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More African Immigrants Moving to the U. S.

Feb. 26, 2017

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - More Immigrants from Africa are calling the United States “Home Sweet Home,” according to Pew Research Center, which based in Washington, D.C.

In 2015, 2.1 million African immigrants were living in the U.S., up from 881,000 in 2000 and 80,000 in 1970, according to the report “African Immigrant Population in U.S. Steadily Climbs,” which was published February 14. This latest report is an update from an earlier one published in November 2015.

Most of the immigrants are from Nigeria, followed by Ethiopia, Egypt, Ghana, Kenya, South Africa and Somalia.

Immigration from Africa can be traced to the Refugee Act, which made it easier to flee conflict-ridden countries, like Somalia.

Africa accounted for 4.8 percent of the nation’s immigrant population, according to Pew.

“Moonlight” Wins Academy Award for Best Picture

Feb. 27, 2017

'Moonlight' Wins Academy Award for Best Picture 

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Viola Davis

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Mahershala Ali

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from NorthStarNewsToday.com

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - The sun shined on “Moonlight,” which won the Oscar for Best Picture during Sunday’s night’s 89th Academy Awards. Actress Faye Dunaway, who presented the award for best picture, announced that “La La Land” had won before realizing she made a mistake.

She then announced that “Moonlight” had won the Oscar for best picture. The cast of “Moonlight” ran to the stage, hugging each other as they celebrated their surprising win. Blacks took home a record five Academy Awards. Winners included Barry Jenkins and Tarell Alvin McCraney for best adapted screenplay for “Moonlight,” a film about the coming of age story of a boy growing to manhood under brutal circumstances in Miami. Mahershala Ali won an Oscar for best supporting actor for “Moonlight.”

Viola Davis won the Oscar for best supporting actress for her role in “Fences.”  Davis is the first Black woman actress to win an Oscar, Emmy and Tony award. Mahershala Ali is the first Muslim to win an Oscar. Ezra Edelman’s film “O.J.:  Made in America,” won the Oscar for the best documentary.

Trump Fails to Push for Racial Unity He Promised in Inaugural Address By Hazel Trice Edney

Editor's Note: This story was updated at 10:20 AM on Feb. 21, following President Trump's visit to the African American History Museum.

Feb. 20, 2017

Trump Fails to Push for Racial Unity He Promised in Inaugural Address
By Hazel Trice Edney

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President Donald Trump takes oath of office Jan. 20 after which he promised to be president of "all Americans". PHOTO: The White House

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - In his inaugural address on January 20, President Donald J. Trump quoted the Bible’s premier passage on unity. Yet, when it comes to race – America’s biggest divide – the President has missed nearly every opportunity to make a major impact or statement to that end. This week, Trump visited the Smithsonian's new National Museum of African American History and Culture in commemoration of Black History Month. Yet, in the month leading up to Tuesday's tour of the museum, he has missed major opportunities to show empathy or understanding of the African American struggle for justice.

“The Bible tells us, ‘how good and pleasant it is when God’s people live together in unity.’ We must speak our minds openly, debate our disagreements honestly, but always pursue solidarity. When America is united, America is totally unstoppable,” he said in front of the millions watching by television around the world and gathered on the Washington Mall for his inauguration. “It is time to remember that old wisdom our soldiers will never forget: that whether we are black or brown or white, we all bleed the same red blood of patriots, we all enjoy the same glorious freedoms, and we all salute the same great American Flag. And whether a child is born in the urban sprawl of Detroit or the windswept plains of Nebraska, they look up at the same night sky, they fill their heart with the same dreams, and they are infused with the breath of life by the same almighty Creator.”

He continued, “So to all Americans, in every city near and far, small and large, from mountain to mountain, and from ocean to ocean, hear these words: You will never be ignored again. Your voice, your hopes, and your dreams, will define our American destiny. And your courage and goodness and love will forever guide us along the way.”

After visiting the African American History Museum, the President said in remarks, "We have to fight bigotry, intolerance and hatred." Then he promised to heal the divide. Yet, so far, he has missed nearly every opportunity to impact gross racial disunity across the nation, to attempt to heal racial divides or articulate a way forward. That includes his failure to publically apologize for his insistence that then President Barack Obama, was not a ligitimate citizen of the U.S. - even after Obama's citizenship was proven.

