia Sanchez have a word in here, from Philadelphia.
KOMOZI WOODARD: Sorry, OK.
SONIA SANCHEZ: No, I saidâno, I donât think that anyone is surprised at hisâI mean, you hear the spirituality in his poetry, and you hear it, you know, when he speaks. He might be hip, you know, in that hip way, that New York hip way that we happen to be, but in the midst of all that, you know, you hear the softness and the spirituality and the learning, because he was always studying and learning. He was always bringing some new way of looking at the world, some new philosopher. He would bringâMalcolm did that. You know, when we went to hear Malcolm speak, we took notebooks with us. You know, we took notes, because he always brought something for us to learn. And we would go to the Schaumburg and research this. But Baraka did the same thing, my dear brothers and sister. He always came, and you felt that spirituality, because he would likeâin a sense, like Malcolm did, he would raise you up to say, “Yeah, Max!” and at the end, you would say, “Max, Max, Max, Max, Max.” It was the loud and the soft, you know, because it was the blues in there, but it was always the sermon in there also, too. It was always that amazing music that he brought to his work, to his poems, to his speeches. Always we heard the music, and the music was doo-dat-doo-dat-doo-doo-doo, doo-dat-doo-dat-doo-doo-day, doo-dat-di, doo-dat-di, doo-doo-di, doo-doo-di, you know. And you wouldâyou lean back on your eyes, and you say, “Yeah, man.”
FELIPE LUCIANO: Listening to music with Amiri Baraka was like watching another concert.
AMY GOODMAN: Felipe.
FELIPE LUCIANO: Last year, we went to the New Jersey Performing Arts Center, Juan, and Iâm sitting there with Christian McBride and Terry Blanchard, two of the most incredible bassist and trumpet players. And we were sitting there, and we were talking and laughing so loud. Amina turns around and says, “Why donât you all shut up?” because Amina was always putting usâyou know, come on. We went to hearâ
AMY GOODMAN: Amina is Barakaâs wife.
FELIPE LUCIANO: Amina is his wife. So, we would goâso, we went to the Lenox Lounge, for example, to hear Hilton Ruiz, may he rest in peace. And Hilton Ruiz, a great Puerto Rican pianistâ
SONIA SANCHEZ: Yeah, yeah.
FELIPE LUCIANO: âwas vamping octaves on both hands exquisitely, exquisitely, because one can do the vamp, but to hear each separate noteâand he jumped up and screamed, “Go, Hilton!” And I jumped up and screamed, “Go!” And she said, “Yâall better sit down, because weâre going to get thrown out this place.” At which point a guy comes up to Amiri and says something surly. You know, Amiri was always listening.
SONIA SANCHEZ: Right.
FELIPE LUCIANO: You couldnât just throw some sotto voce stuff at him and him not hear it. He said, “What did you say?” You know, with those eyes, because he always looked at you from under his eyes.
LARRY HAMM: Yeah.
FELIPE LUCIANO: He said, “What did you say?” He said, “Letâs go outside.” I said, “Amiri, letâs not get busted tonight.”
LARRY HAMM: Well, along those lines, Felipeâ
AMY GOODMAN: Larry Hamm, Adhimu.
LARRY HAMM: âlet me just say, when I was at the hospital the night before lastâI actually started going up to the hospital, I think it was either before Christmas, and I was also there on Christmas Day and a couple of times after that. Amina and Ras, his sonsâBaraka had many children, and they had asâand I guess Iâm at liberty now to say, you know, from the point that I saw him, he was not conscious. The family had hoped that the situation was going to turn around.
FELIPE LUCIANO: Yes.
LARRY HAMM: But to help the situation turn around, they had jazz playing in the hospital bedroom, man.
FELIPE LUCIANO: Absolutely, right next to him.
SONIA SANCHEZ: Yes, yes.
LARRY HAMM: And I donât mean soft, either.
FELIPE LUCIANO: No, no.
SONIA SANCHEZ: Yes, yes.
LARRY HAMM: They had John Coltrane.
FELIPE LUCIANO: Yes. Ellington.
SONIA SANCHEZ: Yes.
LARRY HAMM: They had Pharoah Sanders.
FELIPE LUCIANO: Yes.
SONIA SANCHEZ: Yes.
LARRY HAMM: And you want to hear something thatâs really deep? The last night I went to the hospital, which was Tuesday night, Tuesday night, last night I went to the hospital, some folks came in from Bethany Baptist Church. And one of the brothers must be an operatic singer. He stood by the bedside of Amiri Baraka and sang “Olâ Man River.”
FELIPE LUCIANO: Oh, no.
LARRY HAMM: And with the words that Paul Robeson used.
SONIA SANCHEZ: Paul Robeson, oh, my god.
FELIPE LUCIANO: Oh, my lord!
LARRY HAMM: And it was so deep, because the hospital people was running around, running around, but they didnât stop him. They just closed the hospital room door and let him finish.
But I want to go back to an earlier point about Amiriâs move to the left and how other black leaders responded. I can rememberâIâm not quite sure; I believe it was â72 or â73, that AmĂlcar Cabral died. AmĂlcar Cabral was the leader of PAIGC.
SONIA SANCHEZ: Right.
FELIPE LUCIANO: January â73.
JUAN GONZĂLEZ: Portuguese Guinea-Bissau.
LARRY HAMM: January â73âthat fought the Portuguese and liberated Guinea-Bissau. Amiri Baraka was probably the only African American that was invited to speak at the funeral of AmĂlcar Cabral.
