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FROM THESE ROOTS:

Black Church Leaders Move Forward with Purpose

Our Time Press: Rev. Waterman, did you have Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. in mind when you invited Rev. Al Sharpton to speak on the eve of the late leader’s birthday? Sharpton’s address seemed to answer the question on everyone’s mind these days, which also is the title of one of King’s widely known books, “Where Do We Go from Here?” Would you agree Sharpton’s message-directive is that we go back home to find the map, the principles, the lessons? Do you think younger generations would be captivated by the words, but miss the point of the speech? On the next page, a poet yearns for the absent grandmothers, another wants to know where home is, and another seems to compare racism to poison that has eaten away historical memory.

Dear Bernice & David
Thank you for your insightful questions regarding Rev. Al Sharpton’s recent address to the African American Clergy Elected Official Org. AACEO on the eve of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s birthday. Indeed, Rev. Sharpton’s invitation was deeply intertwined with Dr. King’s legacy, particularly as we reflect on the pivotal themes of his work, including the question posed in his book, “Where Do We Go from Here?” Not only does it speak to the black church but also to the black leadership (Politicians, Educators, Healthcare workers, NYPD, and community-based Organizations, etc.) in our communities.


Rev. Al Sharpton’s message serves as a vital reminder of the importance of reconnecting with our foundational principles, particularly within the context of Black leadership and the role of the Black church.


As we navigate the complexities of our current social and political landscape, the theme that Rev. Sharpton spoke about, returning “home,” becomes essential for understanding who we are and where we come from. This journey involves a profound exploration of our cultural and spiritual roots, elements that have historically provided strength and resilience to our communities.


Black leadership has always been intimately tied to the Black church, which has served as a sanctuary, a hub for activism, and a wellspring of moral guidance. Throughout history, the church has played a pivotal role in social justice movements, fostering leaders who are not only spiritually grounded but also committed to the fight for equality and justice.


In this era of political transition, marked by the Trump Administration and heightened social tensions, the Black Church can offer a framework for collective action and community empowerment. By revisiting the lessons of our history—lessons of perseverance, solidarity, and faith—we can better equip ourselves to tackle contemporary challenges. This involves embracing the narratives of our ancestors, understanding the struggles they faced, and recognizing the victories they achieved.


As we confront issues such as systemic racism, economic inequality, and social injustice, it is essential to draw upon the spiritual and cultural wealth of our heritage. This collective memory can serve as a guiding map, helping us chart a path forward. Just as our history taught us to rely on faith and community to overcome obstacles, we, too, must harness these elements to navigate the complexities of our present circumstances.


I share your concern that while younger generations may be inspired by the powerful language and urgency of Sharpton’s speech, there is a risk they might overlook the deeper implications of his words. While the rhetoric may captivate them, understanding the historical context and the foundational principles that have guided our movements is critical. The church can play a key role in facilitating this understanding through education, mentorship, and community discussions that bridge generational gaps.


The poetic reflections you mentioned on page 7 resonate profoundly with the themes of loss, identity, and the enduring impact of racism. They remind us of historical memories that must not be forgotten, even as we strive for progress.


Our invitation to Rev. Sharpton was indeed timely, aligning with both the commemoration of Dr. King and the political transition we are experiencing. As the Black church, we face a crucial moment to unite, reflect, and strategize on how to move forward. It’s imperative that we engage our communities in dialogue about the implications of these changes and how we can collectively navigate the landscape ahead.


Thank you for your continued advocacy and commitment to these important conversations.

Warm regards,
Rev. Dr. Robert M Waterman
President of AACEO and
Pastor of Antioch Baptist Brooklyn

www.Antiochbaptistbrooklyn.com
828 Greene Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11221
(714) 455-7778

In Need of An Assist

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By Eddie Castro
We are officially at the halfway point in the NBA season and the New York Knicks are currently sitting in second place in the Atlantic Division and would be the No. 3 seed in the Eastern Conference if the playoffs ended today. Aside from superstar Jalen Brunson, If we were to pinpoint who has been a huge contributor to the Knicks’ success, it would definitely be the consistent play of Center Karl Anthony-Towns.

