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Jobs and Justice – will young Black voters come out in November?

By Nayaba Arinde
Editor-at-Large

November 5th, 2024 is General Election Day.
By then the political horse-trading for the White House should be decided between the major two parties with a prospective rematch of Democrat President Joe Biden, and Republican former President Donald Trump.


“We’ve been canvassing the young people in the community, just seeing that they’re registered, and asking about how they feel about the election. A lot of them have checked out. They just don’t want to vote,” Dominique Sharpton, National Director of Membership for the National Action Network (NAN), told Our Time Press. “This is a battle with two old men, and they don’t feel included.”

It has been a tumultuous week in national politics with Biden trying to convince voters and supporters of his cognitive competence; and the widely-reported alleged “assassination” attempt of Trump in Pennsylvania on Saturday, 13th July, where he was shot in the ear by a 20-year-old registered Republican.

Ms. Dominique Sharpton, National Director of Membership, National Association Network (NAN)


Yet, nothing stops the 24-hour political news cycle. The Republican National Convention kept the election headline news. Aside from the choices of Joe and Donald, also-rans running currently include Prof. Cornel West and Robert F. Kennedy.
A roster to inspire young folk to get up and go to the polls?


Perhaps not immediately self-evident, but some youth activists and experienced elders urge engagement in the process since garnering community political power is not a spectator sport.

“It is imperative that each of us are responsible for the world we live in,” the former CEO of Amer-I-Can of New York Walter Beach told Our Time Press. “Voting is one of the responsible ways to have an impact on one’s life. Not to seriously consider can not be blamed on being young. Self-neglect is self-abuse.”


The Board of Elections mission statement determines that they provide the service so, “that qualified voters may exercise their right to franchise and that every opportunity be given to voters to execute that right and to vote for whom they choose.”
Is the acerbic tone of this year’s election period encouraging or discouraging the young vote?


Or will there be a ‘Youth Quake,’ similar to what happened in Britain during the July 4th General Election? There many young people turned from the two major political parties – Conservative and Labour; and instead looked to other groups such as the Liberal Democrats, the Greens, Plaid Cymru, the Scottish National Party, Reform, and independent parties.

UK’s yahoo!news – stated, “The combined vote share for smaller parties among the under-30s was greater – at 46 –than the 42% who voted for the Labour party.”


“Unfortunately our youth cannot be excited with the upcoming election,” Omowale Clay, December 12th Movement Chairman told Our Time Press. “Faced with the fear of Trump winning and Biden, every day appearing as a loser, with the history of assisting genocide in Gaza. However, the responsibility of the conscious is to fight disinformation out there and point out the reality that our people organized is the greatest weapon.

It is not only the basis of being heard but in fact, laying the basis to create justice and development for our people. Whatever the outcome of this election, this government cannot change our fundamental conditions. This is the work before us.”


Asked what are the major asks for young people this general election requests, Ms. Sharpton replied, “From jobs to justice; provisions on why Black and Brown babies are still being disproportionately stopped by police. They feel like they’ve not been heard on things that we have pushed for in terms of what applies to them like student loans.

There is not a lot of attention around community safety, around gun control, around student debt relief. There are issues in dealing with raising the minimum wage, and what happens with the economy and how prices are constantly going up and there’s no direct pipeline to how young people will survive in corporate America, or once they’ve graduated or finished their studies.
“They don’t see a lot on the agenda in terms of what the presidential candidates are actually discussing in terms of policy. We just see empty promises.”


Does she feel that young people will show up in November?
“I don’t. I don’t see that. But, I do see us having an opportunity to turn things around if we continue to engage and do what we need to do as community leaders to not only disseminate information, and make sure that we are doing our part to make sure that they understand the political process, and what really is at stake. We can’t afford for anyone to sit this one out.”


If not impressed with the presidential election, what about the local city and state elections?
“Yes,” said Ms. Sharpton, “local politics is something that we definitely need to amplify, with provisions like housing, especially in New York; around mental health; and dealing with how drugs, substances, and guns are coming into our community.”


These are real-life issues, said the mom and activist, and “not something we are seeing on social media or hearing on the news or on the radio. This is affecting our homes and our livelihoods, that’s taking our friends’ lives, and that’s taking our children’s lives.


