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HAMPTON W. ROOKARD, Freedom Fighter and an Original Man

Hampton Woodward Rookard, the son of Ruth Woodward and Walter Rookard, was born January 29, 1929 in Rembert, South Carolina. Hampton migrated to the North with his mother and his sister Margaret. Their first stop was Harlem, then Brownsville, followed by Williamsburg before finally settling in Bedford-Stuyvesant. His early influences towards education and reading were his mother, an elementary schoolteacher, and his loving “Aunt Mae”, Marion McLester, who had remained in the south. Aunt Mae was a principal of her own school for 47 years. Hamp knew early on what he wanted out of life. He became a Merchant Marine by age nineteen and he had been around the world three times over.
Known by many names, Hamp, Prof. Aladjo Akem-Wume or Rolling Black Cloud, was a scholar, an avid reader, motorcycle enthusiast and later a talk show host on WBAI.
He aligned himself with revolutionary groups due to his belief in having the right and capability to defend himself.  Hampton was with Malcolm X when he started the Organization of Afro-American Unity in the Audubon Ballroom. He traveled to Africa with Cedric Sandiford, Nana Imhotep Gary Byrd and Dr. Barbara Justice Muhammad for the Kemron Investigation.

 He was a familiar sight in his jumpsuits & sea shelled headband. As a Stationary Engineer at several Board of Ed. schools, he was often spotted racing by in one of his signature cars or heard from blocks away on his Harley Davidson motorcycle. After his retirement, he enjoyed dividing his time between broadcasts at WBAI, volunteering his audio visual skills for important causes, traveling and keeping in touch with family and close friends.
Up until his final days, Bro. Rookard was an active warrior in the struggle for African Liberation and human rights. On May 27, 2010, Hampton was called home to rest.
Hampton’s only sister Margaret preceded him in passing. He also leaves to mourn: his son Antonio, daughter Antoinette and their mother Mildred, daughter Vicky, niece Donzia, cousins Dorothy, Thomasina, Celess, Margaret, and Lil Thomasina. He also leaves behind a legacy of four grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. Hampton and his words of wisdom will be missed by his many close friends and the love of anyone who was fortunate to meet him and listen to the words that he enjoyed sharing.

Through The Night Will Touch You!!

If you ever wondered what Black men struggle with in our communities, wonder no more. Go and see Through The Night at the Riverside Theatre. This newest play written and performed by the talented, versatile Daniel Beaty, is a story that lets you know some of the plights that Black men live through on a daily basis.
Beaty portrays six Black men and four Black women and does each character with such a heartfelt realism you will surely be touched by the problems and distress which plague their hearts. Beaty decided to write this play after reading a National Urban League report about the “State of Black Males in the U.S.” The report painted a bleak picture of a future filled with failure and incarceration. Beaty’s characters have issues, but also find ways to survive through their issues. The beauty of Beaty’s writing is that all his characters are intricately connected. There’s Mr. Rogers, an owner of a health food store in the ghetto; his intelligent and sensitive 10-year-old son Eric; his wife Sarah who believes in his dram of this business; his ex-con employee Dre; Dre’s pregnant girlfriend Kim; Twon, a neighbor who is graduating from high school and is going to Morehouse; his mother; the neighborhood church  pastor Bishop, his wife Ellen, their son Isaac and his boyfriend-Allen.
The story that Beaty weaves so well will have you mesmerized. From the opening scene, this incredible playwright creates characters that are so layered. As he changes persona, everything transforms into the specific character-body language, tone, voice, use of language and facial expressions. Now, some may say this is a given for any actor, but when you experience Beaty’s delivery you will realize he takes creating and performing characters to an elevated level.
I’ve tried to whet your appetite, but haven’t shared the meat of the production because the flavor of his poetry, singing and acting is a theatrical fare you need to savor first hand. Just know you will laugh a lot, you will cry some, but you will be completely engrossed from the beginning to the end.
The show is playing four more performances on June 6, 7 and 8. This is a show that not only shares the struggles of Black men, but their triumphs and the extremely critical role that a strong, loving, supportive Black mother or wife can play in the life of a Black man.
To buy tickets call 212-870-6784. This show is appropriate for teens and older. This play is powerfully directed by Charles Randolph-Wright. The show is being presented as part of the 50th Anniversary Celebration of the Riverside Theatre and the 46th Anniversary of the New Heritage Theatre Group.