  • Most recently, on February 17, President Trump stood before a vastly White cheering crowd in Charleston South, S.C., ground zero for one of the worst domestic terrorist attacks in U. S. history and failed to acknowledge or even mention it. That attack occurred on ­­­­­­June 17, 2015 when 21-year-old White supremacist Dylann Roof, brutally murdered nine Black people who had just led him in Bible study and prayer inside the historic “Mother Emanuel” African American Episcopal Church. Included in the slaughtered was the pastor, S.C. State Sen. Clementa Pinckney. Trump was in Charleston for the unveiling of a Boeing 787 Dreamliner aircraft. But the gravity of the Roof attack sent shock waves around the nation so strong that the S. C. legislature, at the behest of then Republican Gov. Nikki Haley – now Trump’s ambassador to the United Nations - finally agreed to remove the hateful Confederate Flag from the top of the State Capitol building. It was lowered and removed nearly a month after the attack. President Barack Obama delivered the Pinckney eulogy. On Dec. 15, a jury found Roof guilty of 33 counts of federal hate crimes and later sentenced him to death.
  • The Southern Poverty Law Center and the FBI have reported sharp increases in the rise of hate groups since Trump's campaign and election; plus a spike in hate crimes and threats predominately against Blacks, Jews and Muslims. Yet, President Trump has failed to speak directly to this issue.
  • On Feb. 1, President Trump held a Black History Month “listening session” with Black Republicans at the White House, which he described as “our little breakfast, our little get-together”. At the gathering, hosted by his White House public engagement assistant  Omarosa Manigault, Trump generally praised the works of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., abolitionist Frederick, Underground Railroad heroine Harriet Tubman, and civil rights martyr Rosa Parks, “and millions more Black Americans who made America what it is today. Big impact.” But, he mentioned nothing about the specific works of these civil rights leaders; nor the injustices and inequities that continue. Even while listing “the need for safer communities” more law enforcement, more jobs, better wages and better schools, Trump once again failed to say what he would do to deal with these issues, which have historically been exacerbated by racism and White supremacy. “I am proud to honor this heritage, and we’ll be honoring it more and more,” he said.

It was in this meeting that Reverend Darrell Scott, pastor of the New Spirit Revival Center in the Cleveland, in an apparent attempt to impress the President, said he’d been contacted by Chicago gang members, implied that they were Trump supporters and wanted to meet with the President about lowing the “body count”. Rev. Scott later confessed that what he’d said was false.

  • Perhaps most notable among missed opportunities are the people who Trump has selected as his chief advisors. While calling for America to unite across divisive political and racial lines, he has appointed Steve Bannon, former head of the alt-right, White supremacist voice Breitbart News, as a chief advisor and Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions as attorney general, a man avidly opposed by the civil rights community because of his past racism, including his reputation of embracing the Ku Klux Klan, a reputation that caused him to be rejected for a federal judgeship in 1986.
  • Meanwhile, another missed opportunity: President Trump has now offended the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) after he apparently ignored a letter sent to him from the CBC in January. The Jan. 19 “Dear Mr. President-elect” letter from CBC Chairman Cedric Richmond (D-La.) outlined ways the 49-member caucus would like to work with President Trump. During an East Room Press Conference Feb. 16, President Trump, in response to a question from long time White House Radio correspondent April Ryan about whether he will discuss his urban and inner city plans with the CBC, responded by asking her whether “they’re friends of yours” and whether she would set him up a meeting with them. Ryan quickly clarified that she is a reporter and does not set up meetings between politicians. CBC leaders later expressed that the President’s overture was disrespectful at best. It appears the meeting may take place between the CBC and the President in coming weeks.

The pending meeting with the CBC and an HBCU funding executive order said to be on the horizon are yet new opportunities to begin fulfilling his promise. Despite missed opportunities only a month into his presidency, in his official Black History Month proclamation, Trump indicates there may still be hope that he will press toward that racial unity and justice.

He wrote, “As we journey toward a stronger, more united Nation, let us use this commemoration of African American History Month to serve as a reminder of the need for meaningful dialogue and shared commitment to collective action that uplifts and empowers, as well as of the strength, ingenuity, and perseverance required of us in the years to come.”

 

 

 

 

NAACP Elects Leon W. Russell as New Chairman of the Board of Directors

Feb. 21, 2017

NAACP Elects Leon W. Russell as New Chairman of the Board of Directors
Chairman Roslyn M. Brock Steps Down After Seven Years

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New NAACP Chairman Leon Russell
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Roslyn Brock has stepped down as NAACP chairman after seven years. The board has elected her chairman-emeritus.

 

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from the NAACP

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - The NAACP board of directors has elected Leon W. Russell as the Chairman Board of Directors at its annual board meeting on February 18 in New York. Russell replaces Roslyn M. Brock, who decided to step down as chairman after seven years of leadership.