SONIA SANCHEZ: Right.
LARRY HAMM: And I remember him coming back, and one of the things he was talking about was how many white people were at, you know, the funeral of Cabral. And so, there was, I believeâeven before then, there was this tension going on between our black nationalist beliefs and perspectives and what was happening in the real anti-colonial struggle. And I think that goes back, because there was another great event in 1972 beside the National Black Political Convention, and that was African Liberation Day.
JUAN GONZĂLEZ: Yes, yes.
SONIA SANCHEZ: Yeah, yeah, yeah.
LARRY HAMM: In 1972. As early as thenâand we have to put everything in context. Baraka wasnât the only one moving left.
SONIA SANCHEZ: Thatâs right.
LARRY HAMM: The black movement, in parts of it, were moving left. And maybe in one way, Baraka was responding to it, and maybe he was moving in his own time, too. But as early as 1972, people were beginning to question, because, you know, thingsâwe had this very, you know, basic belief that if we simply got the white folks out of office and put the black folks in office, that everything would be all right. And it didnât work out like that. In factâ
SONIA SANCHEZ: No, no.
LARRY HAMM: âthe struggle between Baraka and Gibson began almost after Gibsonâ
SONIA SANCHEZ: Right, right.
AMY GOODMAN: Gibson, the first black mayor of Newark.
LARRY HAMM: The first African-American mayor that Baraka helped to get elected.
SONIA SANCHEZ: Yes, yes, yes.
LARRY HAMM: You know, that struggle broke out almost immediately, over the appointment of a black police director. Police brutality was one of the main problems that black people face and one of the planks that came out of both the Black Power Convention at West Kennedy Junior High School and the Black and Puerto Rican convention that followed that would be the appointment of a black police director. And Gibson didnât do that. And, you know, Gibson still might remember. Iâm saying, as a matter of record, he didnât do that. He appointed John Redden, who was a white police director.
FELIPE LUCIANO: Yes.
LARRY HAMM: So the struggle began to sharpen up even then. Soâ
FELIPE LUCIANO: And the contradictions tightened.
LARRY HAMM: Right, and the contradictions. So, let me fast-forward to 1974. Baraka openly begins to espouse Marxism, Leninism, Mao Zedong thought, and it was not initially well received. And itâs also important to sayâand Komozi is a historian; he can correct me on thisâbut the organization was in decline, asâby 1974.
SONIA SANCHEZ: Right.
LARRY HAMM: Many advocates were leaving onâof their own accord. And then, Iâm going to tell you, a lot of people in the communityâIâm talking about the regular people; Iâm not even talking about the leadership, who condemned Baraka for going to the leftâbut even a lot of people in the community could not understand it. I remember at one point in the headquarters, where we had had the giant pictures of the black leaders up, they came down, and Marx was up and Engels was up and Lenin was up. And, you know, it happened so fast for some folks that they couldnât quite keep up.
FELIPE LUCIANO: They couldnât adjust.
LARRY HAMM: And so, it was a toughâit was a tough road to hoe at that time.
SONIA SANCHEZ: Right.
FELIPE LUCIANO: Well, remember, Komozi and Larryâ
AMY GOODMAN: Felipe Luciano.
FELIPE LUCIANO: Weâve hadâthe black community has had an antipathy toward communism and progressive socialism since the ’30s. Amiri would explain to me what happened. If you take the land question outâremember, that was the whole thing: Do we have land? And when the communists came to Harlem in the â30s, their problem was that they didn’t want to admit to racism, institutional racism. And that was a real problem for black folk. Either we deal with the Emmett Tills, or weâre not going to join you. For Amiri to embrace socialism, when the Black Christian Churchâremember, they influenced us a lot. The Pentacostals and the evangelicals influenced so many black folk, and Puerto Rican folk, I would add. And they wentâthey were capitalists. They were involved. They were immersed in a system that was giving them money. Amiri decided, let us not use race as a criteria for evaluation; letâs begin to use class. Unreal. People just couldnât handle it, because the black middle class didnât want to admit it. The black middle class did more to criticize Amiri Baraka than any other class, including white folks. They did everything they can to make him mediocre. It never worked.
JUAN GONZĂLEZ: And in terms of that, though, I think theâhe did follow the trajectory of other great leaders who faced a similar kindâat the time, attempts to isolate themâPaul Robesonâ
KOMOZI WOODARD: Oh, yeah.
JUAN GONZĂLEZ: âalso Mandela himself, in terms of his trajectory. And in that sense, he really was among the foremost revolutionaries of the African-American community in the United States.
KOMOZI WOODARD: Well, letâs look atâ
AMY GOODMAN: Komozi Woodard.
KOMOZI WOODARD: There are differentâthere are different arenas that Baraka was operating in. One, he was in the international arena. Many of the African leadersâlet meâthis issue of the fast move that happened in ’74, â75, here’s what happened. I was on the executive meeting at the time. We were supporting a number of different groups in Angola. One of the groups, very embarrassing, that we were supporting turned out to be a CIA front, which was UNITA.
LARRY HAMM: Savimbi.
JUAN GONZĂLEZ: Savimbi.
KOMOZI WOODARD: Savimbi. Right? When we found that out, thenâand he was using the brand “cultural nationalism.”
LARRY HAMM: Yes.