“There are provisions being discussed, but young people are not aware of them. This is why spaces like the NAN Youth Huddle are important. It is where the information is being disseminated, the elected officials are coming, and the young people are there, but we have got to take it to the streets, and make sure that we are reaching everyone.”


Optimistically, Brooklyn State Senator Kevin Parker told Our Time Press, “The youth vote is a driving force in this year’s elections. They’re engaged, they’re excited, and they’re ready to shape the future. Young voters are stepping up, bringing unprecedented energy and passion for social justice, climate action, and economic fairness.

This election will see their voices louder than ever, demanding real change. The days of youth indifference are over—this is their time to lead.”
@NayabaArinde1

Dr. Segun Shabaka: International African Arts Fest Has Lost Commodore Barry Park for 2025 Event, Active Search is on for New Location

by Fern Gillespie
For 53 years, the International African Arts Festival (IAAF) has welcomed attendees from Brooklyn and beyond for a festive summer celebration of culture and the arts from the African Diaspora. Unfortunately, this cultural mainstay in Brooklyn is now seeking a new location.

The International African Arts Festival has been notified by NYC Parks that Commodore Barry Park, its home for 22 years, will not be available in 2025 due to a renovation project.


“We were told that this is the last year that we would be able to use the park,” Dr. Segun Shabaka, the chair and founding executive board member of the International African Arts Festival, told Our Time Press. “We won’t be able to use the park after it’s renovated.”
Yesterday, NYC Parks confirmed Dr. Shabaka’s announcement to Our Time Press.

Dr. Segun Shabaka


IAAF, just held from July 4 – 7, is the largest Pan-African festival in New York. It spans a dedicated children’s play zone, captivating poetry, fashion shows, chess tournaments, African-inspired goods and cuisine, African dance performances, fashion, lectures, workshops and more.


“It’s free and accessible, family-oriented, intragenerational, inexpensive and positive in every aspect,” said Dr. Shabaka. “It brings in patrons, artists, vendors and entertainers from all over the world. People love the positive vibes.”


For 35 years, the IAAF has held the annual Symposium on Culture, Community and Struggle in conjunction with the National Association of Kawaida Organizations (NAKO), which is chaired by Dr. Shabaka. This year’s issues included culture, housing crisis, social change, and youth with panelists like African artist Damion Soul and NYC Public Advocate Jumaane Williams.

“We must celebrate, but we must also work to transform ourselves and society,” explained Dr. Shabaka. “The symposium is very much in line with what the festival is about. It’s about raising the consciousness of our community and people.”


Brooklyn-born Dr. Shabaka has been a Pan-African activist since he was a student at Boy’s High. After high school in 1971, while attending Brooklyn College, he assisted The East as a worker and volunteer at the first International African Arts Festival and is listed as a founding member.

“My vision coming out of high school was aligned with The East. That’s why I volunteered there,” he said. “I had studied Swahili in high school and I had studied African history and culture. I was already a Pan-African student.”


As a scholar, Dr. Shabaka was mentored by Dr. Maulana Karenga, who developed the Kawaida philosophy, the foundation of Nguzo Saba and the Kwanzaa principles of Umoja (unity), Kujichagulia (self-determination), Ujima (collective work and responsibility), Ujamaa (cooperative economics), Kuumba (creativity) and Imani (faith).


“Kawaida is the foremost philosophy of Black Power and Pan-Africanism in this country,” he explained. “For those people that were around in the 1960s and early 70s, that was the philosophy upon which the major Black Power leaders and institutions grounded themselves. Amiri Baraka, Jitu Weusi, Haki Madhubuti, and others used that philosophy to build independent black institutions, that service struggle and programs.”


Kwanzaa is one of the cultural key outreaches for Dr. Shabaka. As the chair of the New York National Association of Kawaida Organizations (NAKO), he is promoting Kwanzaa in the metro area. “Kwanzaa is growing by leaps and bounds across the globe.

There are countries that are celebrating Kwanzaa,” he said. “It speaks to African people with the need to feel spiritually, culturally, historically and ethically. Kwanzaa is here to stay and growing.”