“I am honored to have served seven years as chairman of the nation’s most important civil rights group,” said Roslyn M. Brock, NAACP Chairman of the Board since 2010. “Leon W. Russell is a stalwart NAACP civil and human rights leader who is prepared to lead the NAACP into the future. Mr. Russell has been the chief architect in the development of the NAACP’s strategic plan and champion of its organizational policy and resolutions process. His commitment to the Association’s mission of protecting civil rights for all Americans remains unquestioned,” she added.

Chairman Brock who succeeded the late Chairman Emeritus and civil rights icon H. Julian Bond in 2010 has been a powerful advocate for social justice and the reintegration of young people into key aspects of the organizational planning and policy objectives. She served as the 4th woman and youngest individual elected to the position of chairman in the organization’s esteemed history. In honoring Ms. Brock’s leadership and 32-year volunteer service to the NAACP, she was elected Chairman Emeritus by the Board and presented with an NAACP Image Award. Chairman Emeritus Brock was also re-elected to a three year At-Large term on the Board of Directors and will support the new Board leadership with health care reform; youth leadership recruitment and engagement and external relations.

“Roslyn M. Brock will forever be noted in the legacy of the NAACP as a powerful and forward thinking leader. We are forever indebted to her contributions and unrelenting sagacity,” said NAACP President/CEO Cornell William Brooks. “I am proud to welcome Leon W. Russell as the new chairman of the NAACP board. His lifelong commitment to civil rights and human rights as a member of the NAACP and leader in the state of Florida, represent a rigorously solid foundation for taking the platform of social justice to greater heights. I cannot think of a better successor to the stewardship of the organization than Mr. Russell,” added President Brooks.

Russell most-recently served as vice chair of the board and has been a board member for over 27 years. He served as President of the Florida State Conference of Branches of the NAACP from 1996-2000, after serving for 15 years as the first vice president. He is also the former assistant secretary of the Board and the former director of the Office of Human Rights for Pinellas County Government, Clearwater, Florida from 1977-2012, where he was responsible for implementation of the county’s human rights and affirmation action ordinances.

“This is a most prestigious, yet humbling honor and one that escalates in importance as we move into a new era of increased challenges against civil and human rights,” said Chairman Russell. “I am indebted to the work and leadership of Chairman Emeritus Brock and President Brooks for inheriting a powerful organization that after 108 years, still remains the most relevant and influential civil rights organization in our nation. I assure you that I will keep watered the seeds of activism and social justice that the NAACP’s legacy spouts from,” he said.

The recipient of numerous civic awards and citations, Mr. Russell was also elected for two terms as the President of the International Association of Official Human Rights Agencies. The IAOHRA represents civil rights agencies from the US and abroad responsible for enforcing state and local civil rights laws and the promotion of intergroup relations. 

He is also a member of the International City Management Association; the National Forum for Black Public Administrators; the Board of Directors of the Children’s Campaign of Florida; past Board Member of the Pinellas Opportunity Council, past President, and Board Member of the National Association of Human Rights Workers; and the Blueprint Commission on Juvenile Justice with responsibility for recommending reforms to improve the juvenile justice system in the state of Florida. The 64-member board also elected Mississippi NAACP State President Derrick Johnson as the Board’s Vice-Chairman to replace Russell.

“I look forward to working in partnership with Chairman Russell in advancing the agenda of the Association” said Derrick Johnson. “It is an honor to serve the hardworking volunteers who sacrifice daily to make Democracy work for all.”  Johnson currently serves as state president of Mississippi NAACP and as executive director of One Voice Inc.  A former Mel King Community Fellow with Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Johnson also serves on the board of directors of the Congressional Black Caucus Institute, Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation, and as an adjunct professor at Tougaloo College.

Scholarship Fund Grants Empty Promises To Young Black Men by Chris B. Bennett

Feb. 19, 2017

Scholarship Fund Grants Empty Promises To Young Black Men
 By Chris B. Bennett

EDITOR'S NOTE: THIS ARTICLE HAS AN OPTIONAL CUT.  ALSO, SOME OF THE NAMES LISTED BELOW HAVE BEEN CHANGED TO PROTECT THE PRIVACY OF THE INDIVIDUALS AND THEIR FAMILIES. 

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from the Seattle Medium

 (TriceEdneyWire.com) - Nine months ago, 18-year-old Jason Smith was on top of the world. He had graduated from high school, been accepted to his college of choice and had just been awarded a scholarship worth up to $10,000 from Real Life 101, a non-profit organization out of Detroit, Michigan that provides college scholarships to African American males.

