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Memories of Our Special Sister by Julianne Malveaux

June 1, 2014

Memories of Our Special Sister
By Julianne Malveaux

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Many people will remember Dr. Maya Angelou for her phenomenal career.  She was a true renaissance woman – an author and teacher, a dancer and performer, a radio personality and a producer.  I will remember has a sister friend, a wise “auntie” who didn’t mind pulling your coat, a generous spirit who made time for virtually any who asked, a gentle and kind spirit.

If you dropped by when a meal was being served she asked you to sit down and enjoy the assembled company.  If you came and it was not the meal hour, she never hesitated to offer a cup of tea and a snack.  She knew before you did that you needed a hug an encouraging word.  I’ve seen her take the hat off her head and give it to someone who admired it,

She shared her work.  It was not unusual to sit at her working table and listen to a poem or some wisdom she had shared.  Sitting at her table one day, I decided to put some of her words in my cell phone, thinking that I’d like to review them one day.  She very gently took the phone from me and told me “just listen”.  “You don’t have to write everything down”, she said.  “I am giving you my undivided attention and I want the same from you."  Chastened, I left the phone on the table for the rest of the visit.

She loved people, genuinely and unconditionally. When asked about the greatest virtue, she said that it was courage, the courage to love.  She loved everyone, the pauper and the princess.  She would often list the way she loved, mentioning the black and white, the Asian and Latino, a one-eyed man and the woman who is missing a leg.  And if you had the privilege of attending her Thanksgiving dinner, you saw exactly that – a rainbow of the peeped she loved.

Each year that I served as president of Bennett College, she visited the campus and gave a lecture to students.  Once I asked her to spend time with the honor students and she told me, sharply.  “I would rather spend time with the students at the bottom.  They are the ones who need encouragement.  She opened her home, the sculpture garden and the pool to a group of pre-teens from the Southeast Tennis and Learning Center in Washington, DC.  Escorted by Cora Masters Berry, the former first lady of Washington, the girls could not stop talking about her generosity and the words she shared with them.  I wondered how a woman who most consider an icon would take the time to entertain five 11 year olds for a couple of hours.

That was Dr. Maya.

The first time I remember sharing a meal with her was in 1989 when the women who appeared in Brian Laske’s I Dream a World were gathered for a reception. As two women I accompanied left as soon as the program was over, Auntie Maya (which she asked me to call her) graciously invited me to dine with her friends.  My thirty-something self basked in the attention.

Mid-reception, a man attempted to get everyone’s attention (and with a room with Sonia Sanchez, Nikki Giovanni and others, you can imaging who difficult it was).  The gentleman whistled and Dr. Maya, gathered herself to full height, chided the man with a rebuke and also an impromptu poem.  “You will mot whistle at black women,” she said.  “We had enough of that when we were chattel.  You will respect us as the women that we are” She went on and by the time she was finished, not a word was uttered.

“We have already been paid for,” she frequently said, recounting the horror of slave ships, the harsh conditions of slavery, the inequalities of Jim Crow, and contemporary instances of inequality.  She spoke so vividly that you could see the people crowded into a ship, with not even enough room or facilities to attend to bodily functions.  She frequently quoted Paul Lawrence Dunbar, “ I know why the caged bird sings.”

The last time I heard the song was at dinner with San Francisco’s Rev. Cecil Williams, and his wife and poetess, Jan Mirikatini.  We loved up on each other and told stories, released and enjoyed the conversational flow.  We ended the evening with laugher and fellowship.  It was the kind of evening we revel in.  Good food, good talk, good friends.

As I got my walk on the next morning, I was flooded with appreciation and memories. I was in a rich space and I had been fed.  I paused to appreciate Dr. Maya.  I was so very grateful to know her, not as an icon, but as a friend.

At the end of her life, Dr. Maya was frail. “Getting old ain’t for sissies,” she said. As Blame Bayne wrote on my Facebook page, “No longer caged, she forever sings.”  Ache’ Dr. Maya, Ache'.