Working on his doctorate at Temple University, Dr. Shabaka uncovered an historic connection between Black Americans and Haiti. “I did my dissertation on the African-American migration to Haiti from 1824 to 1825. The movement of 13,000, some people believe it’s more, to Haiti,” he explained. “It was Pan-African and run by Black people here and in Haiti.

About 500 had been freed by the Quakers. There were AME church people. Some of them were supposed to be enslaved, but they escaped to the north. These are the kinds of stories that we should be teaching our children.”


A veteran frontline Black Historian, specializing in African American and Pan-African history, Dr. Shabaka is disturbed by the conservative movement to destroy or “whitewash” Black History classes in schools. “It’s part of a campaign on society where they don’t want to see and have our story told. Black History gives you a realistic view of American society.

They don’t want Black people to tell their story because they say it makes their children feel bad. Our children have been feeling bad for centuries,” he said. “Black people need to come up with a counter to this campaign. To be vigilant. The Black church and Mosques and other institutions have to teach our stories, and tell the truth in different after-school programs, so that these young people get a sense of who they are.”


To give people the opportunity to visit African Diaspora nations, over 30 years ago he established Pyramid Productions, a travel and consulting firm. He coordinates cultural tours to Africa, the Caribbean, and South America. Currently, he’s organizing upcoming trips during 2024 and 2025 to South Africa, Tanzania, Cuba, and Senegal.


Right now, he’s on a mission to find a new Brooklyn home for the 2025 International African Arts Festival. “This 53-year-old institution has bought some of the best programming to this borough, city and country and to low-income communities. We deserve more support than we’re getting in this effort to find a new home. There are not a lot of events that you can go to for free that offer this type of programming,” said Dr. Shabaka.


“We are planning on coming back next year and we want people to keep checking out our website for updates on our plan of action.”
For more information on the International African Arts Festival, contact https://www.iaafestival.org/

Preserving That which brings us Joy

by Bernice Elizabeth Green
This year marks the 10th anniversary of the passing of Joy Chatel, an iconic figure in Brooklyn preservation activism history.
“Mama Joy,” as she was known, believed in the sanctity of places with an ancestral African presence. Especially places like the 19th-century Greek Revival brick row house at 227 Abolitionist Place-Duffield Street in Downtown Brooklyn where she lived with her family for 17 years.


Built c. 1848-1851(and extended in 1933), it was the house abolitionists Harriet and Thomas Truesdell lived in from 1851 to 1863. 227 Duffield Street may have been a stop on the Underground Railroad. It is reported that enslaved Africans seeking freedom, were sheltered at the house.


In 2004, as part of Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s upzoning of Downtown Brooklyn, the Bloomberg Administration promised to commemorate Brooklyn’s Abolitionist history by developing a greenspace. Work began on it in 2010. Three years prior, in 2007, Chatel and friends rescued 227 from dreaded Eminent Domain.


In 2019, five years after Mama Joy’s death, some of those same friends, neighbors, community Brooklyn residents with Mayor Bill DeBlasio successfully rallied to save the building from demolition. The developer’s plans were to raze it and build a 13-story tower on its site and adjacent to it.


In 2021, The New York Landmarks Preservation Committee (LPC) designated 227 Abolitionists Place as an individual New York City landmark.
A month later the City of New York purchased it for $3.2million, further assuring support of the building’s permanence.


This spring Abolitionist Park, formerly the site of Willoughby Square, opened up next door to 227, at 225, in May. It did not replace the building as was planned years prior.
Neighbors and preservationists recall how Joy beat the drum loudly, calling for the building to be saved from destruction. How one woman gathered a team and saved a building in the face of every dart aimed at her dream, is a story.


Ten years after Mama Joy’s passing, her will keeps pushing through.
The new park, designed by landscape architecture firm Hargreaves Jones, includes a children’s play area, lawns, ornamental plants, a waterplay feature and multiple seating areas.
Abolitionist Park Place is managed and programmed by the Downtown Brooklyn Partnership. It will feature a public art installation by Brooklyn-based multimedia artist Kenseth Armstead to be installed starting in 2026.

New York Public Library Celebrates 100th Birthday of James Baldwin Across Library System

NYPL will honor one of its most legendary patrons with exhibitions at libraries he frequented, along with programming and book giveaways

To celebrate what would have been the 100th birthday of writer, activist, public intellectual, and beloved library patron James Baldwin, The New York Public Library will present to the public for the first time ever some of the most important and extraordinary items from the Library’s collection of Baldwin’s papers.