The unsolicited scholarship offer was a direct result of the 100 Black men gathering that took place in February of 2016 at Southshore Pre-K – 8 School in Seattle. The event, which drew national media attention, saw over 200 Black men greet students and provide them with encouragement as they entered the school building. Shortly after hearing about the event, Real Life 101 reached out to the school with an offer to fund scholarships for Black males who previously attended the school.

Jason’s mother, Lisa Smith, said that the scholarship was a blessing that could really help alleviate the financial pressures she and her husband were facing to pay for Jason and his older sister to go to college while maintaining a household of five children.

“It was like winning the lottery,” says Smith. “We all, Jason included, were very excited.”

According to Smith, the excitement didn’t last very long. She said they registered her son for college in September, and sent over all the paperwork requested by Real Life 101 in order for them to provide funding directly to the school. The family eventually received a notice from the school that the scholarship funds had not been received and that Jason’s registration was in jeopardy of being dropped. Smith reached out to Real Life 101 and was informed that the funding was not available. As a result, Smth was unable to enroll in school for the fall quarter.  

“We already knew that it was going to be a struggle,” said Smith. "In the Black community we have to do the best that we can for our children and education is what’s going to help them in the future, especially our young men.”

“It was really like pulling the carpet from under Jason’s feet because he was so excited to be going to school,” continued Smith. “We thought this was really happening, and it was a huge disappointment when the funds weren’t received.”

Unfortunately, Jason Smith was not alone.

Last year, Real Life 101 awarded scholarships to 10 African American males in Seattle. The awardees were supposed to receive: $10,000 in scholarship funding (payable at $2,000 per year for up to five years); a new laptop computer; a computer backpack and be paired with a certified Real Life Mentor while in the program. The young men did receive the computer and backpack as promised. However, to date - nearly one year after the initial announcement - the organization has failed to provide scholarship funds to the students who are currently enrolled in school, and instead of providing mentors the awardees were “directed” by the organization to “Find Your Own Personal Mentor.”

One of the awardees, William Jones, says that he has not received the scholarship funds yet, but he has received compensation for books from the organization totaling about $225. According to Jones, he was in jeopardy of losing his on-campus housing when he reached out to the organization during the fall semester about the status of his scholarship. Although they did not have the funds in place at the time, the organization did provide him with leads for other scholarships that he could apply for. Eventually, he took out student loans to help cover the remainder of his expenses for the semester.

According to Sid Taylor, founder and chairman of Real Life 101, for the first time in the organization’s 17-year history, they have not been able to secure the necessary funding for their scholarships. However, Taylor stresses that he and his staff are working diligently to secure funds so that they can fulfil the obligations that they have to the students.

“The funds did not come through like we had expected,” said Taylor. “Right now, we’re reaching out to all kinds of organizations, applying for grants so that we can try to back fill the stuff that we have in terms of the scholarships.”

“I’m going to continue to work at getting these funds to make sure that they receive the funds,” added Taylor. “I am still committed to finding these funds.”

However, many parents of the awardees are concerned that not only has the organization failed to provide scholarship funding for this year, it is also unclear, based on correspondence they received from Real Life 101, if the organization will be able to honor their financial commitment to the awardees at all.

On July 15, 2016, the organization sent out an email that read: “The funds allocated for the scholarships for the 2016/17 school year unfortunately have been delayed. We expect to receive the funding during the month of August; we will immediately notify you once the funds are ready for distribution. We apologize for this delay and we are extremely disappointed that we are unable to process scholarships at this time."

On July 21, 2016, another email was sent out that read: “The funding (from our donors) allocation process for the scholarships for the 2016/2017 school year is being finalized. We expect the process to be completed during the month of August. We will notify you immediately, once the process is completed..."

However, a very disheartening letter was sent from Real Life 101’s Founder and Chairman Sid E. Taylor on November 30, 2016 – well after the students started schoolThe letter read as follows:

“I want to inform you that I continue to work on securing the funding for your scholarships; unexpectedly and unfortunately, the funds have not been allocated as of yet. In light of this and the fact that some of you may have certain deadlines, I encourage you to work with your parents or others to secure student loans until you receive the Real Life funds.”

Tia Isabell, whose son is a Real Life 101 scholarship awardee, says that her son is currently in school.  However, the failure of Real Life 101 to provide the scholarship that they promised has forced her to seek other funding options and is a source of disappointment for her son. 

“He’s disappointed,” says Isabell. “He was pumped up [when the scholarship was awarded to him] and now it seems like it was a fluke.”

“I have contacted them [Real Life 101], but the only response I get is that they are working on it,” added Isabell. “It has not been a good experienceWe had to borrow more money than we planned to. It's really sad.”

