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Summer in the City

Brooklyn’s Migrants – Community and Commerce in effect

By Nayaba Arinde
Editor-at-Large

When the recent inflow of migrants first arrived, there was a sense of welcoming with underlying concern, especially last year. From April 2022, the nation in general, and Brooklyn in particular, experienced a mass influx of migrants and asylum seekers from countries like Venezuela, Ecuador, Mexico, Russia, China, Guinea, Mauritania, Senegal, and Jamaica.
Thousands of African migrants came to New York last November.

Mauritanian-born Amina Cherif Photo:Nayaba Arinde


Months later, with summer well underway, many of the migrants have been absorbed into the fabric of New York City.


“Over 206,300 asylum seekers have come through our intake system since Spring 2022,” Mayor Eric Adams’ office told Our Time Press. “Last week, from 6/24 to 6/30, more than 1,100 new migrants,” arrived in the city.


As of July 2024, Adams said, “We have over 65,300 migrants currently in our care.”
Many African migrants took what is a torturous journey.
“There is not one person who was not robbed coming across the border. They crossed seven to 15 countries to come here,” migrant advocate Sekou Krumah told Our Time Press. “Hope for a better opportunity will make you do anything.”


A casual stroll down Fulton Street in Brooklyn, for example, will show rows of scooters and bikes used for food delivery. The block between the Mosque Taqwa on Bedford Avenue and the train stop on Franklin Avenue has a decades-long row of successful African and African-American Muslim restaurants, African foodstuffs, clothes, and resource stores. The new migrants and asylum-seekers–a mere block from the Bedford Armory, populate the area and patronize, and are supported by the businesses.

Sekou Krumah, from Conakry, Guinea
Photo:Nayaba Arinde


While many have found work, others still linger daily, with no occupation yet found.
“There’s a lot of them that just came at the wrong time,” Amina Cherif told Our Time Press. The Mauritanian-born, American citizen explained, “There are no jobs.

The ones who came earlier are kind of lucky, some of them are stable now. But the ones who just got here are struggling, and some of them are crying to go back. But they really don’t have the money to buy the tickets to go back, and some of them are forced to work illegally because they don’t have the papers.”


The Brooklynite continued, “They still need to survive and the shelter can’t have them forever, so they are stuck between a rock and a hard place. They take on jobs to survive, like selling sneakers by the roadside – exhausting things for a few dollars.”


“We have used every possible corner of New York City to shelter asylum seekers in a compassionate and equitable way,” Liz Garcia, the Mayor’s Press Secretary told Our Time Press.

“It is clear that our efforts are working, as we have already helped more than 65 percent of asylum seekers who have come into our care take the next steps in their journeys and move out of our shelter system as they seek to be self-sufficient.”
They want to work, Cherif reiterated.


“They’re already here, so I guess the government should help them with becoming legal so they can work and have more options and pay rent. They want to be part of the system. They want to be legal and work. They are not here to find shortcuts, and we want to encourage that mindset, so we don’t want to make it hard for them.”


Migrant advocate Sekou Krumah told Our Time Press, “The first generation of Muslim, French-speaking Africans came in 2001-2007.”
Drawing from his own experience when he came from Conakry, Guinea, 15 years ago, he said that he wanted to become a mentor to those who came after him. He created Save My Nation in 2013 to help newcomers avoid pitfalls and bullying and establish themselves in their new neighborhoods.


As for the second wave, who came in the last two years, Krumah said, “They came to be a part of this society. To work and to build. A lot of them died trying to get here, in the ocean, through lack of food, all of them got robbed by the rebels crossing the border.”


Disillusioned by the lack of work once here, some of the new migrants “want to go back home. It’s not what they thought it was going to be,” said Ms. Cherif. “You see the men crying ‘no job, no job.’ They have liquidated all the money they had. They sold their houses and their cars. They sold their gold. They closed up their businesses. The whole family pooled money for them to come here. Some of them were bosses back home.


At the border, they just kept spending money, and then you live off of your savings because you can’t find a job. They were robbed by the drug dealers and the passport dealers. They lost a lot of money.”


Community and commerce have helped those who made it to Brooklyn. As some became food delivery workers and bike messengers, Ms. Cherif said, “There’s some kind of network where some of them rented bikes and phones. But, they work around the clock because some of them raise the price of the bikes or the rents.”


As for some others, Bed Stuy Fulton Street stores, “allow them to sell shoes in front of their buildings, but some of them will not. But, I have seen some new cashiers at the African buffets, at my Mosque Taqwa, and I have heard some new voices. They have given them money, food, and water that’s for sure.”