In addition, as part of a wider celebration of Baldwin’s legacy including free programs for all ages, 30 of the Library’s branches across the Bronx, Manhattan, and Staten Island will participate in one of the largest adult book giveaways in NYPL history. The initiative, “Celebrating 100 Years of James Baldwin at NYPL,” will honor James Baldwin’s love for libraries and his legacy as one of the most read and respected writers of our time.


The story of James Baldwin’s education and path as a literary truth-teller is deeply intertwined with the history of The New York Public Library. Baldwin was born in Harlem in 1924 across the street from what would later become the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, and visited the library 3-4 times a week in his youth when it was one of the first integrated libraries at NYPL. Baldwin first arrived at the flagship 42nd Street Library, now known as the Stephen A. Schwarzman Building, as a teenager.


The library left such an impression on him that he became a regular patron, and the building makes an appearance in the novel Go Tell It on the Mountain. Today the Schomburg Center stewards James Baldwin’s collection of personal papers, ephemera, manuscripts, and materials.


Patrons can see the first major exhibitions of NYPL’s James Baldwin papers at the two libraries that inspired him. Highlights include manuscripts of his most famous and influential works, including the drafts of Go Tell It on the Mountain, Giovanni’s Room, and The Fire Next Time; James Baldwin’s high school literary magazine from DeWitt Clinton High School; and letters with friends, including Maya Angelou and Lorraine Hansberry.

Exhibitions honoring James Baldwin:

James Baldwin: Mountain to Fire at the Polonsky Exhibition of The New York Public Library’s Treasures (Stephen A. Schwarzman Building)
June 13, 2024, through Fall 2025

Exhibited within the Polonsky Exhibition of The New York Public Library’s Treasures, James Baldwin: Mountain to Fire includes never-before-exhibited literary manuscripts—including draft pages from his early works Go Tell It on the Mountain, Giovanni’s Room, and The Fire Next Time—alongside other remarkable items from the Baldwin papers.
New exhibition: JIMMY! God’s Black Revolutionary Mouth (Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture)

August 2, 2024, through
February 2025

JIMMY! will feature the Schomburg Center’s collection of Baldwin’s archive of personal papers along with materials from other research collections to highlight his literary career and legacy from childhood to death. This exhibition will illuminate the passion, brilliance, and courageous spirit of James “Jimmy” Baldwin. The Schomburg Center will hold an opening reception on Friday, August 2 from 12–3 PM.


“The James Baldwin papers open a window into Baldwin’s vibrant, masterful literary persona. As a child, Baldwin visited the 135th Street Branch Library, predecessor to the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, at least 3 or 4 times a week. Today, we are honored to be home to his papers and legacy. By celebrating Baldwin in his centenary, we invite readers to engage with Baldwin, his rich inner life, and the way he used the written word to tell the truth about the world around him,” said Barrye Brown, Schomburg Center Curator of Manuscripts, Archives, and Rare Books and curator of Jimmy! God’s Black Revolutionary Mouth.


More than 30 library branches will give away 4,000 select Baldwin titles to patrons, as well as offer a robust lineup of arts and writing workshops throughout the summer and fall. Patrons can follow in Baldwin’s footsteps with two branch-led neighborhood walking tour programs in Harlem and Greenwich Village and a self-guided tour map from the Schomburg Center to the Stephen A. Schwarzman Building, including stops along the way (available both in print at branches and online via the Bloomberg Connects app).


“James Baldwin was born with gifts, but there’s no question that The New York Public Library and other public city resources played a critical, nurturing role in the early intellectual development of this artist who opened the minds and hearts of so many people around the world. That’s something that all New Yorkers can celebrate,” said Charles Cuykendall Carter, Assistant Curator of the Carl H. Pforzheimer Collection of Shelley and His Circle and Curator of James Baldwin: Mountain to Fire.


Celebrating 100 Years of James Baldwin at NYPL will continue into the fall, with more to be announced at nypl.org/baldwin100. On October 4–5, the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture will hold a two-day symposium, How to Start a Fire, in collaboration with Columbia’s Institute for Research in African American Studies. The forum will engage in critical discussions about Baldwin’s work and consider his impact on today’s fights for social justice.