KOMOZI WOODARD: OK? So, thatâs why it looked like we made a very quick knee-jerk reaction at the point to say, “OK, weâre going to go for standard Marxism,” at that time, because we saw that the CIA was going to use the brand of cultural nationalism, and they were going to do the same thing to split the struggle in South Africa, try to get the Zulus to cultural nationalists against the ANC. So, that was the change we were responding to, and itâso, for the outside world, it looked like a very quick move. We had been studying socialism for a long time. Letâs remember, Baraka was in Cuba in 1960.
FELIPE LUCIANO: Thatâs right.
KOMOZI WOODARD: Right? He was in Cuba in 1960. Thereâs a funny story about this. Baraka at the time was a wild kind of a party person. And so, the party was always in his room, and everybodyâs drinking in the room. So, they came with the bill for the drinks, and Baraka takes it and says, “Charge it to the revolution.” So thatâsâHarold Cruse told me that story.
AMY GOODMAN: Talk about the effect of Cuba on LeRoi Jones, Amiri Baraka, the effect on his poetry, the “Cuba Libre” essay.
KOMOZI WOODARD: Itâs a transformative moment. Itâs similar to Paul Robesonâs transformation in the Spanish Civil War, when he, you know, had to take the side against slavery. Baraka is confronted by young poets from Latinâall over Latin America who are politically engaged. And because of the Cold War, we separated culture, art and politics. Right? And he saw that they basically embarrassed him and said, “How could you not be involved in the struggle for your people?” And so, he came back, and I think thatâs when he joined a lot of these things and started really thinking seriously. And I think, you know, the cultural thing was whatâabout the Cold War, the Cold War really made it taboo for black people to express their real feelings.
FELIPE LUCIANO: Yes, sir.
KOMOZI WOODARD: So, even as a poet, I think he was struggling against this, isâyou know, this wholeâhow can Iâwhy am I not permitted to have my own feelings in my poetry? Like the Cold War kind of deadened that. So, it both culturally and politically came out of that, and I think seeing the Latin American example was very powerful for him.
AMY GOODMAN: I also wanted to follow up on Juanâs question about South Africa and Mandela. I mean, Adhimu, Larry Hamm, you went from Newark, the youngest member of the school board, deeply influenced by Amiri Baraka, named by himâ
LARRY HAMM: Deeply.
AMY GOODMAN: You go on to Princeton, and you become a leader of the anti-apartheid movement there, taking on the corporationâthatâs Princeton Universityâand their investments.
LARRY HAMM: Yes, yes.
AMY GOODMAN: Talk about Nelson Mandela and how Amiri Baraka influenced you and the similarities there.
LARRY HAMM: Well, the whole struggle that was going on in Africa, I became acquainted with through Amiri Baraka. Baraka had and the Committee for a Unified Newark had several headquarters and properties in Newark. One, of course, was known as 502 High Street. That was Hekalu Umoja, the House of Unity. Thatâs where I first had my first meeting with Amiri Baraka, on the third floor of that building. But right next to Hekalu Umoja was his store. They had a store, Nyumba Ya Ujamaa, the House of Cooperative Economics. And it was at Nyumba Ya Ujamaa that I bought my first books about Kwame Nkrumah. I bought Return to the Source, AmĂlcar Cabral. All the revolutionary leaders from there, they soldâ
AMY GOODMAN: Kwame Nkrumah, the founding president of Ghana.
LARRY HAMM: Thatâs right, of Ghana. All the revolutionary leaders of Africa, Baraka had their books on sale there. My first Malcolm X record, I bought from Nyumba Ya Ujamaa. So, the struggle in South Africa, although I had heard about it, it was really through Baraka, and not just the books. Every Sunday, Baraka and the Committee for a Unified Newark had something called “soul session.”
FELIPE LUCIANO: Yes, I remember.
LARRY HAMM: At 3:00 on Sundays. And I believe they were first at Hekalu Umoja, and then when he got Hekalu Mwalimu, which is Temple of the Teacher, 13 Belmont Avenue, the soul sessions were there. And thatâs where Baraka would really teach, you know, teach politics. You know, thatâs how I felt as a young person. I donât know how the other fellows felt. But as a young person, I was sitting there in awe. And every Sunday, he would talk about the struggles here at home, he would talk about the struggles in Africa, you know, and he would teach us. And it was there that I first really learned about the struggle in South Africa.
So, when I got to Princeton, I was already a member. I had been on the school board. I was accepted at Princeton and went to Princeton in 1971. But like Baraka, I left Princeton to do my three-year term on the school board, and then returned back to Princeton. So I returned back with a much higher level of political consciousness. So, it wasâ
AMY GOODMAN: Were you there around the time of Michelle Obama?
LARRY HAMM: I was there long before Michelle Obama. The second timeâI graduated from Princeton, finally, in 1978. But the struggle in South Africa began to intensify, and our first campaign at Princeton was to get the banks at Princeton on Nassau Street to stop selling the Krugerrand. The Krugerrand was the gold coin that South Africa was using to raise a lot of money. And then, you know, we began the struggle for disinvestment, which hadâfor divestment, which had broken out on other campuses even before Princeton, at Stanford and other places. In fact, the first event that we had, we didnât evenâit wasnât even an ANC. This is where theâIâm still influenced by the black nationalist movement.
JUAN GONZĂLEZ: The PAC. Thatâs the PAC.
LARRY HAMM: The firstâthe first representative we brought to Princeton was from the PAC.
JUAN GONZĂLEZ: Right.