Black Shows And Performers Grab Tony Nominations
The Tony Award nominations are out and African-American productions and performers are faring very well. FELA, the musical produced by Jay-Z, Will and Jada Pinkett Smith and Alicia Keys is up for Best Musical; Best Book of a Musical-Jim Lewis and Bill T. Jones; Best Direction of a Musical-Bill T. Jones; Best Choreography of a Musical-Bill T. Jones; Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical-Sahr Ngaujah; Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Musical-Lillias White; Best Scenic Design of a Musical-Marina Draghici; Best Costume Design of a Musical-Marina Dragnici; Best Lighting Design of a Musical-Robert Wierzel; Best Sound Design of a Musical-Robert Kaplowitz; and Best Orchestration of a Musical-Aaron Johnson.
Fences got 10 nominations which included: Best Revival of a Play; Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Play-Denzel Washington; Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Play-Viola Davis; Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Play-Stephen McKinley Henderson; Best Direction of a Play-Kenny Leon; Best Costume Design of a Play-Constanza Romero; Best Scenic Design of a Play-Santo Loquasto; Best Lighting Design of a Play-Brian MacDevitt; Best Sound Design of a Play-Acme Sound Partners; and Best Original Score Written for the Theatre-Branford Marsalis.
Memphis-received eight Tony nominations: Best Musical; Best Book of a Musical; Best Original Score Written for the Theatre; Best Direction of a Musical; Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical-Chad Kimball; Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical-Montego Glover; and Best Orchestra.
In the plays Race and Superior Donuts African-American actors David Alan Grier and Jon Michael Hill respectively both received Tony nominations in the Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Play.
The Tony Awards will air live on CBS, Sunday, June 13 from 8pm-11pm. Watch and root for your favorites.

New York Architects Design "Soft House" for Haitians Facing Hurricane Season

Funds Sought to Build and Distribute Units to Not for Profits and Individuals in Haiti

 
HaitiSOFTHOUSE is a flexible and sustainable approach to shelter that provides immediate transitional housing, community development and reconstruction solutions.
The shelter is designed to resist tropical storms and hurricane conditions, resist earthquakes and provide a healthy, well- ventilated environment. The flexibility of the structure allows for multiple-unit combinations, addressing domestic space needs, institutional needs and community needs.
The design features a lightweight and easy-to-assemble structural steel frame that receives high-performance fabric with excellent weather capabilities. The structure can be anchored directly into the ground using high-strength earth anchors in a variety of soil conditions. Additionally, the structure can be mounted on a prefab concrete foundation tile system that is manufactured locally from recycled concrete rubble. The structure is designed to be assembled with a few people in one day or less.
The SOFTHOUSEgroup was conceived and initiated by a group of designers with unique complimentary expertise and a commitment to bringing high quality, sustainable design solutions to the current demands of the recovery and reconstruction efforts of Haiti. The SOFTHOUSEgroup is currently working in conjunction with The Rural Haiti Project to combine creative and professional expertise with local and cultural knowledge in addressing the intermediate needs of Haiti in the aftermath of the 2010 earthquake.
The SOFTHOUSEgroup has established a association with Fabric Images, a Chicago-based manufacturer of lightweight deployable environmental structures. Fabric Images has international manufacturing locations with expertise in mass production under highly demanding delivery schedules.
The SOFTHOUSEgroup, LLC, in conjunction with The Rural Haiti Project, have secured the use of a site in Jacmel, Haiti for the initial construction of prototypes for field testing in June of 2010. The initial deployment of HaitiSOFTHOUSE units is intended to expand and evolve into the Jacmel SOFTVILLAGE in 2010.