As I alluded to in a recent article a few weeks back, Towns is experiencing a career year statistically in points, rebounds, and shooting efficiency. His ability to space the floor has taken the load off Brunson and has opened up the floor for other players to get involved in the offense, such as Josh Hart and Mikal Bridges.

The All-Star break is a month away, and the Knicks are showing signs of fatigue. As we go to press, the team has lost 5 of their last 7 games, and the reason may very well be the lack of depth.


Their starting five are Brunson, Towns, Bridges, Anunoby, and Hart, who are, without a doubt, some of the very best in basketball. However, due to the lack of production from their bench, Head Coach Tom Thibodeau has played his starters heavy minutes.

Thibodeau is well-known for relying on his starters quite heavily, but as the playoffs approach come April, it will be a big concern for the team down the stretch. New York’s bench is filled with many inexperienced players, hence why Coach Thibs is reluctant to insert them into key moments in games. This is where Knicks General Manager Leon Rose comes into play as the trading deadline looms on February 6.


Let’s be honest Knick fans, the team can use anybody to help shed some minutes off their starting lineup. With center Mitchell Robinson still recovering from off-season ankle surgery, trading for a center is ideal for the Knicks to give the team a rim protector on the defensive end. Some notable names to keep an eye on are Jonas Valuncianas, Robert Williams, and Walker Kessler.

All three players would easily address the teams’ depth issues. The Knicks also can use a scoring punch to come off the bench. One name that can be a possibility is Brooklyn Nets shooting guard Cam Johnson.

In his 6th season in the NBA, Johnson is currently having a breakout year for the Nets. However, a trade to get him will be difficult because it is almost a foregone conclusion that the Nets will ask the Knicks for some significant draft assets in return. Johnson will be a perfect fit with his tremendous shooting ability and is known as a solid defender.

The team could also go the cheaper route (not as attractive names) to fill out their bench to avoid unloading draft picks. Players such as Davion Mitchell and Alec Burks, who are known as disruptive defenders, could be options for coach Thibs to easily put his trust in them.


Whatever direction Leon Rose decides to address at the trade deadline, getting consistent contributions from the bench will be key in how far the Knicks will go in the East. Thibodeau would rather not continue to overuse his top players.

Health played a huge part in the team being bounced out of the playoffs last year. If Rose can swing a few trades and get at least two solid players to come off the bench that can instantly make an impact in keeping players like Brunson, Towns, and Hart fresh for the playoffs, it will only give Thibodeau more options to plug in players to put together more wins.


The team will fight for seeding in hopes of catching teams like the Boston Celtics and Cleveland Cavaliers for the No.1 overall seed in the East. A feat the team has not accomplished since the glory days of Patrick Ewing, John Starks and Charles Oakley back in 1993. New York has currently hit a speed bump in their season. A few trades could get them back on track to continue chasing championship supremacy.


Sports Notes: (Basketball) The Knicks will continue their home stand as they Welcome former Knick Julius Randle and the Minnesota Timberwolves to Madison Square Garden on Friday night. The Brooklyn Nets have won just three games since December 19.

As we go to press, the team is currently on a five-game losing streak. Brooklyn will look to turn it around as they head to Los Angeles to square off against LeBron James and the Lakers.

Harlem Bomb Shelter

On a Mission to “Repair and Rebuild the Real World”

HARLEM BOMB SHELTER, founded in March 2012 by Luther “Anubis” Isler, is a spoken-word and literary arts organization that produces open mics, showcases, workshops, and opportunities for education and empowerment through expression and entertainment.


“Much like a physical bomb shelter is an escape and shield from war, explosions, nuclear fallout, and apocalypse,” Anubis told us two weeks ago, “The Harlem Bomb Shelter is a relief from the war and fallout of our everyday lives: where those who make it, pool their resources, experiences, thoughts, and ideas together in preparation to repair and rebuild ‘the real world.’ “


“As part of our mission, Harlem Bomb Shelter has established two dynamic youth and young adult initiatives to fortify the future, the Harlem Teen Poetry Slam and the Bomb Squad Mentorship Program.

