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Reflections on the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., His Dream and Legacy

The Hon. Ed Towns at Berean Baptist Church (1/18) and Greater Bright Light Missionary Baptist Church (1/19)

Former Congressman Ed Towns will deliver speeches honoring The Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr, at two churches in Brooklyn this month in celebration of the late Civil Rights leader’s 97th anniversary of his birth on January 15th.


Sunday, January 18, Towns is guest speaker at Berean Baptist Church (Dr. Arlee Arkofa, Sr. Pastor, and Trevor Hyde, Pastor. For details, call 718-774-0466.) Monday, January 19, the day of the official 2026 national holiday celebration, Towns will deliver a speech at The Greater Bright Light Missionary Baptist Church, pastored by the Rev. Grady Zellars, 1329 Sutter Avenue.

Service begins at 10:am, followed by a brunch at 11:30 am. The event is sponsored by the Metropolitan Interdenominational Ministers Conference, Inc. lead by The Rev. Dr. Walter P. Alston. Towns’ theme is: “Living the Dream” with a look at “unity, justice, hope.”

Hon. Ed Towns


Our Time Press’ talk Tuesday, with Mr. Towns about Rev. King’s influence on the congressman’s life and work appears next week. Town’s stories, thoughts and reflections include references to such stalwarts as Civil Rights icon John Lewis, Brooklyn’s Cornerstone Baptist Church’s Rev. Sandy Ray, and other ministers, leaders and places.


One notable “footnote” to King’s and Towns’ shared history centers around their brief encounter in 1955 at the then-newly constructed New Hope Baptist Church in Niagara Falls, N.Y., where Towns and his family lived at the time. Well, it was not so brief, according to Mr. Towns, in his well-known, witty, poke-fun style.


Towns, then 21, was selected to introduce the church’s guest speaker — The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr, 26, pastor of Atlanta’s Dexter Baptist Church, and fairly well known throughout America’s black church circuit. The young reverend was already at work developing support for his Civil Rights campaigns for 1956, including the Montgomery Bus Boycott.


A former educator and military man, Towns was raised as a child growing up in North Carolina farmland country, to be fully prepared for all occasions. He read everything he could find on King to include in his remarks. Towns shared with Our Time Press hat Rev. King’s first words as he took the podium were “devastating.”

We think they are, of note a marker, at least, a footnote to Black political history: according to Towns, Rev. King said that Towns’ words marked the first time ever the introduction was longer than the speaker’s remarks.


Though Towns did not meet King again, the architect of the Civil Rights Movement remains a constant influence. Towns reflects on King’s leadership, and his thoughts, if he were alive, on the world today, and how far his dreams have advanced in next week’s Our Time Press and through his speeches at Berean and Bright Light Baptist Churches.
(Bernice Elizabeth Green)

The Rev. Dr. William J. Barber at Brooklyn Academy of Music (1/19)

Bishop William J. Barber II is President and Senior Lecturer of Repairers of the Breach, Bishop with The Fellowship of Affirming Ministries, Executive Board Member of the Christian Church Disciples of Christ, and Professor in the Practice of Public Theology and Public Policy and Founding Director of the Center for Public Theology and Public Policy at Yale Divinity School. He is the Co-Chair of the Poor People’s Campaign: A National Call For Moral Revival, and a Kettering Foundation Senior Fellow.

Celebrate the life and legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. at this quintessential Brooklyn tradition. Our inspiring annual celebration is back for the 40th year and features powerful remarks by Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II; a special solo performance from Grace by Ronald K. Brown/EVIDENCE, A Dance Company; a musical performance by The Fire Ensemble; and more. Link arms with friends, neighbors, artists, and civic leaders for a day of reflection, family-friendly activities, and celebration of all who carry Dr. King’s vision of justice and equality forward.


The tribute continues throughout the day with a free screening of Just Mercy at 1pm at BAM Rose Cinemas, a performance by the Brooklyn Music School’s intergenerational choir on the steps of the Peter Jay Sharp Building, and family-friendly activities presented by BAMkids in The Adam Space. See below to learn more.

Sing with The Fire Ensemble during our celebration of Dr. King!

The Fire Ensemble is an intergenerational choir that centers BIPOC and queer folx. They will host five community rehearsals at BAM prior to the program on January 19. Rehearsals will take place in The Adam Space on the following dates:

Tue, Jan 6, 6—8pm
Wed, Jan 7, 6—8pm
Tue, Jan 13, 6—8pm
Wed, Jan 14, 6—8pm
Sun, Jan 18, 4—8pm
In order to perform on January 19, singers must attend at least three rehearsals, one of which must be the rehearsal on January 18. Everyone is welcome at rehearsal, even if they can’t sing on the day of the tribute.


Note to Readers: Tickets are free for this event on a first-come, first-served basis beginning at 8am on January 19 in the BAM Howard Gilman Opera House lobby, 30 Lafayette Avenue. Please note that providing an RSVP does not guarantee entry. For more info: bam.org

American Empire Roars into 2026

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By Kazembe Batts
IG: @kazbatts


“No boots on the ground or bombs in the air, U.S. out of everywhere!” shouted the twenty-something, female African demonstrator as I walked past Union Square Park in Manhattan. A catchy slogan that is fast becoming a reality as the world’s hegemon makes global demands from allies and alleged adversaries. With adversaries the military confiscates large oil tankers off the coast of Venezuela or alleged Al-Shabab militants in Somalia, the U.S. military is flexing its trillion-dollar arsenal.