Baba Chuck Davis Proudly Walks … and Dances … in the Footsteps of The Ancestors

Chuck Davis, the architect of  DanceAfrica – the largest cultural event in this nation devoted to the African dance experience and traditions, is very clear on his role: he is not the creator nor is he the founder.

 “DanceAfrica is a direct result of what is happening in the community and what has evolved over centuries, and of all the beauty of tradition and history – everything – in all of the cultures spread across the vast African continent,” he told us in a phone interview weeks ago from his North Carolina home.

“We have a world of knowledge explored and unexplored,” he said. “My role is to make people aware of the existence of those traditions as we destroy negative images of people of African descent that have been thrown out there for such a long time. Traditions born in Africa are spread throughout the world and  touch every aspect of culture and dance in the universe, so  we must pay homage to it. That is my role. I walk in the footsteps of the ancestors who lead me in the right directions.”

And he also is forging a path of his own.  He has carried DanceAfrica from its Brooklyn start 33 years ago to several other cities in the nation.  And he has embraced more than 100 dance companies, groups and ensembles that have performed in Brooklyn annually since February of 1977. 

Baba Chuck is tirelessly passionate “about just how fantastic we are as a people and their contributions to not only dance, but fashion, music, culture, the arts and more.”
All of modern dance and every modern dancer are in debt to Africa, he says.  “Not only is it important to recognize that, it is imperative that we preserve the knowledge and the facts.  DanceAfrica takes pride in who we are and where we come from and in preserving the traditions.
 “Are you aware that in some areas of Africa there are no drums; there is handclapping, blowing on twigs.  A leaf can be made to sound like a Jewish harp.”

“Our dress is not costume; it is depiction,” he says. “Through the fabrics we wear, our heritage is recognized.  Our attire is handed down from generation to generation. There are even lessons in which ethnic group of Africa fostered which style.”
“With regards to rhythm, we all are endowed with it: One may skip.  One may slide.  One may jump yet, we always return to the earth.”

The skipping, sliding and jumping led to one of the world’s most celebrated dance forms at one of the world’s most celebrated places. We asked Baba Chuck about it.

“Ahhh Swing. Harlem. The Savoy.  Yeaahhh,” he mused about the era that was in the fullness of its life when he was about 12.  “I’m about 7,000 years old now. So I was there. I had at least two generations of lives that hit the Savoy ballroom. I was there with Frankie Manning and Mama Norma Miller, and all the dancers who hit that one special jitterbug corner.  I relate to that place. There was a time when I was there. There was a time when all of us were there.
“You can see those movements and that swing today wherever people are moved to move their bodies.”

Another honor we can give to Africa is the birth of the break-dance, he says.  “The whole style of it came from the nomads of West Africa who made acrobatic dancing a part of their entire culture. Ballet Africaine sojourned through there.  The whip stop, whip-and-turn and all the other movements formed the groundwork.  Children, there, do those dances before they walk, talk or hum.

“Now, you know, our young people don’t wait; they take a move and go with it.
 “We constantly remind them that what such artists as MC Hammer, Usher and others are doing is from Africa. My only thing against some of today’s young artists is they never give Africa credit or remind their followers that their style is from Africa.”

Yet, DanceAfrica, the week-long master of master classes for global dance, will continue to give credit where it is due.  Every May over the past 3 decades, the event has merged areas of Brooklyn into a total dance village with a marketplace for local and regional entrepreneurs; free schools of dance instruction for the community; and entertainment, including cinema fest of African films for all ages. 

As mentioned, DanceAfrica is alive and well in Washington, D.C. and Chicago and other cities during different parts of the year. We estimate the annual week-long treat has resulted in billions of impressions.  “Audiences are increasing, and it is gaining recognition, more and more people understand its educational value.