LARRY HAMM: The Pan Africanist Congress. We brought him first, so we had a kind of relationship with the Pan African Congress, and then we met Prexy Nesbitt and other people from the American Committee on Africa. And then we began to move closer to them, and we brought delegates from the ANC. We brought delegates from ZANU, Tapson Mawere, from ZANU. So we were not just talking about divestment, Princeton divesting; we were educating the students on the campus about the anti-colonial struggles, including the struggle against apartheid on that campus. So, like I said, I came back to Princeton with a consciousness that lent itself toward that activity.
AMY GOODMAN: Weâre talking about the life and legacy of the poet, of the activist, of Amiri Baraka, who died on Thursday in Newark, New Jersey, Newark where he was born. I want to go back to a clip of Amiri Baraka speaking in June 2004 at the first National Hip-Hop Political Convention right there in Newark. He talked about the need to defeat President George W. Bush and much more.
AMIRI BARAKA: I donât have a whole lot of time. I just want to say something. Why is this in Newark? Why is it in Newark? 1970, the Black and Puerto Rican Convention brought the blacks and Puerto Ricans together. If you think electoral politics doesnât make any difference, youâre being shortsighted. If youâre not registered to vote, youâre a fool. If you donât vote, youâre worse than a fool.
Why conventions? Because we have to organize ourselves because we are slaves. We want conventions so we can build a stable national political organization, not because we are separatists or because we know we are not separate. We must elect our own candidates. For instance, why do you think this is in Newark? The Gary convention was where? Gary. Why? Because it had a black mayor and black police chief. This is here because, of all these cities, Newark since 1970 has had a continuous political power, exercised by, well, at least Negroes, if they ainât black.
But the point is this: Black Power is not paradise; it is a higher form of struggle. Once you organize yourself and elect people that look like you or represent your interests in your town, then youâre going to have to fight with them. Nobody is telling you that this is all. Thatâs why Iâm saying, Iâd rather beat Bush than talk bad about my man. You understand? Iâd rather beat Bush and you say, “[bleep] Bush” and “[bleep] Kerry.” Yeah, thatâs good. “[Bleep] Bush” and “[bleep] Kerry.” But youâve got to beat Bush, or you wonât even be here to fight Kerry. You understand? You have to beat Bush. Look, donât nobodyâlook here, you might be the strongest person in the world, but if you get sick, youâve got diarrhea or some other trots, but if you get sick like that, youâre going to have to stop the sickness. Bush is killing us. You understand? He is transforming this society into fascism. You know what fascism is, really, the ruleâthe naked rule by force. The naked rule by force.
Now, what we were saying, Malcolm X said the ballot or the bullet. Charles Barron, my man, he was in the Black Panthers; I was in the Congress of African Peopleâunderstand?âwho, when we got old enough to get our heads beat long enough, decided, just like Malcolm X told me the month before he died, and just like Martin Luther King told me the week before he died, in my house, said, “What we must have, Brother Baraka, is a united front.” We must build that united front, no matter whether youâre the Panthers, the cultural nationalists, whether you believe in rap or whether you believe in hip-hop, whether youâre a Muslim or a Christian, or a vegetarian, or you donât even know what you is. You understand what Iâm saying? We have got to put that together first to do what? To beat Bush. Thatâs the key link. But the overall theme has to be to fight for a peopleâs democracy.
AMY GOODMAN: That was Amiri Baraka speaking in June 2004 at the first National Hip-Hop Political Convention in Newark, New Jersey. And, Felipe Luciano, that was pretty controversial, as he was pushing people to vote at that time.
FELIPE LUCIANO: Considering his former cronies, who hated electoral politics, who felt buoyed by what he had said 20 years before. Why should we invest in a white, imperialist system, institutionalized racism, not to mention personal? Why should we invest? Why should we participate in a process that doesnât respect us? His position was, if you are here, if you call yourself American, then you have to participate. And youâre paying taxes, arenât you? You might as well. Staying out of this system is self-destructive and self-defeating. His sonâand we should add that one of the great legacies of Amiri and Amina are the progressive children.
LARRY HAMM: Right.
FELIPE LUCIANO: All of his kids, Obalaji, Amiri, all of them, are incredible. We should also add that in spite of the sacrifices that he madeâhis daughter was killed.
LARRY HAMM: Yes.
FELIPE LUCIANO: His sons were beaten. He was constantly threatened, not only by Imperiale at that time, but by the Mob in Newark. He was constantlyâthe FBI called him the father of pan-Africanism. Itâs amazing that they didnât do a COINTELPRO operation, though, Juanâand we know what happened with the Panthers with respect to that.
LARRY HAMM: Do we know that they didnât?
FELIPE LUCIANO: We donât know that they didnât. But it was amazing how many leftist allies, formerâor “allies” in quotesâwere against him because he decided to advocate for an electoralâelectoral participation in which we could defeat, with a united front, Bush. By the way, Juan had talked about this years before, before I had gotten to it.
LARRY HAMM: Could I just tellâ
AMY GOODMAN: Larry Hamm.
LARRY HAMM: I read a pamphlet by Baraka in 1971, written in 1970, and I believe it was titled Toward a Pan-Africanist Party.
KOMOZI WOODARD: Oh, yeah.
FELIPE LUCIANO: Yes.
LARRY HAMM: And as early as then, in that pamphlet, Baraka talks about running black candidates for president. He actually laid out in that pamphlet the whole process that became the Gary convention process, in that pamphlet called Toward a Pan-Africanist Congress. And thatâs what Gary was supposed to lead to. It was supposed to lead to the creation of a black political party. Delegates were elected to the National Convention. The National Convention elected delegates to the National Black Assembly. The National Black Assembly elected delegates to the National Black Political Council, which met in between the meetings of the Assembly. And that was supposed to be the beginning of a party. But, you know, Felipe raised COINTELPRO, and Iâm waiting for other documentsâI mean, Iâm not personally waiting, but I think we all are waiting, as we do wait, for documents to become unclassified, so we can find out additional information.