We eagerly look forward to the trials and triumphs of 2025 using poetry to find answers. Contact Email: TheHarlemBombShelter@gmail.com Instagram: HarlemBombShelter

HARLEM BOMB SHELTER, founded in March 2012 by Luther “Anubis” Isler, is a spoken-word and literary arts organization that produces open mics, showcases, workshops, and opportunities for education and empowerment through expression and entertainment.


“Much like a physical bomb shelter is an escape and shield from war, explosions, nuclear fallout, and apocalypse,” Anubis told us two weeks ago, “The Harlem Bomb Shelter is a relief from the war and fallout of our everyday lives: where those who make it, pool their resources, experiences, thoughts, and ideas together in preparation to repair and rebuild ‘the real world.’ “


“As part of our mission, Harlem Bomb Shelter has established two dynamic youth and young adult initiatives to fortify the future, the Harlem Teen Poetry Slam and the Bomb Squad Mentorship Program.

We eagerly look forward to the trials and triumphs of 2025 using poetry to find answers. Contact Email: TheHarlemBombShelter@gmail.com Instagram: HarlemBombShelter


The Burden

by AZIR, 19 – 2024 Harlem Teen Poetry Slam Champion

I know where we’re going, because I know
where we’ve been Yet I can’t shake this feeling
that the world can turn on a whim
The more I learn the more I’m burdened
Is it grim to say I’m uncertain whether this life is worth it? I’m sure it is But not every person bears the curse of their gifts
Are we cursed by circumstance where generations teach trauma I find we all have
the answers But few choose stairs to go find ‘em More drama Ancestors in hand
with God prepare us Where do we find ‘em?
Inside our love not just the feelings that we find fun.


The Glassmaker

by BOOK OF J, 28 – HBS Squad 303 Member

If I stood in front of you, as you were watching what would become of this generation
You might ask, “Is your father a glassmaker?”
I’d say, Actually, He made mirrors so I never forget what I look like and what others see
He knew, after a certain time, it was more likely to see a son set on the evening news than on the horizon So he kept me inside
Which is why he polished his broken pieces
to reinforce me to reflect light I don’t know if that answered your question But no, I won’t sit down


The Recipe

by EMPRESS JAZMYN, 25 – HBS Squad 303 Member

Recipes lost, Role models of generations
past, long gone. We must rewrite the
rules of activism. Times have changed
New wars require new weapons
21st-century technology now, our weapon of destruction. Our elders watch in distaste
As we trailblaze on our own. We are nitpicked
Chastised, Rebuked. And still, we rise
Us young folk. Left with retellings of stories from the past. We can only do so much with reiteration. The journey is ours to take


The Journey

LANEY THE POET, 19 – HBS Squad 303 Member

They say The arc of history bends toward justice
They do not say Its curve is hidden in our spine We wake to Angry aches
Moonlight guiding us toward grout towers, grumbling
Dig.
Scuff souls on cement
Etch black fist into white plaster like a dead-end destiny, don’t apply to you
I’m afraid it applies to us.
Chipping at freedom’s walls They did not tell us how thick their hatred grew I’m afraid there is nothing good waiting for us to arrive.


The Lesson

by POETIC BREY, 26 – HBS Squad 303 Member

I never understood why I’d have to eat even after I’m full —
— finish my meal Our elders thought they were teaching us an impactful lesson.
But why does this lesson seem trivial as an adult? I’ve learned how to eat
or rather be consumed by all this chaos
happening around me.
Elders, I’ve tried to listen and swallow up the genocides, mass murders, and white supremacist — but now there’s this
lump in my throat. I feel like I have no tools to
navigate this world– Because all I can remember is you telling me to eat even after I’m full.