“It can only move forward.  It’s like a tide, gathering more and more and more.    We can not just put Africans in one little tiny space and say, ‘Now you exist.’  No, Africa is all encompassing. Everything born there is all-encompassing.  It also is being recognized that that everyone on the continent of Africa isn’t black.”

“I’ve learned from every source I’ve come in contact with.  Everything I know has had an impact.
And Davis, in turn, is having an impact. Two years ago, he expanded DanceAfrica to reach out and touch Weeksville Heritage Center in the Ocean Hill section where a 19th century longshoreman created New York State’s … and possibly the nation’s …first self-sustaining  African American village. Davis coaxes prodigies … from individuals to  cultural organizations – to come out of the shadows.  And join his dance.

Bedford Stuyvesant Restoration Corp. along with Weeksville and other venues is now part of DanceAfrica, so the DanceAfrica village extends several miles.
 DanceAfrica “exists to celebrate the community’s African identity.  Weddings, christenings, and other ceremonies have taken place during DanceAfrica.”  As well as a huge celebration of the ancestors and elders preceding the opening of Brooklyn Academy of Music performances.
“We must carry forward the special knowledge the ancestors gave to us – immerse ourselves in it – in order to understand our greatness.

Baba Davis’ role is to show and to let people all over the world know.
This Memorial Day weekend,  DanceAfrica swings  inside and outside of the Brooklyn Academy of Music as it does every year.

The theme is African Rhythms / American Echoes.  Performing companies include:  Pamodzi Dance Troupe (Zambia), Dallas Black Dance Theatre (Dallas) Illstyle & Peace Productions (Philadelphia) and BAM/Restoration DanceAfrica Ensemble.   (Bernice Elizabeth Green)
For schedule and more information, visit www.bam.org/

Wikipedia Background:
In the 1960’s, Chuck Davis moved to New York to perform with musician Michael Babatunde. When he arrived, Alvin Ailey, Talley Beatty and Donald McKayle were with the New Dance Group at the Harlem Cultural Center, and they appeared in productions at the Brooklyn Academy of Music. Davis also studied Katherine Dunham technique and jazz with Syvilla Fort. In 1967 Davis formed the Chuck Davis Dance Company at the South Bronx Community Action Theatre, later moved to Bronx Community College.

In February 1977, the Chuck Davis Dance Company performed in a constructed African village in the BAM Lepercq Space. The following Spring, DanceAfrica debuted with a day-long African bazaar.  Arthur Hall, Charles Moore, Chuck Davis, Dinizulu, and the International Afrikan American Ballet participated in the festival, which offered five performances in the BAM Playhouse and culminated with all five companies-approximately 70 performers-on the Opera House stage. DanceAfrica is BAM’s longest running performance series-and has become a Memorial Day weekend tradition in Brooklyn.

In the 1980s Chuck Davis added master classes in African movement and music. DanceAfrica 1993 opened with a motorcade procession from Harlem to the steps of BAM. Fifty-two members of the Imperial Bikers Motorcycle Club, each carrying the flag of an African country, were joined by the Council of Elders, artists, and dignitaries for a libation pouring ceremony that included a gigantic carrot cake baked in the shape of Africa. The 20th Anniversary Celebration in 1997 debuted the BAM/Restoration DanceAfrica Ensemble, a collaboration between BAM and the Bedford Stuyvesant Restoration Corporation’s Youth Arts Academy that has become an annual crowd favorite.

In 2007, DanceAfrica celebrated its 30th festival with 30 Years of DanceAfrica: Remember! Honor! Respect! An African Dance Odyssey, and marks another milestone-its founder Baba Chuck Davis’ 70th birthday.

DanceAfrica has showcased troupes based both in Africa and the African Diaspora including many from New York. Companies have ranged in style from indigenous African to urban American hip-hop. DanceAfrica has shown that “traditional” African dance is not fixed in time and remains tremendously inclusive and diverse, and that even the most cutting-edge choreography can contain African influences. DanceAfrica embodies tradition, but also a spirit of change and growth reaching back into the past and forward into the future, embracing the links between cultures across the African Diaspora, always bearing the message, “Peace, love, and respect for everybody!”