KOMOZI WOODARD: Well, we do have the one document. We have the one document. The FBI targeted Barakaâ
AMY GOODMAN: Komozi Woodard.
KOMOZI WOODARD: âbecause he was for unity.
FELIPE LUCIANO: Yes.
LARRY HAMM: Right.
KOMOZI WOODARD: Right? And they said he was unifying all the different ranks. And they gave the Panther formula: “Pay special attention to him. Disruption, disoriention.” Now, Barakaâs larger vision during that period of time was a Bandung West. We had been in contact with the Native American movement, the Chicano movement La Raza Unida, the August 29th Movement.
FELIPE LUCIANO: Yes.
KOMOZI WOODARD: All the different groups had said they wanted to have an anti-racist conference in 1975. If you know what happened in 1974, there was so much turbulence, we said, “OK, weâve got too muchâweâve founded four or five different organizations in 1974. Letâs put it off âtil 1975.” COINTELPRO came at the Young Lords at that time with a vengeance.
FELIPE LUCIANO: Yes.
KOMOZI WOODARD: Young Lords was one of the most important groups in that period of time. And everything tumbled.
AMY GOODMAN: Which Juan and Felipe were a part.
KOMOZI WOODARD: So, thatâs what happened. But the COINTELPRO was very active. And particularly, letâs understand how important unity is. The crime was unity.
FELIPE LUCIANO: Yes.
AMY GOODMAN: Letâs play some footage from the streets of Newark in 1968. This is Amiri Baraka, shot by the renowned French director, Jean-Luc Godard. It appeared in the film One P.M., or One Parallel Movie.
AMIRI BARAKA: Black art, black magic the turn of the Earth black art, black magic the turn of the Earth the Earth turns in blackness and blackness is the perfection of the Earth turning blackness is the perfection of the Earth turning black art, black magic the turn of the Earth and blackness is the perfection of the Earth turning the perfection of the man the perfection of God black art, black art, black art.
AMY GOODMAN: And that is Amiri Baraka actually in the streets in 1968. For our listening audience who canât actually see him playing, itâs Amiri himself. Soniaâoh, Juan, sorry.
JUAN GONZĂLEZ: Yeah, no, I wanted to ask Komozi to follow up on what you were talking about. Youâve done a study of Amiriâs influence, and one of the things I think you mentioned was that there are many unpublished manuscripts that he hasâhe produced, that you saw at one point. Do you think thereâs a lot more work yet to come out that heâs already done?
KOMOZI WOODARD: Well, yeah, when I was a kid in 1974, I went down in his basement, and he had 40 to 60 transfiles of unpublished plays, television treatments, short stories, the whole nine yards. So thereâsâyou have to realize that part of the consequence he paid for being political is he was censored.
LARRY HAMM: Amen.
KOMOZI WOODARD: So, thereâs going to be a renaissance of Barakaâs work coming out, I would imagine, sometime soon.
AMY GOODMAN: Sonia, before we wrap upâ
SONIA SANCHEZ: Yes.
AMY GOODMAN: You and Amiri Baraka celebrated your 75th birthdays together.
SONIA SANCHEZ: Right, right.
AMY GOODMAN: So, talk about what he means, as you move on and you continue your poetry and your haikus and your political activism.
SONIA SANCHEZ: I think what I am doing, and people in my generation, what weâre doing, is that weâre remembering that thereâs always something to pull onto, to hold onto. I couldnât sleep last night, and so I went back to some of the things that I had written down that Baraka had said. And one of the things that he wrote is thatâhe said, “We learned that this is the function of art,” he said, because he made a comment. We are “told that Osiris, the Djali, raises the sun each day with song and verse.” He said, “We learned that this is the function of artâto give us light, to let us fly, to let us imagine and dream, but also to create, in the real world.” And that is what our dear brother did.
He said, “Iâyou know, Iâve got to be true to people.” He said, “Iâve got to be writing something that people can understand, but at the same time,” he said, “itâs got to be profound.” And thatâs the beauty of that. He said, “Iâm going to give you something. Iâm going to take you a little higher, and youâre going to understand it.” Itâs profound. Itâs deeply deep, you know? “Come on. Listen to what Iâm saying.” And thatâs what we did. And he said, “You ainât going to find it on the 6:00 news, either.” And you donât find it on the 6:00 news.
My dear sister, I canâI can never imagine this Earth, you know, beforeâwithout Brother Baraka, without Sister Maya, Sister Toni, Sister Alice, you know, Sister Angela. I canât imagine this Earth without Haki, because these are all the people thatâyou know, there are times that we argued together. I listened to the brothers there. Some of them were in the organizations. Some of them were his children. But I was a temporaryâI was a contemporary. I mean, I was the same age. So we fought, you know, But what I want young people to understand, we fought. We had, you know, battles, where I said things. He said, “I donât know what youâre doing with that old haiku. You know, youâre talking about peace all the time, you know?” So we fought.