Ms. Cherif said that she came from Mauritania 20 years ago, landing in Boston first, then New York 12 years ago, working and getting her citizenship. An African clothing and accessories vendor at this past week’s International African Arts Festival, the Fulani and French speaker added, “I found my people here. It’s open to different cultures. I found my food here. There’s a big community here.”


It is self-evident that many African migrants have been able to find some sort of work here; food delivery, working in stores and restaurants, some employed doing road work and construction, and odd jobs.


Krumah said that as they navigate the process of establishing themselves, “I am hopeful that they are assimilating, adapting. These West Africans came with culture, character, education, and experience. They are handymen, carpenters, educators, professionals, and they want to work. I know that New York City is blessed to have them.”

Consequential Supreme Court Decisions 2023 Term, Part 2

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By Mary Alice Miller

This year’s end of term Supreme Court decisions are proof that it is important to vote and vote intelligently. Trump’s appointments to the court have for the most part dismantled decades of precedent. The high court did not issue all of its rulings by the end of business last Friday in June, leaving everyone in suspense for their decision on whether Trump (or any president) is immune to criminal charges.


Was Trump prescient when he said he could shoot someone in the middle of Fifth Avenue and get away with it? The Supreme Court essentially ruled that yes, Trump could shoot someone in the middle of Fifth Avenue if it is in the course of his presidential duties. The court sent the case back to the lower court to determine which of Trump’s actions related to denying the results of the 2020 presidential election were part of Trump’s absolute constitutional powers and which were not, for instance, any communications between Trump and former Vice President Mike Pence when Pence was acting as president of the Senate during the certification of the election.


The court ruled that homelessness can be criminalized. Grants City, Oregon, enacted an ordinance that, on its face, seems neutral: camping on public property is banned by everyone. But homeless people, by definition, have no choice but to sleep outdoors wherever they can find a safe space. By a 6-3 decision, the high court found that imposing fines, banishment from city property, presumably including streets, and imprisonment are not an Eight Amendment violation against cruel and unusual punishment. Considering there are approximately 600,000 homeless across the nation, including New York City, the decision will have a far-reaching impact.


We all saw what happened at the Capitol building on Jan 6, 2021; our Congressional Representatives and Senators experienced it firsthand. Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and former Vice President Mike Pence were literally hunted and threatened with death, as other legislators ran for their lives and hid in fear wherever they could. At the behest of then-President Trump, hundreds who stormed the U.S. Capitol were charged with obstruction of an official proceeding.

By a 6-3 decision, the court ruled that obstruction of an official proceeding applies only to evidence tampering in official proceedings, such as the destruction of records or documents. One wonders if the temporary 8-foot fencing installed in front of the Supreme Court in May 2022 after the decision overturning Roe v. Wade was leaked was placed solely to protect records and documents. The ruling could impact more than 600 other defendants, including Trump, although all of them were charged with other crimes connected to the attack on the Capitol.


The Supreme Court found its opportunity to curtail the power of federal agencies to interpret laws they administer, transferring interpretation of ambiguous laws to the courts. In yet another 6-3 decision, the high court overruled the Chevron doctrine, derived from a 1984 case that found if Congress had not directly addressed the question at the center of a dispute, then a court was required to uphold an agency’s interpretation as long as it was reasonable.

The Chevron doctrine was derived from a Reagan-era case that reduced strict adherence to environmental protection law. At first, conservatives applauded the decision but rejected it because it was based on the power of any president’s administration to interpret vague law. Congress deliberately crafts laws with ambiguity, allowing those with technical expertise to craft regulations based on law.

Conservatives prefer to take any obscure law to court rather than have agencies with technical expertise interpret the law. Of course, court backlogs would increase delaying outcomes, and conservatives would be able to judge shop for a court that would provide favorable rulings to them. This decision will have far-reaching consequences for any Congressional law that requires interpretation.


In yet another blow to administrative powers, the high court ruled that in cases of securities fraud, the Securities and Exchange Commission can no longer impose fines to penalize fraud, a routine practice. The court reasoned that the fines violated the Seventh Amendment right to trial by jury. The case involved a hedge fund founder and investment manager who misled investors by making misleading statements.


The Supreme Court dismissed a pair of cases that leave in place a federal judge’s order that temporarily blocks Idaho from enforcing its abortion ban to the extent that it conflicts with federal law: The Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTLA). That 1986 law requires hospital emergency rooms that receive Medicare to provide necessary stabilizing treatment to patients who arrive with an emergency medical condition.