The James Baldwin Papers were acquired through the generosity of the Ford Foundation, Katharine J. Rayner, James and Morag Anderson, the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, and New York Life. Support for processing has been provided by the Arcus Foundation.

About the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture
Founded in 1925 and named a National Historic Landmark in 2017, the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture is one of the world’s leading cultural institutions devoted to the preservation, research, interpretation, and exhibition of materials focused on African American, African Diasporan, and African experiences. As a research division of The New York Public Library, the Schomburg Center features diverse programming and collections totaling over 11 million items that illuminate the richness of global black history, arts, and culture. Learn more at schomburgcenter.org.

About The New York Public Library
For over 125 years, The New York Public Library has been a free provider of education and information for the people of New York and beyond. With 92 locations—including research and branch libraries—throughout the Bronx, Manhattan, and Staten Island, the Library offers free materials, computer access, classes, exhibitions, programming, and more to everyone from toddlers to scholars, and has seen record numbers of attendance and circulation in recent years. The New York Public Library receives approximately 16 million visits through its doors annually and millions more around the globe who use its resources at www.nypl.org. To offer this wide array of free programming, The New York Public Library relies on both public and private funding. Learn more about how to support the Library at nypl.org/support.

“Who will be Vice President Kamala Harris’ Running Mate?”

I was standing with Congressman Hakeem Jeffries on Lafayette Avenue by Herbert Von King Park several years ago, and I remarked how he was “swimming with the big dogs now” on the Budget and Judiciary committees. Congressman Jeffries responded, “Yeah, I may have to whip some Brooklyn on ‘em.” Now is that time, Congressman.


The president has got to be told what the word is on the street. That he’s grown too old for the biggest, most important job in the world. And the person who would replace him would use his power to destroy who we are as a nation in order to stay out of jail.


I suggest you gather up a posse with fellow Brooklynite Chuck Schumer, the Obamas, the Clintons, Jim Clyburn, Nancy Pelosi, and committee chairs and go to the White House. Have a heart-to-heart with our valiant hero Joe Biden and tell him what the majority of voters, not his aides, are thinking. Aide’s insistence that Biden is not declining is self-serving and cannot be taken at face value.


Tell Joe if it was up to the delegation, you’d want him to stay, but it’s the mass of voters who will decide. And after looking at the data and hearing constituent voices, the voters see him as old now, and they imagine how he’ll be in a year or two. Ask if he’ll have more energy two years from now. The voters don’t believe he will.


To save our republic, it’s time to do the patriotic thing; he has to let go so that his policies and positive legacy will continue. Tell him, don’t become the “Only I can fix it” guy who believes his delusions are real. They are not. You’re going to lose.


In this life-outside-the box, after that meeting, Biden announces he’s stepping out of the race and assigning his delegates to Vice President Kamala Harris.
With that decided, the only remaining question is, “Who will be Vice President Kamala Harris’ Vice President?”


I believe the person has to be a straight, White male from one of the “must-win” states. We can return to our tribal corners after we defeat this common threat.


I would suggest Senator Mark Kelly from the swing state of Arizona. He has a phenomenal background: astronaut and combat fighter pilot. After his wife, then Congresswoman Gabby Giffords, was shot and disabled in an assassination attempt, he co-founded Americans for Responsible Solutions, now Giffords, a gun control advocacy organization that has kept his name fresh as an advocate in the gun control movement. As such, he comes to the table with a national base of passionate voters and name recognition with good vibes.


This team would give us a new generation to run the country. Kamala Harris is an outspoken advocate for abortion rights, and Mark Kelly is a well-known antigun advocate. Both issues are supported by a vast majority of voters. They would be further armed with the Biden/Harris record of achievements and the Harris/Kelly plan for the future.


This combination will bring a huge sigh of relief across the country and fire up the party and everyone who understands that our very democracy, who we are as a nation, is on the line.
They will bring a blue wave that keeps the presidency and the Senate, wins the House, and gives us the power to deal with the Supreme Court.


We cannot let history remember us in this time as having left our fate to be decided by deference, niceties, and the stubbornness of an old man.
This is an election the nation cannot lose. We just can’t.