But the next time we saw each other, we bowed and we hugged, because, you see, itâs one thing to struggle, you know; itâs another thing to love and respect and to be a part of that struggle. You know, I listen to young people talk about, “Donât be hatinâ on me.” No, the brother wasnât hating on me or anybody. He was struggling with ideas and philosophy. We all struggled together. And sometimes we were not on the same page. The thing that we must understand is that we loved each other. The young people must understand that we loved each other, that we knew the struggle was a concerted effort for us to change this world. Yes, we went out and said to people, “Youâve got to vote.” You know, many of us didnât vote for a while, but at some point we understood we had to get rid of the Bush, you know, people and people like Bush. But we understood also, too, that when we electedâgot elected this black president, that we still had to struggle with him and with the country, because it is the country, you know, that we are in struggle with. And that is so important.
So, yes, my dear sister and my brothers, you know, the thing about this dear brother, our brother, is that we understood his movement. He was like Du Bois. He changed. And people would say to me, “Well, you know, Baraka has changed again.” I said, “Heâs like Du Bois.” I said, “When he got more information, he evolved.” You know, this is what we do. He canât say the same thing he said from the 1960s. Iâm not saying the same thing I said in the 1960s, because if I were saying that, you should say, “Somethingâs wrong, Sonia.” And people would have said, “Somethingâs wrong, Baraka.” We had to evolve. We had to change, because we traveled. We saw people. We met people. We learned. We studied. We were in the Schaumburg. We read books. We evolved, and we learned different philosophies, you know, and as a consequence, we changed. Art is change, my dear sister and brothers. And Baraka taught us that this thing called art is change.
AMY GOODMAN: Weâre going to end with the words of Amiri himself, but I did want to ask about the use of the N-word. Weâre very loath to play it on Democracy Now!, but in some of Amiriâs poetryâmaybe, Komozi, if you could talk about that?
KOMOZI WOODARD: Well, I think language is very important to Baraka, and he was basically trying to make an art form out of the language that people actually speak in the streets. And so, youâll always hear whatâwhatever people are saying, he would take that and then represent it in his poetry.
AMY GOODMAN: So weâre going to end with two different times in the history of this country and in Amiriâs life. This is Amiri Baraka delivering a poem about New Orleans. Itâs September 2005 at a benefit for victims of Hurricane Katrina, recorded at the Bowery Poetry Club in New York City.
AMIRI BARAKA: Da dada dada da da da dada da dada Bye, Bye, Blackbird Where are we? Here, television Stare back through us in history clothes You know, television Wink the blood out us Sit âem in a hangar a coliseum, see âem Is they being lynched more hiply, huh with water? Thatâs a twist In coliseums, Superdomes, like Rome Kill the only Christians this land has known TV, youâre helping too We hip to you That [bleep] youâre advertising Please send it to them niggas If they could only figure out how to grab you and [bleep] by the throat so yâall could no longer emote them anti-life window dressing for the same devil bloods learned about on their mamaâs knee and then come out the house can walk by theyself and find out rich and stupid white boys is their leader and they bleed her They both in hoods And one is all blood One just got blood on their mask Donât ask where it come from Look at your chest Itâs best to find out who they stabbed most recent They is not decent You can cry or shoot a gun Thatâs the only fun left for the bereft of all but evil titles and character assassination They see you as if you was not beyond the proclamated your so-called unslaveness overstated The Superdome you starve in now your home and dukes up the hill can rant and rave like naked crackers in a cave how low you is, they write If you wasnât so low youâd still have a real place to live They high with their own lie and still got slaveryâs cash their main stash to keep you underfoot Does it matter what they say? You know the story Your pain is your own doing Itâs true because youâre so in love with you you wonât kill them Youâd rather hum and sing them hymns and wonder if heaven is real as being poor We hope it is and know it ainât This is hell like that Superdome smell like the crying child like the darkness fell of things gone wild It was dangerous there even before the storm The only clarity is the lack of charity which the Bible says is them that cannot love who have it not and nobody want it anyway just I equal I which is translated from political French or self-consciousness from philosophical German Yet the humanness of them that rule is abstract as the food and rescue they send They is made and rich from sin They is yet neither women nor men but some kind of arrogant carnivores who pretend they is civilized Best this is realized before their actual teeth cut in your actual flesh Yet it has That mean you still donât know who is them so-called rulers twelve inches of wood with line printed on them to measure their power A ruler cannot, do not, will not have a soul unless itself is human or da dada dada da da ba dada dada da Bye, Bye, Blackbird.
JUAN GONZĂLEZ: Amiri Baraka in September 2005 at a benefit for survivors of Hurricane Katrina. And we end with Amiri Baraka in February 2009 speaking at the Sanctuary for Independent Media in Troy, New York. He read a poem called “Obama Poem,” while Rob Brown played the saxophone.
AMIRI BARAKA: Those who canât understand what they did and canât understand who they are are then lost in the moss lost in a discourse uncorrected, misdirected, uninspected, unprotected never seen or known then what they, we and us all yâall so then be unknown to most people except the hosts who told them they ainât who they is so insist they is who they ainât Itâs quaint Just add a little pain and say the same brain is the insane and not know who you, who he, who we blind like in Spanish cannot see sĂ sĂ as if race was a waste It is Horse number three ainât none of we And class, was it true? Others the same as you? But on your head, if youâre upside down they underground Thatâs cool, itâs romantic you get frantic Their answer is antic like the guy who crawl up out the bottle and want to know if you got his bubble but pleased to make you understand you is another breeding space who got their own time and place come this far in a minute ainât even out of breath come this far so soon donât know yourself drunk some coon swoon A hundred forty-five years thatâs a beginning again Forty-four equal eight Start in â09, equals the time and itâs 10, one again come so far so quick You come so far so quick they forget to tell you you wasnât just slow you wasnât just uneducated you was slick You wasnât just all heart you was also very smart How you think you was drug over here in chains next thing we know youâre the president [bleep] You think you could survive amongst this hostile tribe and not be smart plus tough with all that heart? Those who dug Lester Young would understand Whatâs happeninâ Prez?