The Mantra

by TAMRA, 26 – HBS Squad 303 Member

My parents didn’t teach me how to show up and serve Confront and challenge
They taught me about a pension
They taught me to work work work
My family is divided like Africans and African-Americans
Jesus taught me love and unity What the masters continue to abuse
Where is this “Great” America? No eye has seen of it Ears haven’t heard of it
Just another propaganda turned mantra
Pride comes before demolition Politicians play God But they be Baal And I will not dance for change to hail Where is this “Great” America?
Teach me

Salina Coleman (12/4/73 – 11/13/24)

On the eve of the 10th anniversary of the Tompkins Park Senior Center’s Writing Class in Bedford-Stuyvesant, group members, sent reflections on the passing of sister-scribe Salina Coleman.
The group was formed in 2015, according to the mission statement written by Selma Jackson (President of Age Friendly Central Brooklyn, Inc. and Facilitator of the Creative Writing Class at the Tompkins Park Older Adult Center).
“In 2020 we were isolated because of the pandemic, Jackson noted. “When we finally began meeting again in 2021 participants were writing so much each had a collection of short stories. We shared our stories in class with one another. We were so excited about our work that when it was suggested we do a book, we all said yes immediately!”
The group organized themselves as the Tompkins Park Writers Association, and Women Sharing Our Stories was published December 2023. “While we all come from different cultures,” wrote Ms. Jackson, “there was a shared experience of growing up in communities that nurtured us. We laughed, gave suggestions on how to make the stories better, and encouraged one another to write more.”
This past November 2024, the Tompkins Park Older Adult Center writing class, a close-knit group, sadly lost writer Salina Coleman due to complications related to Lupus. Coleman was a popular community health and wellness advocate, and often hosted workshops despite her pain.
On this page, scribes Selma Jackson, Frances Sentino, Terri Strobert, Debra Johnson, and Claudette Winston shared their heartfelt responses to Ms. Coleman’s death and appreciation of her legacy.


Frances Sentino:
She Lived in Grace,
One Day at a Time

Salina was a determined person. She knew that she had a role in life to help others, even when her health was not the best for many years because of Lupus.
I believe that God chose her to show us how to live gracefully with our cross one day at a time.
Salina’s contribution by organizing monthly workshops, even though she was in pain with a swollen leg, showed us that she had faith and trust in God’s goodness.
I tried to encourage her even when I was unable to attend her workshops. My phone text that I sent her on November 10, 2024, is still in my cell phone. It read, .“Have a Blessed Sunday, Salina. God loves you.”
She usually answered before the end of the day. But this time I did not get a reply.


Claudette Winston:
She Funded her Programs Herself

Sometimes, once in a lifetime you are blessed to meet a person who leaves a deep impression on your spirit and soul. For me it was Salina.
I was amazed how she connected to the elders. She delighted in going the extra mile, once a month, preparing the best programs for the seniors.
Salina was special, a genius in my eyes. Her programs were meticulously planned. Every detail implemented, color code, fine-tuned and carried out to the best of her ability. She did her homework. She provided so much information. Information that could be used by the seniors. I would see her in her wheelchair-mobiling up and down the Avenue, picking up things for her latest project. She took pride in all that she did, and she funded the program herself.
I have attended Salina’s programs for almost two years and admired her courageous spirit in battling Lupus, that ravished her body, while putting on the best programs for her seniors.
As I pass by her apartment #2L, I will miss the pleasant aromas that always flowed from her partially opened door. On that door are these words: FEARLESS, BEAUTY, LOVED, STRONG.
Rest in Peace, my Little One.
You deserve it.


Terri-Mardina Strobert:
She Did Amazing Things With
Little or Nothing

When I think of Salina Coleman, I remember a sweetheart of a person who had a big heart for creating fun, loving monthly events for the seniors at Tompkins Park Senior Center.
She suffered from Lupus disease and often held workshops to bring awareness to so many people who may be suffering with the disease. We connected when I signed up for one of her workshops and shared that my sister had the disease too but hers was manageable.
The disease had advanced so rapidly, Salina’s leg was amputated and few of her fingertips removed. She spoke of not feeling well and how hard it was for her to get up and get started in the mornings. Often fatigued and losing sleep, she would keep inside for a few days, but she never complained. She mustered up strength and courage with the help of God. With the aide by her side, together they would decorate the community room so beautifully: pretty tablecloths with flowers, cutlery with matching napkins and handouts of reading materials for the theme of the event.
She served food and beverages, played games and gave away party bags. All of Salina’s events were well attended because she had a sign-up sheet outside of the lunchroom. She did amazing things with little or nothing, her own money and donations.
The recent Motown event on September 27 of this year will forever be memorable. Salina ordered Motown T-shirts for paying participants, organized a talent show of many acts from dancers, singers, a DJ and highlighted the famous female singing group, The Supremes, which I was a part of. Salina rehearsed each group for days and made sure we were all costumed. The community room was fashionably decorated in black and gold representing Motown’s milestone.
I had the program recorded.
Salina covered her pain and suffering so well we forgot her daily struggles. She did mention her heart problem, but we did not think that she wouldn’t beat it.
Oh, what a painful loss for so many of us! But there’s no more suffering for Salina now. With God she is made whole.
Rest in peace, dear friend.
_