Idaho’s ban would allow an abortion only if the woman’s life were at risk or in cases of rape and incest. But the EMTLA would cover if the woman would face grave health consequences, including infertility. Until the high court’s ruling, Idaho has had to airlift a pregnant woman in medical distress to another state every other week. The Idaho abortion protection is temporary until fully adjudicated in lower courts.


There was a time when the conservative faction of the Supreme Court would rail against the court using decisions to make new laws and saw court cases that confirmed the rights of citizens as job creators for progressive lawyers. Now that conservatives have a firm 6-3 majority on the court, none of that applies.

Celebrating the Legacy of Black Rose Nelmes at 97

By Louise Dente
Black Rose Nelmes, born in New York on June 28, 1928, is a pioneering natural kinky haircare pioneer, beautician, and performing artist. As an original member of the legendary Grandassa Models, founded by Elombe Brath in 1961, she was pivotal in promoting the classic Afro hairstyle as a symbol of pride and cultural identity. Today, she stands as the sole surviving original Grandassa model, a living testament to her enduring impact and legacy.


In addition to her groundbreaking work with the Grandassa Models, Black Rose Nelmes was one of the few natural hair care stylists of her time, catering to a prestigious clientele that included renowned figures such as Cicely Tyson, Angela Davis, Dizzy Gillespie, and basketball legend, Earl “The Pearl” Monroe. Her expertise and dedication to celebrating natural beauty attracted a diverse range of clients seeking her unique haircare and styling approach.


Throughout her career, Black Rose Nelmes distinguished herself as a trailblazer in the beauty industry, creating her own line of haircare oils tailored to kinky hair textures. Her contributions to popularizing the Afro hairstyle during the 1960s and 1970s resonated with a generation seeking authentic expressions of identity and self-acceptance. By embracing and celebrating natural beauty, she empowered individuals to embrace their unique features with confidence and pride.


Despite facing health challenges, including a stroke two years ago that led to her residing in a nursing home, Black Rose Nelmes continues to be honored and celebrated by her friends and family. Each year loved ones gather to pay tribute to her remarkable achievements and enduring legacy.


Her birthday was a joyous inter-generational celebration filled with drumming, singing, poetry, dancing, and more. Her devoted friends ensure that each year’s celebration is truly a festive occasion.


As we reflect on the life and legacy of Queen Black Rose Nelmes, we are reminded of her profound influence on the beauty industry and her unwavering commitment to promoting natural beauty and self-acceptance. Her famous clientele, including cultural icons and celebrities, attest to the impact she had on shaping perceptions of beauty and identity during her era. Through her work and dedication, she inspired generations to embrace their authentic selves and celebrate their natural beauty.


In conclusion, Black Rose Nelmes’ legacy as a natural hair care stylist, beautician, and advocate for cultural pride and self-acceptance continues to inspire and uplift those who have been touched by her story. Her pioneering spirit, creative vision, and dedication to empowering others to embrace their natural beauty are a testament to her enduring impact on the beauty industry and beyond.


I, Louise Dente, had the pleasure of interviewing Queen Black Rose in 2018 for the Cultural Caravan TV show, that I founded in 2007. At the time, there was no other media about this notable elder. Cultural Caravan TV can be seen on Sundays from 5:30pm to 6pm on NYC Life Channels 25 and 22. Check out the local listings. The broadcasts can be seen throughout the Tri-State area.

Jason Powell: Harlem’s Firefighter Mystery Writer

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Fern Gillespie
New York City firefighter Jason Powell leads a double life. For almost eight years, his day job has been charging into burning buildings in Harlem as a firefighter to save lives. His moonlighting job has been penning the mystery fiction series No Man’s Ghost, about a young Black firefighter in Harlem who balances, his personal life, with saving the lives of Harlem neighbors from burning buildings.


The heroics of the New York City firefighters who charged into the World Trade Center inspired him. Powell was too young to witness the horror of watching New York City firefighters race into the burning Twin Towers and then see the buildings collapse on live television. However, as a young adult, a documentary on the role of those firefighters sacrificing their lives in Lower Manhattan emotionally moved him.


“When the Twin Towers were hit, it affected the communications for the fire department. So, at one point, the captain was on the 51st floor, and he called the dispatcher to get a handle on it. The recording was played in the documentary. He says, ‘We’re on the 51st floor, and everyone below us is out. We are signing out,’” Powell told Our Time Press. “I have to think that at that point in the operation, he and his team knew that they were probably going to die, but they kept doing their jobs to make sure that everyone they could get out could get out.