AMY GOODMAN: That was Amiri Baraka in February of 2009, speaking at the Sanctuary for Independent Media in Troy, New York, reading the poem called “Obama Poem” while Rob Brown played the sax.
And we want to thank our guests, who have remembered here today Amiri BarakaâFelipe Luciano, poet, activist, journalist and writer, chairman of the Young Lords; Komozi Woodard, who wrote the book, A Nation Within a Nation: Amiri Baraka and Black Power Politics; Larry Hamm, or Adhimu Chunga, chairman of the Peopleâs Organization for Progress; and in Philadelphia, Sonia Sanchez, the renowned writer, poet, playwright and activistâas together we remember the life of Amiri Baraka. He died on January 9th, 2014, in Newark, New Jersey, where he was born. Iâm Amy Goodman, with Juan GonzĂĄlez. Thanks so much for joining us..
re: “Marvel’s Agents of SHIELD”: I Still Don’t Understand…….
…..what the show is, and what it’s doing.
The Golden Globes! Still Chuckling From……
Backed-Up Book Reviews: M.K. Asante, Randall Kennedy, Devorah Heitner and Geoff Wisner
I got tired of waiting for a certain website to print these. I hope it still does.
The reviews are in the posting style of the website, not the one I usually use here.
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EAT, SEETHE, HATE
A Young Filmmaker Recalls His Caged Bird Years
Â
I got so much trouble on my mind/
Refuse to lose
–Chuck D, âWelcome to the Terrordomeâ, from âFear of a Black Planet,â 1990
Â
In the 1990s, while M.K. Asanteâs world of childhood privilege fell apart and he began a lonely, angry, abandoned adolescence with âbroken glass in my mind,â a smattering of Baby Boomer Black journalists began to write memoirs. Most talked about their personal struggles, and almost all of them had most of the same elements: a missing or abusive father, problems on The Street, jail time (or the threat of it), and discovering the power of the written word. All of them had the most important narrative element: a job at a prestigious white newspaper that challenged them on many personal levels. (One writer, a Black journalist known to be a contrarian in a way that Zora Neale Hurston would be proud of, derided the new sub-genre early on, calling them âmodern-day slave narrativesâ and attacking their hard-won Black middle-class status at The Washington Post or some equivalent as, frankly, a dubious kind of freedom.) All these memoirs, however powerful, gave us, in effect, something relatively new back then: âNative Sonâ with a âhappyâ ending: think âThe Cosby Showâ with dabs of irony and righteous Black anger.
If Asanteâan award-winning filmmaker and a tenured professor at Morgan State University, all under the age of 35âhas written a post-modern âslave narrativeâ with his brand new memoir âBuckâ(Spiegel & Grau), he has mastered, usurped and updated the genre for the 21st century. (Public disclosure: I was a fulltime Lecturer at Morgan from 2007 until this year, and Asante and I were colleagues in the universityâs College of Liberal Arts.) The poet tells his story of Cracked Up and Drive-By Ghetto America in a way that combines expressive beauty with the hard-driving beat found in any urban nightclub on Friday and Saturday nights. He narrates a simple yet gripping chronicle of his response to the abandonment of his famous academic father (â[His] bagâs been everywhere; it spends more time with Pops than I doâ), the mental illnesses of his mother and sister, and the imprisonment of his older brother.
His slow descent into his own hell is at once touching, funny, frightening and disturbing, as ghetto stories often are. A sensitive Philadelphia teenager becomes a dropout, thug and drug dealer, testing his and societyâs restraints. âDecisions lead to options, options to choices, choices to freedom,â writes the author. âWe all design our own reality, write our own script, build our own houseâŚor prisonâŚor coffin.â Like a sort of male, real-life Precious in âPush,â he is rescued by, among other things, words and the caring alternative-school teachers who encourage him to explore them. When the smoke clears, it does so in tear-jerking, Afrocentric-yet-family-values ways that will fit well if the rumors about this book being considered as an upcoming Jaden Smith film vehicle are real.
The only complaint is that sometimes the power of this truly inspired work often folds in on itself. The deeper symbolism and detail of both his life and the lives around him occasionally seem to be sacrificed for speed and style. (Using excerpts from his motherâs diary gives the work more heft, but not the amount of depth needed.) The hiphop lyrics sprinkled throughout, for example, are used to quickly describe a scene or a feeling. As a kind of punchy punctuation, they help the reader get (to) the point quickly, but perhaps that is not the best way to allow the lifeâeven one of a reckless 1990s teenâto marinate, and ultimately resonate, in a memoir.
âBuckâ may not be more than the sum of its often-flashy parts, but it is undeniably powerful. With this, his fourth book, M.K. Asante joins the post-modern pantheon of, arguably, the greats of todayâs Black male nonfiction writers under 55: Jabari Asim, Ta-Nehisi Coates (who, by the way, also has a fantastic memoir that covers some similar ground), and William Jelani Cobb. âBuckâ and Asante demand to be taken seriously as literary on their own lyrical, painful, b-boy terms, and they exceedingly succeed.