Debra Johnson: An Angel,
on earth, gone too soon.

I felt her caring spirit every time she entered the room.
She gave all she had to make others smile, even when she had to make others smile, even when she was journeying through her trials.
She may have left her body (like a butterfly —her favorite motif — out of the cocoon), yet her spirit lives on.
NOW, Salina is a Warrior in heaven sharing her triumphant song.
Rest In Peace, Salina. Your work has just begun. Now, you can FLY.


Selma Jackson: Her Giving
was Astronomical! She Spread Love
and Joy!

Salina Coleman was a shining star! She continually gave of herself to serve her community.
Salina encouraged others to participate and through her efforts two members of our writing group continued rather than dropout.
Thank you, Salina, for sharing your story of hope, which will live on to inspire others!
Salina stepped up her commitment to serving older adults at the Tompkins Park Older Adult Center. For more than a year, she volunteered to do workshops every month with relevant topics for better health outcomes for us all.
We will miss her; however, I am encouraged. Salina showed us how to enjoy life despite adversity…by spreading Love and Joy!

What Would Dr. King do?

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Trump inauguration. Time of turmoil, testing resolve

By Nayaba Arinde
Editor at Large

“We can’t slow up and have our dignity and self-respect,” Reverend Doctor Martin Luther King declared at Rev. Gardner Taylor’s Brooklyn Concord Baptist Church in March 1956. “In our generation, something has happened to the Negro. He has decided to reevaluate himself, and he is coming to see that he is somebody.”


As the Montgomery Bus Boycott was simultaneously uniting the disenfranchised Black community and terrifying a taken-by-surprise white status quo across the United States, King spoke to the eager crowd of 2,500, saying that the people should be inspired to “Press on and keep pressing. If you can’t fly, run; if you can’t run, walk; if you can’t walk–crawl.”


The January 15th, 2025 96th birthday observation of Dr. Martin Luther King Day takes place on January 20th, 2025. It is the same date that President-Elect Donald Trump will be inaugurated. He promises the deportation of millions of immigrants beginning on day one, in less than two weeks, with predicted protests against promised polarizing policies occurring on the same day as rallies and day-of-action activity in support of an MLK progressive people’s ideal.


“Dr. King would have tried to work with Trump,” Clinical Psychologist Ruth Smith told Our Time Press. “I believe because of his ‘turn the other cheek’ philosophy, he would have tried to find some middle ground. But, even though Trump might decide to work with someone like Dr. King, his ego is so out of control that he would fight even against himself to reach any sort of compromise. So perhaps Dr. King might instead say, “Forget it; there’s no working with this guy; he’s on a mission to wreak havoc everywhere.”


Meanwhile, even though he is a Queens-born Native New Yorker, there is no guarantee that NYC will be the beneficiary of policy, strategy, and federal legislation of his administration.
Some political pundits have observed that the November 2024 election result showed that Black Democrat supporters of then-presidential candidate Vice-President Kamala Harris discovered that a perceived alliance collapsed in spectacular fashion.


In NYC, Mayor Eric Adams scheduled his State of the City address at Harlem’s Apollo for today, Thursday, January 9th, to lay out what he feels have been the pros and cons of his three-plus year administration. This, as prosecutors announced this week that there will be new charges, alongside the five felonies, as he awaits an April court date for alleged bribery and corruption.
In the interim, the much-fought-for Dr. King federal holiday–seen by advocates as not a day off, but a day on with public civics events, protests, and rallies, particularly in the wake of the alleged murder of Robert Brooks, who died on December 10, 2024, by Department of Corrections and Community Supervision officers at Marcy Correctional Facility in Marcy, Oneida County.