Julianne Malveaux is a DC-based economist and author. Parts of this column appeared in USA Today on May 29, 2014.

 

 

 

Mayor Baraka – A New Direction for Newark by Marc H. Morial

June 1, 2014

To Be Equal 
Mayor Baraka – A New Direction for Newark

By Marc H. Morial

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - “When I become mayor, we all become mayor.” - Ras Baraka, new mayor of Newark, New Jersey

Add Newark, New Jersey to the list of big cities now being headed by a new wave of progressive mayors.  On the heels of New York Mayor Bill de Blasio’s successful “economic inequality” campaign last year, another urban crusader, Ras Baraka, was elected mayor of Newark on May 13.  A Newark native, city councilman, high school principal and son of the city’s most well-known poet and activist, the late Amiri Baraka, he will be sworn in on July 1. 

Baraka succeeds interim mayor, Luis Quintana, who became the acting mayor last October when former mayor, Cory Booker, was elected to the U.S. Senate.  Facing an unemployment rate of 13 percent, a resurgence of homicides, and a budget deficit of $93 million, Baraka ran a populist campaign highlighted by his local roots, his experience as an educator and a promise to fight to regain local control of Newark’s public schools, which have been under the jurisdiction of the state for the past two decades. 

Education was an over-riding issue in the campaign, as it has increasingly become in communities across the nation.  Baraka staunchly defended public education and received enthusiastic support and financing from the Newark Teachers Union.  He also stressed his progressive roots, as the son of renowned poets, Amina and Amiri Baraka, a family that has lived in Newark for more than 70 years. 

Further distinguishing his progressive background during the campaign, Baraka touted his 20 years as a community organizer, his stint as Deputy Mayor in 2002 and his 2010 election to the Newark Municipal Council representing the South Ward.  He has also served as principal of Newark’s Central High School and taught elementary school for 10 years.

Undaunted by opposition from Cami Anderson, New Jersey Governor Chris Christie’s appointee as superintendent of Newark’s public schools, Baraka has been in the forefront of widespread community resistance to the state’s One Newark reorganization plan, which involves closing and consolidating some neighborhood schools to make space for more charter schools.  While not categorically opposed to charter schools, Baraka rallies against what he sees as a top-down, profit-driven privatization of Newark’s schools.  He is calling for more community input and, ultimately, a return of decision-making to local authorities.   

As urban America faces a plethora of challenges stemming from worsening educational, income and economic inequality, a growing number of cities and mayors are fighting back with progressive policies that put people above profit, support living wages, and are designed to give more working families a real shot at the middle class.  In addition to the new mayors of Newark and New York, Marty Walsh, a former union leader, is the newly-elected mayor of Boston.  Also, Edward Murray, who became mayor of Seattle in January, has called for raising the city’s minimum wage to $15 an hour.  Like Murray, who describes his administration as “committed to progressive principles and practical solutions,” Ras Baraka and a new wave of progressive mayors are taking the lead for urban America as Washington continues to be mired in gridlock.

Booze Marketer Puff Daddy Satisfies Howard's High Standards by Dr. Barbara Reynolds

May 25, 2014

Booze Marketer Puff Daddy Satisfies Howard's High Standards
By Dr. Barbara Reynolds

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Next year if your resume includes pushing alcohol to youth, writing female-bashing, profanity-laden lyrics, dropping out of college and being indicted on gun charges or worse, take heart. If you have enough big bucks, you too could end up making a college commencement address and receiving an honorary doctorate. Didn’t Diddy do it?

Howard University, my alma mater, prides itself in setting high standards for young people.  In May, Howard officials outdid themselves in awarding hip-hopper entrepreneur Sean (Puff Daddy) Combs an honorary doctorate after making a commencement address. Forbes says Combs has a booze-partnership with Diageo, a British-based beverage firm to hawk Diageo’s Ciroc Vodka. The deal reaps Combs millions for his marketing role that entices youth to get high.

You have probably seen Combs’ TV commercials. Smoothly dressed, fawned over by young girls (he has called them hoes in his rap lyrics) brandishing Ciroc vodka which by his lifestyle equates booze with the good life.  In a recent interview he extolled Ciroc vodka’s brand as a great way to celebrate youth.