That was the first time that it occurred to me what firefighters do. Which is to say the only time that they’re actually working is when someone calls for help. Their job description is to help people.”


Working at various jobs was an integral part of Powell’s life. Including the New York Fire Department, he’s held 11 jobs. Powell, the youngest of nine children, spent his youth in Brooklyn. He was born in Brookdale Hospital and raised by his parents in Red Hook and East Flatbush. While working in a shoe store, a chance meeting with NYFD recruiters at Kings Plaza Mall became a life-changer. The Vulcan Society, the fraternal organization of Black firefighters, reached out and mentored him with test prep classes and programs. He scored 100 on the NYFD exam. After four rigorous years, Powell became a probation firefighter assigned to Harlem.


Working and living in Harlem, people sometimes recognize him in plain clothes. He might have often been to their house for a fire or gas leak. “I would have frequently been in my neighborhood, and people would remember me for seeing me on the job. That would be a cool experience,” he said. “Going and helping people and they remember you for that–it’s a great cool thing.”


For Powell, his life continues to inspire his art. He was a firefighter at the tragic Harlem movie set in 2018, where a blazing fire in a brownstone used for the production of the Edward Norton-directed film “Motherless Brooklyn” killed firefighter Michael Davidson.


“We were fighting the fire. I didn’t feel that we were in danger. We were familiar with the building that we were in. It had building inspections,” Powell recalled. “But it became a movie set, and now there were false walls. Where I was trying to put out the fire there wasn’t any problem. But it turns out there were fires behind the walls that we did not know about.”


“A friend of mine, who was a firefighter in the first house that I was assigned to, Michael Davidson, died at that fire that we were fighting on the Harlem movie set,” he said. “So, my character firefighter Charles Davids in No Man’s Ghost is a homage to him.”


No Man’s Ghost tells the story of a probationary firefighter during his first week out of the academy. Charles Davids finds himself investigating a mysterious spree of escalating fire and gas reports in Harlem that surround a couple. Publisher’s Weekly calls the book “a promising Debut for Powell” and “a love letter to firefighters.”


“Charles Davids is very conscious of being good at what he does. He wants to be an asset to wherever he is. He’s a family man. He lives with his mother, a widow,” said Powell. “What’s important to him are his relationships, whether they are with his coworkers, friends, or his girlfriend. They are valuable to him, and he wants to be valuable to them.”


Powell continues to embrace new opportunities in career and life. In 2022, he transferred to the FDNY Hazmat Unit, where he attended bomb and radiation courses and dealt with the crisis of combustible scooter batteries facing New Yorkers. His FDNY goals include courses on being promoted to lieutenant. Racheal Ray’s magazine’s special feature on cooking firefighters, spotlighted his gourmet skills with steak alfredo.


Balancing writing and firefighting are no easy feats. Already, he’s completed book number two on firefighter Charles Davids and is working on number three in the series. To hone his writing craft and promote No Man’s Ghost, Powell attends book conferences, takes online master writing classes, works with his literary agent’s writers group, and is an active member of Crime Writers of Color, an organization of BIPOC mystery authors.


“Most writers that I know hate the act of writing. They do love writing. But, it’s about the ideas, clearing our heads and the act of putting it to paper can be tedious,” he explained. “It’s hard, but it’s fun when you complete it.”

Wanted: Vision, Skills and Compassionfor Career with FDNY

Filing Period for FDNY Open Competitive Exam Open Through August 9

In 2022, Mayor Adams appointed Laura Kavanagh as commissioner of the New York City Fire Department (FDNY) overseeing day-to-day administration of the agency’s 17,000 employees with a $2 billion budget. In his comments on Kavanagh’s previous decade of FDNY work, the mayor praised her direction of “a firefighter program that resulted in the most diverse applicant pool in the department’s history.”

He also said that she had “the vision, the skills and the compassion to lead the FDNY into the future.”


Commissioner Kavanagh, now with a total 12 years of experience working as a “dedicated servant” and “crisis-tested leader” in the words of Congressman Hakeem Jeffries, on behalf of FDNY’s missions, continues to fulfill the departmental missions. Ethnic groups of color represent 28% of firefighters, an increase of 14% from 2014.

Two years after her swearing in, she is building on the City’s effort to implement new technology to support the department and brave firefighters. She also has developed and is leading one of the most ambitious diversification efforts in the city’s history.


The current campaign showcases the backgrounds and motivations of 10 current FDNY firefighters, each with a unique background — including Jason Powell profiled in these pages. All share a commitment to serving the city.