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THEIR COUNTRY, AFRICA:
New Anthology of African Autobios and Memoirs Show Continentâs Diversity
There is more, much more, to African writing than the literary holy trinity of Wole Soyinka, Chinua Achebe (now an Ancestor) and Ngugi wa Thiong’o. There are stories about women, about members of the LGBT community, about lives in Northern Africa, about childhood stories that donât all start with growing up in huts and end with the colonial powers taking their communityâs land, leaving a nation of victims. âThe problem with stereotypesâŚparticularly in literature,â postulated Nigerian writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, âis that one story can become the only story: stereotypes straightjacket our ability to think in complex ways.â
Adichieâs essay, âAfrican âAuthenticity,ââ is part of this book, edited by Geoff Wisner, a White, Brooklyn-based writer who has demonstrated a serious commitment to African literature. It is billed as the first anthology of African memoirs and autobiographies. Skipping past the irony of this situation, Wisner wisely gets out of the way so that Africans can speak for themselves.
The writing in this collectionânovelists contribute from all across the continent and autobiographies, or speeches of, or conversations with, major 20th century African political leaders such as Steve Biko and Kwame Nkrumah show their necessityâhas been translated from many (mostly colonial) languages, so that English speakers can sample the rich diversity of the continentâs writing.
Wisnerâs selections emphasize personal identity, so that stereotypes can be shattered. Dagmawi Woubshet writes about his sexuality while growing up in Ethiopia. Many of the childhood talesâand there are many, perhaps too manyâshare the universal feelings of pain and pleasure that situate the reader into the worlds of the writers, whether male, female, Muslim, Christian or indigenous religion. âI took for granted the fact that my friends came in all shapes and colours,â remembered James R. Mancham of his growing up in the small East African island of Seychelles, âthat a Seychellois could be blond with blue eyes or as Black as night, or any shade in between.â Not surprisingly, the personal evolves into the political in many of the excerpts, with the CIA and the colonial powers firmly placed in the background.
The anthology is heavy with writers recalling their empowerment through writing. âI had always told stories,â declared Laila Lalami, a Moroccan journalist and novelist, âbut now I wanted to be heard.â Wisner ensures that the continentâs multi-hyphenated rainbow of nonfiction writing, old and new, at all edges of the continental compass, gets that chance.
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Randall Kennedy, one of Black Americaâs top legal scholar stars, makes the politically difficult defense of affirmative action in this time of White and Black conservative retrenchment. Kennedy sketches the legal history of affirmative action, from its origins in the days of the Kennedy administration and implementation by Presidents Johnson and Nixon to the battles against it in the courts, including the Supreme Court, from the late 1970s until the present, including the views of President Obama, arguably the policyâs most powerful beneficiary. âWhether it is good or bad depends on local conditionsâthe character of the societyâs needs, the relative strength of those benefited and disadvantaged, the plausibility of alternative vehicles for reform,â writes the author, using a scholarly reasonableness almost bordering on neutrality. But one thing is clear, he argues: there will always be vocal and organized opposition to social resourcesânotably jobs and university slotsâgoing from one group to another, no matter who they are and how they were, or are, oppressed.
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WHEN THE TV WENT BLACKÂ
In this post-modern, sci-fi age where millions of Black Americans (and Africans, and Caribbeans, andâŚ) can make youtube videos of themselves discussing Trayvon Martin and trend on Twitter about Harry Belafonte hating on Jay Z, itâs becoming more and more difficult to remember yesteryearâs quaint and analog six-channel, black-and-white TV world that began, one hour a week at a time in the late 1960s and early 1970s, to emphasize the Black for the first time. And the power those local and national political and cultural images carried, reverberating in Black communities, back in the days when âkeeping it realâ was referred to as âtelling it like it is!â
Devorah Heitner, a White feminist media scholar, has documented much of this period as it played out on the East Coast, and has done a superb job. âBlack Power TVâ (Duke University Press) is the first comprehensive look at Black public affairs television programs. The groundbreaking shows discussed are Bostonâs âSay Brother,â Brooklynâs âInside Bedford-Stuyvesantâ (look at this link to see Roxie Roker, Lenny Kravitzâs mom and Helen Willis, the neighbor married to the White guy on âThe Jeffersons,â before she became a network sitcom star), and the national âBlack Journalâ and âSoul!â (imagine a âSoul Trainâ for Black nationalists). These programs did something truly evolutionary: they presented Black people on television from the points of view of Black people themselves.
These programs, most of them weekly that aired for an hour on weekends, were created and aired as a response to the 1960s summer urban insurrections sparked by racist police brutality, poverty, a sense of invisibility and, in 1968, the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. Writes Heitner: âThese programs created a space for publicizing internal debate in Black communities, negotiating between a lively mix of strategies proposed by Black leaders during the Black Power era, from about 1965 through the early 1970s, including armed revolution, electoral participation, economic self-help, cultural nationalism, community policing, affirmative action, collective agriculture, separatism, and other strategies.â They were a way for all races, all viewers, to see and understand the Black Power and Arts movements up close, in the comfort of their own homes. In which direction would Black America headâchaos or community? Dashiki or business suit, or both? Tune in next week!
The author correctly dissects and describes how undiluted Black history, Black culture and Black anger shook the conservative and very White boob tube, thanks to the work of White foundations, White television executives, Black street activists and Black community-minded broadcasters. She is unafraid to peer inside an almost-forgotten period of television history in order to explain the funky and the radical, catching the tenor of the time. Tavis Smiley, Black Americaâs Larry King, owes his whole television career to the brothers and sisters in Heitnerâs book. Right On!