Combs really knows how to celebrate, says Britain’s Sun tabloid. Combs-- Howards’ role model-- recently blew $164,000 on a party at a London nightclub. “The bill included 17 magnums of Moet Rose, six magnums of Dom Perignon champagne and “several methuselahs” of Sputnik vodka.

With all the crises alcohol is contributing to on college campuses, Combs—although a marketing genius—is a bottom of the barrel choice for college students who are setting records getting high without the likes of a Puff Daddy  cheerleader.

Death, traffic injuries, sexual assault and rape are just a few of the tragic consequences of alcohol on college campuses. About 1,900 college students between the ages of 18 and 24 die each year from alcohol-related unintentional injuries. More than 690,000 students between the ages of 18 and 24 are assaulted by another student who has been drinking. More than 97,000 students between the ages of 18 and 24 are victims of alcohol-related sexual assault or date rape, according to the National Institute of Drug and Alcohol Abuse.

Rape on college campuses is so bad that Time Magazine recently stated that “America’s campuses are dangerous places for young women and that 19 per cent of U.S. undergraduate women are victims of sexual assault,” much of it fueled by alcohol.

Alcohol figures heavily into college dropping outs, missing grades, falling behind and receiving lower grades, which should be another reason to avoid celebrating alcohol on college campuses.

Combs defenders are quick to point out that dropouts like Steve Jobs and Bill Gates received honorary doctorates at Harvard. That sounds good but recent statistics show that the nationwide college graduation rate for Black students stands at an appalling 42 percent, which is 20 points below 62 percent for White students.

Moreover, Gates and Jobs are pitching mind-building technology, quite a difference from Combs pushing alcohol --a mind-bending, mind-blowing reality.

Then there is that little matter of guns, which is often part of the apparel of the female-bashing, hip-hop crowd.  Combs in 1999 was indicted after being charged with shooting off a gun in Club New York and bribing someone else to take ownership of the gun. He was acquitted. What would you expect since he was defended by top gun Johnny Cochran?

Many Howard students were divided over the choice of Combs. Defenders pointed to Combs' millionaire status, which interim president, Wayne A. Frederick, obviously thought qualified Combs as the kind of doctor their students needed.

When money can overshadow the importance of harmful substances being pushed, women being disrespected and higher education preparation being a subset in academia, I have to disagree.

Pimps, prostitutes, hedge-fund rip-off artists, drug dealers (alcohol is considered a drug) all make money.  If that is the greatest measure of success and encouraging young people to get high is a worthy credential for being honored in an academic setting, we have a problem.

On the other hand, Condoleezza Rice was forced to withdraw from her invitation as commencement speaker at Rutgers University after protests over her advisory role in President George W. Bush’s handling of Iraq.

Under President Bush she became the first African-American woman to become Secretary of State. From 2004 - 2007, she was named by Time Magazine, “one of the world’s most influential people.” She has an earned PH.D from University of Denver.  As a professor at Stanford, she won the 1984 Walter J. Gores Award for Excellence in Teaching and the 1993 School of Humanities and Sciences Dean's Award for Distinguished Teaching.

Professor Rice, a skilled academic pioneer and advisor to the once leader of the world’s greatest super power, rejected.  Combs, the liquor hawker to youth, honored. I can’t wait to see what kinds of people academia will honor or not honor next.

Memories of Dr. Maya Angelou by Dr. Barbara Reynolds

May 29, 2014

Memories of Dr. Maya Angelou
By Dr. Barbara Reynolds

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President Barack Obama awards the 2010 Presidential Medal of Freedom to Dr. Maya Angelou in a ceremony in the East Room of the White House February 15, 2011. PHOTO: Lawrence Jackson/The White House

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Maya Angelou reciting her poem "On the Pulse of Morning" at the 1993 Presidential Inauguration of William J. Clinton. U.S. Capitol, Washington, D.C. January 20, 1993. PHOTO: William J. Clinton Presidential Library and Museum as posted on WhiteHouse.gov

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Dr. Maya Angelou’s prose sounded like music and her poems sounded like words in flight soaring on the wings of butterflies. That was the magic, the mystique of her gift and of course the blessing. Her prose and poems are treasures.