During an interview with The Seattle Medium at the time of the initial announcement, Taylor said the mission of the organization is to invest in education and not incarceration, and that Real Life 101  invests in the kids’ futures and hopes that the community will reap the benefits of this investment.

Yet, some of the parents and scholarship “awardees” believe that rather than providing scholarship funds to the students, the organization is providing the students with a “Real Life” lesson - world can be full of empty promises.

While many of the parents were hopeful that funds would be available in time for the spring semester/quarter, those hopes were quickly dashed in a 3-page letter that they received from Taylor  dated January 4, 2017. The letter, which basically appears to ask parents to fund the scholarships themselves, reads as follows:

What you as a parent, mentor, relative, organization or associate, can do personally to assist the Real Life students:

1. Go to our website at www.reallife101.org and make a PERSONAL donation via our DONATE LINK.

2. Reach out to your COMPANY or PLACE OF EMPLOYMENT and solicit donations on behalf of your son and the students at Real Life 101

3. Solicit donations from your PLACE OF WORSHIP.

4. Use your CONTACTS with the LOCAL BUSINESSES in your state and local domains and solicit donations for the Real Life mission.

5. You can PROVIDE A LOAN to your son for now. You will be allowed to apply for reimbursement once the funds are received.

6. Have your LOCAL RADIO STATION or TELEVISION STATION promote Real Life 101 to go to our DONATE PAGE and assist with funding.

7. Provide Real Life with any suggestions and/or other sources of funding that you may have access to."

The letter also refers parents/students to the fine print on their Real Life 101 scholarship award certificates, which says, “If you are a scholarship recipient: Scholarship payments are dependent on the success of future fundraising by the Scholarship Fund and are subject to continuing availability of funds."

“We’ve all seen this type of small print before,” says Adam Myers, whose son was awarded a scholarship by Real Life 101. “But no one expects for an organization to award scholarships with funds that they don’t already have.”

“This sends the wrong message to our young men,” continued Myers. “They have done everything that we have asked them to do, and now you want to reward them with a piece of paper that apparently has no value.”

Taylor claims that the organization has been upfront with their commitment to the students from the very beginning and says that the students are told during orientation that the scholarships are not guaranteed and are based on the ability of the organization to raise funds. While, according to Taylor, there was no “in-person” orientation provided for the students in Seattle, Taylor claims that the information was provided to the students in an online orientation video provided to them by Real Life 101.

“Its not guaranteed money,” said Taylor. “That is the reason that our legal team had us put the disclaimer on the certificate, we tell them in orientation that the funds are not guaranteed."

“We are not a full funder, we are a supplemental funder,” continued Taylor. “They [the students] have to go out and do what other students do to get student loans, find other scholarship dollars, Pell Grants, etc..”

“$2,000 is not going to get you through college and they know that,” added Taylor. “The Real Life funds are just supplemental.”

Another concern for parents is that in order for students to be in compliance with the requirements of their scholarship, they must submit monthly communication reports and share a positive social media post about Real Life 101 once a month. This is something the organization is enforcing despite the fact that they have not provided the funding they promised. The organization, according to an email dated February 2, 2107, may even impose a $25 fine for each month a scholarship awardee does not submit the required reports.

Most of the students The Seattle Medium talked to say that they are no longer making social media post and are further frustrated by the organization sending out reminders to do so. For many of the awardees, like Ronald James, their conscience will not allow them to write anything about Real Life 101 right now.

“It’s hard to say something nice about an organization that has not followed through with their word,” said James, who says he was blessed to have other scholarships to help cover his college expenses so far this year.

While most of the parents are still hopeful that Real Life 101 will eventually provide the funds they promised to their kids, many are not very confident that it will happen and feel misled by the organization.

“I feel that it really would have been important for them to be upfront and let the families know that they did not have the funds but were hoping to secure the funds,” said Smith.

“Honestly, I don’t expect anything from them,” she concluded.

OPTIONAL CUT

Taylor says that the organization has distributed funds to some students. However, he says the organization places a priority on providing funds to students who they have provided scholarship funds to in previous years. Unfortunately, according to Taylor, the students from Seattle are first year students and are not given the same priority for funding as 2nd-5th year students. According to Taylor, none of the first-year students have received scholarship funding this year.

“Some students have received funds,” says Taylor. “The problem is that we don’t have enough funds to go around.”

“At the end of the day, it all comes down to the all mighty dollar,” he continued. “If you don’t have the funding then you don’t have a program.”

END OPTIONAL CUT

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