In addition to general promotion highlighting the benefits of joining the FDNY, including the extensive training, environment, and competitive salaries and retirement packages, Commissioner Kavanagh, herself, is on the ground delivering the message directly to the neighborhoods where potential candidates call home.

She has addressed congregations at houses of worship throughout the city, including Brooklyn, and will make additional visits to churches in coming weeks.


“The FDNY is the best fire department in the world, and we are looking for candidates with the unique combination of qualities that make an FDNY firefighter,” she said. “This is a high-stakes, critical thinking job that attracts candidates with bravery, skill, and are called to public service.

We know there are young people with those qualities across our five boroughs, and we encourage them to sign up to join our FDNY family.”


Commissioner Kavanagh’s message references the story of another history maker who held the same office with similar public service tasks, six decades ago. Robert Oliver Lowery (April 20, 1916 – July 24, 2001), was the first Black commissioner of New York City’s Fire Department.

He also was President, multiple times, of the Vulcan Society (a group of active and retired Black firefighters and civilians in the FDNY founded in 1940 to fight racial discrimination in the department and promote Black career achievements and fire safety). Lowery joined the FDNY in 1941, assigned to Ladder Company 34 in Manhattan.

He served as a Fire Marshal for 17 years; held the rank of Acting Lieutenant, responsible for establishing a community relations program for the Bureau of Fire Investigation; and in 1961 was appointed Deputy Fire Commissioner, charged with increasing diversity within the ranks of the Department.

In 1966, he was sworn in by Mayor John V. Lindsay as FDNY Fire Commissioner, serving in that position for eight years until his resignation in 1973.


“He was a trailblazer,” Commissioner Kavanagh told Our Time Press. “It’s an essential part of his legacy (that all New Yorkers) understand how much he had to overcome, what was going on in our city back then — that he was not allowed to sit at the table, yet he overcame those odds to become Fire Commissioner of a major U.S. city.

He was a member of the Vulcans. It’s a testament to him that he didn’t let animosity or hostility or discrimination towards him dissuade him from carrying out his objectives.

In addition to his recruitment work, he brought upgrades to equipment, technology, and protocols that improved responses to emergencies, and he made it a mission to actively mentor and recruit minorities, opening the door so the Department would look more like the city it served. His ideals hold true to this day.”


Fifty-six years separate the appointments of Commissioner Lowery, the First African American (1966), and Commissioner Kavanagh, the first woman and 34th Fire Commissioner (2022). In response to Our Time Press request for a comment, Kavanagh said, “Every fire commissioner is going to face challenges” but Lowery faced more than others. “Commissioner Lowery came up the ranks in a very divided department.

Black firefighters were not allowed to eat at the same table or sleep in the same quarters as their white counterparts. His appointment did have its detractors, but that didn’t stop him from modernizing the Department in terms of equipment and technology. And it certainly didn’t stop him from advancing diversity among the ranks.


“The role of fire commissioner is about being a public servant. Every decision made comes with an eye towards improving the safety of all New Yorkers,” she said. “Recruitment and diversity in the firefighter ranks continues to be a priority of FDNY Commissioners. We encourage anyone who is interested in FDNY to sign up for the exam and take advantage of the many opportunities the Department offers throughout the hiring process to learn about the job and the skills needed to do well on the test.


To Our Time Press’ query about career possibilities, outside the role of firefighter, in the department related to saving lives, she offered, “Outside of being a firefighter or EMT in our public facing roles, there are lots of other opportunities in the FDNY. The Department is more than 17-thousand strong, made up of dedicated and passionate people, in uniform and civilian.

Our Bureau of Fire Prevention ensures businesses adhere to fire codes and inspect occupancies for dangerous life hazards. Fire alarm dispatchers are critical to our responses. Our civilian employees work behind the scenes in bureaus like fleet services and buildings to ensure our department runs smoothly.


The FDNY launched its firefighter recruitment campaign in the hopes of attracting people from all neighborhoods and backgrounds, who share a common goal of serving the public and saving lives.”


The filing period for the FDNY firefighter open competitive exam is now open and runs until August 9, marking the first exam in nearly seven years due to COVID-related delays. The FDNY offers resources such as free prep sessions for the written exam and workout sessions to aid candidates in training for the physical test.


Interested applicants should sign up at https://firefighter.joinfdny.com/ or email recruitment@fdny.nyc.gov for information on how to register for the firefighter exam’s open filing. –by Bernice Elizabeth Green