As I join the national and world spotlighting her life and poetry in light of her death this week, I feel honored that on several occasions she shared that gift with me. Dr. Angelou, who declared upon the death of Nelsen Mandela, “No sun outlasts its sunset, but will rise again, and bring the dawn,”  died at her Winston, Salem, N. C. home May 28 at the age of 86.

“When her friend Nelson Mandela passed away last year, Maya Angelou wrote that 'No sun outlasts its sunset, but will rise again, and bring the dawn.' Today, Michelle and I join millions around the world in remembering one of the brightest lights of our time – a brilliant writer, a fierce friend, and a truly phenomenal woman,” declared President Barack Obama upon her death. “Over the course of her remarkable life, Maya was many things – an author, poet, civil rights activist, playwright, actress, director, composer, singer and dancer.  But above all, she was a storyteller – and her greatest stories were true.  A childhood of suffering and abuse actually drove her to stop speaking – but the voice she found helped generations of Americans find their rainbow amidst the clouds, and inspired the rest of us to be our best selves."

I concur with President Obama and join him and millions remembering her words and - moreover - her life. Earlier this month, we talked by phone about how she missed her friend Coretta Scott King. They thought of each other as sisters.  By phone I could hear that she was directing a flurry of activity at her home in Winston Salem, NC.  Another phone was ringing, she also had visitors, but she interrupted her schedule to talk with me. She invited me to call back in a few weeks for an uninterrupted chat talk.  Sadly, that conversation would be our last.

But I still have the memories of earlier conversations that inspired and motivated me as a much younger journalist to keep moving in mainstream journalism, where I was never really wanted.

In 1985, she gave me permission to use the name of one of her most inspiring poems, “And Still I Rise,”  and change the “I in the title to We,” which resulted in a book I wrote  entitled: “And Still We Rise: Interviews with 50 Black Role Models.”

In interviews for the book, she sat with me and shared some of her views that are timeless.

On some of the changes she has witnessed in the South, she said, “Black and White children go to school together now, stare in the same shopping mall windows, and walk together on field trips. The mystery between the races is not as prevalent as it was in my day when I really thought that White people were not real.  I thought we were people but White folks were ‘White folk’. And that if you put a hand on a ‘White folk’ your hand would go right through them. They were so mysterious to me. I just couldn't believe that White folk had livers and hearts and all this that we had inside of us. It is a different world entirely. Not that racism isn't still prevalent. It is as prevalent in the South as in the North. As it is often said, Savannah, Georgia Is down South and New York City is Up South.”

Dr. Angelou encouraged young people—both Whites and Blacks - to know the history of Blacks in the United States:

“Young Black men and women need to be informed about our history. Dreams fulfilled and those deferred; promises, achieved and broken - that's for the voting Black people,” she said. “The young White people desperately need to be informed about Black American history.  Only equals can be friends. If not; they will topple. They will be paternalistic, materialistic and philanthropic relationships. You cannot make friends from those unequal positions. If White students knew Black American history and knew how the struggle had been waged and the achievements, they could look at young Black people in an informed light. Then it would be easier to make friends, and out of friendship comes support.

Reflecting upon her life and how she wanted to be remembered it was significant that she did not mention her acting career, her novels her receiving the presidential Medal of Freedom. It was all about the power to love.

“What I really would like said about me is that I dared to love. By love I mean that condition in the human spirit so profound it encourages us to develop courage and build bridges, and then to trust those bridges and cross the bridges in attempts to reach other human beings. I would like to be remembered as a person who dared to love and as a very religious woman. I pray a lot. I am convinced that I am a child of God. And that everybody is a child of God. I try to address each person as a fellow child of God. Now I blow it a lot. I am not proud of that. But I do forgive myself and try to ameliorate my actions.”