Backstage Notes on the Concert & Benefit of the Year

The performances were electric, the awards presentations poignant, the huge crowd ecstatic at last Friday’s  Benefit Concert starring Stephanie Mills; in tribute to Hon. Assemblywoman Annette M. Robinson; and designed to support efforts to complete construction of an in-the-community banquet hall. 

Cornerstone choir. Superstar Mills, who once lived on Greene, bet. Throop and Marcus Garvey Blvd. (then Sumner Avenue), in her gfirlhood years attended Cornerstone, where her parents were deacons for 25 years. (Photo by Olivia Cousins)

Even the beloved ancestor Chief Charles Joshua, who led the Central Brooklyn Coordinating Council and spearheaded a movement years ago that directly links to the  Central Brooklyn Community Services Corp., sponsoring agency of the Friday, May 21 fundraiser and benefit, had a place of honor at the table.  The assemblywoman remembered him in her remarks of appreciation.   (Proceeds from the concert benefit the work of CBCSC’s construction of a conference center/catering hall in the neighborhood.)

The evening also celebrated Bedford Stuyvesant as a great “home”  through the wonderful music of Stephanie Mills, 53, whose voice is stronger and more vibrant than ever.
And “stars” were born:  They included violinist Joya Bravo; the Voices of Cornerstone led by Natasha Quiller and the revelation of The Rev. Robert M. Waterman’s gifts as a master emcee.
There were other reminders of Bed-Stuy’s status as a bona fide village, too.  When event organizer Wayne Devonish sent a call out two weeks ago for support of his huge endeavor, soldiers lined up around him.  They included: Lorrie Ayers, Phyllis Hurd, Our Time Press intern Jessica Harris, and event coordinator/stage manager Sandra Coello.  Also, the Herbert Von King Park Friends; the Magnolia Tree Earth Center of Bedford Stuyvesant’s Board of Directors, of which Devonish is a member; Bridge Street Development Corporation staff; and dozens of  community and faith leaders, including the the security ministry of Christ Fellowship Baptist Church (Vinessa Toyer, Elizabeth Hill, Faye Baker, Patrice Webb, Brian Springer, Tommy White, Charles Crooms and Darryl McNeil) joined by the great ushers of historic Bridge Street AWME Church, all resplendent in white.
The community’s VIPS came out in full force, including the omnipresent and ever-supportive Dr. Marcia Maxwell, The Rev. Dr. Cheryl Anthony, Barbara Sidbury and her scores of classy sweetheart friends who not only supported the event with their dollars but also with their extreme patience and class.   Dinner was served late as guests along with caterers Lemuel and Charlotte Mial,  awaited the arrival of a local company charged with delivering tablecloths, napkins, dinnerware and silverware, but delayed by extreme circumstances.

Class Act: Stephanie Mills (foreground) took time for a photo op for the Bed-Stuy Archives with Bed-Stuy leaders, from left, community activist Sharonnie Perry, Community Board #3 President Henry Butler, CBCSS PresidentBill Wrenn of Central Brooklyn Community Services and Councilman Al Vann. (Photo by Olivia Cousins)

Responding to Mr. Devonish’s requests, post-concert, Ms. Mills greeted community leaders and the Voices of Cornerstone Baptist Church where she first started performing and both parents were deacons for 25 years.  Images of Miss Mills with community leaders can be seen on these pages of Our Time Press and, thanks to Lem Peterkin and other local photojournalists, in other  community papers, including The Amsterdam News, The Beacon and The Daily Challenge.
Wayne Devonish, Bill Wren, president of CBCSC and their staff, including the efficient Susan Bishop, Devonish’s assistant, have extended a special thanks to the entire Central Brooklyn family.  Said Mr. Wren, “It takes a village to get things done, and it always will.”