Attorney General Letitia James, who released the video of the brutal and deadly beating by 14 correction officers and other personnel, citing however, “internal conflicts checks,” days later added, “After much consideration, research, and review, my office decided to recuse itself from the investigation of the correction officers involved in the events preceding the death of Mr. Robert Brooks… to protect the integrity of the investigation, and to ensure accountability and justice for Mr. Brooks.”


The AG’s office of Division of State Counsel “by law, represents state agencies in legal matters, including the Department of Corrections and correction officers.” As grassroots organizations responded with uproar, James added, “Four of the correction officers under investigation in the Robert Brooks matter are currently defendants in other matters and are being represented by lawyers in the Office of the Attorney General.”

James continued, “Even the possibility or mere appearance of a conflict could tie up a potential prosecution in lengthy legal challenges or get a potential prosecution outright dismissed. And I will not allow justice to be delayed or denied because of a conflict.” Activists were not appeased, demanding that Gov. Kathy Hochul immediately fire the 13 officers and one nurse involved. And she did. But, the December 12th Movement originally organized actions to demand that Hochul and James “arrest, indict, prosecute, and incarcerate them for murder for hate crimes, and terrorist acts.”


The community advocacy group slammed the “frenzied slaughter” and said, “After a jury acquitted Daniel Penny of the murder of his son, Andre Zachary, the father of Jordan Neely said, ‘We have got to do something,’ The question facing the Black community is ‘What are we going to do?”


On Tuesday this week, the “data-driven organization, the NYPD, again applied precision policing in 2024,” saying crime is down by 3%. Many New Yorkers remain skeptical, citing; recent murders, assaults, stabbings, shootings, and bloody violence on the subway, including the horrendous deadly arson on the Brooklyn F train, the subway train killing of Jordan Neeley by the recently-acquitted Daniel Penny, the fatal stabbing in a Harlem deli over a sandwich, Brownsville police chasing down and shooting a person over fare evasion on the Sutter Avenue L train; and gun and knife violence a constant threat, and mental illness presenting on the streets every day, and every way.


What would Dr. King do? Or, with his centenary being celebrated this year – Malcolm X, too?
Homelessness is up 18% nationwide, in the long shadow of the rumored warehousing and proposed selling of public housing by a number of private entities. Amidst an affordable housing crisis, The Coalition for the Homeless said, “There are now more people homeless in New York City than at any time since the Great Depression of the 1930s. In March 2024, 146,547 people slept each night in NYC shelters.”


They estimated that “more than 350,000 people were without homes in NYC in March 2024… 69 percent of those in shelters were members of homeless families, including 48,304 children.”
What would Dr. King do?


Licensed social worker Ruth Smith told Our Time Press that, “This about-to-be-president-again is unstable, and anything can happen. He is out to fulfill his agenda, and he is surrounded by yes men who will go along with absolutely anything he suggests. No one can tell him no, and he wants the world to know he is in charge.
People should just prepare for what’s coming. Get all your situations together because he may plan to hurt New York just because he can. I don’t want people to panic, but I do want them to be aware.”
In preparation for January 20th protests nationwide, New York City gears up for a Washington Square Park 11:00 a.m. rally.


Two days before, on Saturday, January 18th, at 495 Martin Luther King Boulevard, Newark, the People’s Organization for Progress (POP) will host its annual March to observe the 96th birth anniversary of “the immortal champion of Civil Rights, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.”


Participants are being asked to assemble at the new Martin Luther King Statue, acknowledging the theme of ‘The Martin Luther King Jr. March of Resistance’, launching “mass actions to protest and challenge the Agenda of President-elect Donald Trump, an agenda that includes pointed efforts to roll back Women’s Rights, Civil Rights, Immigrant Rights, Free Speech, and others.”


Lawrence Hamm, POP’s founding chairman, said, “We are having this march not just to honor the achievements of Dr. King and the Civil Rights Movement, but to recommit ourselves to the ideals and objectives for which they stood and to demonstrate our determination to resist the efforts of the incoming Trump Administration to continue to turn back the clock on the past eighty years of racial and social progress.”