About her friend, Coretta Scott King, she applauded her for her tireless commitment and leadership. “Coretta showed us her womanliness not just her humaneness.  On one level it is very possible to become an old female who lives long enough by managing not to get run over by a truck.  Then there is a female who takes responsibility for creating something better in the time she has and the space she had to occupy and that is true greatness And Coretta did that.”

The same must be said about Dr. Maya Angelou. In her own phenomenal style and passion, she created something better that is universal, unique and timeless.

President Obama  concluded his remarks this week by paraphrasing the title of her sixth autobiography: “With a kind word and a strong embrace, she had the ability to remind us that we are all God’s children; that we all have something to offer.  And while Maya’s day may be done, we take comfort in knowing that her song will continue, ‘flung up to heaven’ – and we celebrate the dawn that Maya Angelou helped bring.

First Lady Michelle Obama echoed the sentiments of millions: "Maya Angelou teaches us that it’s not enough merely to seek greatness for ourselves. We must help others discover the greatness within themselves. We need to reach down and reach out, and give back, and lift others the way Maya has lifted us. That is how we can most truly honor our friend Maya Angelou – by how we live our lives … by striving every day to embody the wisdom, and generosity, and radiant love with which she has graced our world."


Joint Center - Once Bastion of Black Political Research - Now Pressing to Survive by Hazel Trice Edney

 

May 25, 2014

Joint Center - Once Bastion of Black Political Research - Now Pressing to Survive
By Hazel Trice Edney

 overton spencer
Spencer Overton

(TriceEdneyWire.com) – The Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, esteemed as America’s foremost think tank for Black political and economic research, is struggling with financial problems so serious that its political arm has been gutted and its interim president is working for free.

Spencer Overton, the center’s interim president/CEO, is on sabbatical from his job as a Georgetown University law professor. He assumed the interim presidency in February after the departure of Ralph Everett, who was president for about eight years. Upon Everett's departure Dec. 31, Dr. Brian D. Smedley, director of the Center’s Health Policy Institute, assumed the interim presidency briefly until Overton was announced. But Overton, who was also a member of the Joint Center’s board, recently confirmed in an interview with the Trice Edney News Wire that he took the position with no salary. 

“No, I am not on salary,” Overton confirmed in a brief interview after participating as a panelist for a Capitol Hill event early last month.

When asked previously about the financial state of the Joint Center, Overton had responded guardedly in an email saying, “The recession has affected various organizations. People of color face significant challenges, however…there is a clear need for a think tank that focuses on policies that affect people of color.  I think if we focus on the challenges of real people, produce high quality policy solutions to those challenges, maintain responsible internal practices, and clearly communicate the value of our work to potential supporters, we will grow and thrive. There is much work to do, but I’m excited about the future.”

Overton has spent the last three months meeting with people who have been affiliated with the Joint Center over the years, seeking advice and help. Despite Overton’s public silence on the state of the organization’s financial affairs, long-time Black political researcher David Bositis, who recently left the organization because of its financial woes, was not as subtle. 

“They’re having money problems. Basically right now, they’re a health group,” said Bositis, who researched Black politics for the Joint Center for 23 years. “They’re trying to hold on. And they’re not under water from the sense that they’re not closed. I mean they are still open, but the political part of it… politics is not being emphasized anymore.”

Bositis said the health research is extremely important, but Black political research - such as tracking the growth and decline of Black elected officials, voting trends, positions on issues - is still equally as needed, he says. 

“I’ve been involved in all sorts of legal cases on voting rights and redistricting. The thing is you need that research to provide information for a lot of the court cases,” Bositis said. “I’ve been talking to a variety of people in terms of where we go from here.”

Overton led the Political Law Studies Initiative at Georgetown and served as a member of the first Obama campaign, transition and administration. But, ironically, he said nothing about political research in an emailed response to questions about his vision from a political perspective. Instead, he referred to health policy as a “traditional strength.” 

Founded in 1979, the Joint Center, for the first 15 years of its existence, was actually the Joint Center for Political Studies. JointCenter.org now says the “Joint Center uses research, analysis, and communications to improve the socioeconomic status and political participation of people of color, to promote relationships across racial lines, and to strengthen the nation’s pluralistic society.”

Other sources close to the Washington, D.C.-based non-partisan non-profit have expressed deep concern about the organization’s finances and future. They include the Center’s former 30-year president, Eddie Williams.

“I’m very concerned,” said Williams, who assumed presidency of the Center two years after its founding. “I have a meeting coming up with the new president to get some perspective on that,” he said of the organization’s financial woes. “I won’t speak for the President. I think he would agree with you that you need more information about some of the issues affecting the Black community whether it’s politics or health or whatever. But, it takes money to do that. And I don’t know but I think they have lost money. That’s my understanding.”

Word began to circulate about the Joint Center’s financial problems shortly after the departure of Everett in December. In addition to Everett and Bositis, at least seven staff members have left the organization since late last year, sources confirmed. 

The Joint Center’s financial contributions largely come from foundations, corporations, government contracts and individual donors as well as fund-raisers like dinners and luncheons.  The organization’s gala dinner is coming up June 25. U.S. Senator Cory A. Booker, former Newark mayor and first Black elected to the Senate since Barack Obama, will receive the Center’s highest award, the Louis E. Martin Great American Award, named after the legendary journalist, presidential confidant and co-founder of the Joint Center. Other recipients of the Great American award include Presidents Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton; U. S. Reps. Jim Clyburn (D-S.C.), Charles Rangel (D-N.Y.), and John Lewis (D-GA.); civil rights leaders Vernon E. Jordan, Jr., Dr. Dorothy I. Height, Rev. Jesse L. Jackson, Sr., Muhammad Ali, Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed and Ambassador Susan E. Rice. 

The Joint Center’s Board of Governors include such political heavy weights as Democratic strategist Donna Brazile and political scientist Dianne Pinderhughes of Notre Dame University. There is also heavy corporate representation on the board including Robert R. Hagans, Jr., vice president and CFO, AARP; A. Scott Bolden, managing partner, Reed Smith LLP; Frederick S. Humphries, Jr. vice president, Microsoft; Freada Kapor Klein,  trustee, Mitchell Kapor Foundation;  Reed V. Tuckson, M.D., chief of Medical Affairs, UnitedHealth Group; Robert Raben, president, The Raben Group; Anne Chow, vice president, Premier Client Group, AT&T Global Services; and board Chair Barbara L. Johnson,  partner, Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker LLP.

Among the associates that Overton has sought for advice is Dr. Elsie Scott, former president/CEO of the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation, who raised millions with the CBCF’s annual dinner.

“I’m very impressed with his commitment to try to raise the funds and keep the Joint Center moving and preserve the rich legacy,” says Scott, who confirmed she met with Overton two weeks ago to discuss fund-raising strategies. “It’s going to be a hard hill for him to climb. But, I think that if anybody can do it at this time, I think he would definitely be a person who has the commitment and drive.”

Dr. Scott, who now heads the Ron Walters Institute at Howard University, says she discussed collaboration between the Joint Center and the Walters’ Center to seek funds for political research using the help of students from Howard and other universities to do exit polls and other surveys.

She said she also encouraged Overton to “really beat the bushes to see how many people that he knows who will support the dinner because they believe in him.” 

In the Feb. 11 press release announcing his interim presidency, a list of nationally known bi-partisan activists and public policy advocates praised Overton’s appointment. They included Sen. Booker; Benjamin Ginsberg, a counsel to the Bush-Cheney and Mitt Romney presidential campaigns; Harvard Law School professor, Charles J. Ogletree, founding and executive director of the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice and Rashad Robinson, executive director, Color of Change.

Dr. Scott concluded that much weight will likely be placed on the amount of money raised at the upcoming dinner which would go toward “core support” like staff, upkeep of the building and operational funds to sustain them while they seek grant money, she said. “I think the dinner is going to be a major decision point for their board. If they don’t do well, the board is going to have to make some decisions.”

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