The United States military has 750 bases in every region of the world. With allies Trump has declared his desire for Canada to be a 51st state, demands access to Greenland from Denmark for strategic reasons, threatened to seize the Panama Cana and to bomb Columbia and Mexico to take out drug gangs, now called terrorists.


The Trump administration is also using non-military soft power, like tariffs, trade deals and outright blackmail to influence elections, especially in the Western Hemisphere. Unlike any previous president he has overtly lodged himself into recent elections in the Americas by loudly supporting conservative Nasry Asfura who barely won in Honduras and conservative Jose Antonio who also won in Chile.

The arrogant interference is also on display when Trump pledges $40 billion to Argentina but only if Javier Milei is elected. Trump has also supported former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, who was recently sentenced to 27 years in prison for having led a coup to stay in office after his 2022 loss to Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. Trump is troubled that his friend has been punished for doing something very similar to what happened on a January 6th day in Washington DC. Trump wants Bolsonaro pardoned.


Similar to its earlier cutback of USAID, on Monday12/29 the Trump administration announced a $2 billion pledge for UN humanitarian aid as the administration continues to slash US foreign assistance The $2 billion (€1.7bn) is only a sliver of traditional US humanitarian funding for UN-backed programs, which has run as high as $17 billion (€14.4bn) annually in recent years, according to UN data. The money is a small fraction of what the US has contributed in the past but reflects what the administration believes is a generous amount that will maintain the United States’ status as the world’s largest humanitarian donor.


Cutting needed humanitarian aid while threatening military force remains the American norm. The Empire has some of its military bases located in Africa. Arguably Nigeria, South Africa and Kenya are three of Africa’s most powerful nations. Let’s review how the Trump administration is engaging these three powerful African nations.


South Africa – Trump in a deliberate move to embarrass South African President Cyril Ramaphosa played a misleading video at a press conference in the White House and accused the SA government of perpetrating white genocide. Under Trump the USA practically boycotted the recent G-20 Summit in Johannesburg and has said that South Africa is barred from the next summit in Miami in 2026.

Relations are currently strained and marked by deep disagreements over South Africa’s non-alignment with the West, its relations with China/Russia, its ICJ case against Israel, SA membership in BRICS and current Trump administration policy, impacting areas like trade AGOA, and diplomatic trust.


Nigeria – U.S. is Nigeria’s largest foreign investor. On Christmas Day Trump delivered a present. Security cooperation against extremism, has occurred in the past but recently has become strained due to Trump administration claims of Christian persecution leading to Nigeria being designated a “Country of Particular Concern”. Did the bombing compromise sovereignty? Nigerian officials have said they approved of the bombings. A U.S. military official tells “PBS News Hour” a ship off Nigeria’s coast fired more than a dozen Tomahawks at two ISIS training camps.

Local security analysts say the missiles hit in at least four locations, all in Nigeria’s northwest Sokoto state. Lakurawa, which asserts connections to ISIS Sahel, capitalizes on inadequate local governance within the region. The Nigerian government declared them a terrorist organization, but locals say they’re connected to bandits and criminals.

The attacks targeted the northwest Nigeria, hundreds of miles from Maiduguri in the northeast, a known stronghold for Islamic banditry. Interestingly, the location is far closer to the borders of the three Alliance of Sahel States of which AFRICOM head General Michael Langley discussed negatively while testifying before congress.


Kenya –The USA has a deepening strategic partnership focused on economic growth, counterterrorism, and democracy, highlighted by Kenya becoming a Major Non-NATO Ally in 2024 and hosting a U.S. State Visit. The two governments recently signed a five-year, $2.5 billion Health Cooperation Framework that says the United States plans to provide up to $1.6 billion over the next five years to support priority health programs in Kenya including HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis (TB), malaria, maternal and child health, polio eradication, disease surveillance, and infectious disease outbreak response and preparedness.

Kenyan troops at the urging of the USA have landed in nearby Haiti to help “pacify” the gangs who control Port-Au-Prince. More recently Kenyan nationals, without working papers, were deported from South Africa for illegally attempting to facilitate white South Africans emigration to the United States. Unlike South Africa and Nigeria, Kenya seems to be in sync with the foreign policy goals of the US.


Entering 2026 the Trump administration is killing people without trial in international waters. Indiscriminately bombing places without it even making major news, like in Somalia. Making false claims about stopping wars like between Congo and Rwanda. Threatening to go “guns a blazing” in Africa’s most populous country. Ignoring real genocide in Sudan. African people living in America are still in the best position to jumpstart an African renaissance globally.

True Pan-African unity is needed now. In honor of the centennial birth of Patrice Lumumba, Franz Fanon and Malcolm X let us strive to make sure that the United States government empowers while the military does not destroy people all over the world. No boots on the ground or bombs in the air, U.S. out of everywhere.

Better Days Ahead: Brooklyn’s Young Guns Grow Up Fast as Nets Turn Heads

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By Eddie Castro

The Brooklyn Nets heading into the 2025-26 campaign knew it was going to be another rebuilding year in hopes of better days ahead for the franchise. A team that doesn’t necessarily have much talent on the roster but have a few players that can go out and get you a bucket or two.

In his second season as Head Coach, Jordi Fernandez has cultivated a positive culture which was needed for the team, especially with the current roster mostly being filled with young inexperienced players. After beginning the season with a win-loss record of 4-16 in their first 20 games, Brooklyn appears to have found some chemistry that Coach Fernandez was hoping for.

Since the 20-game stretch, the Nets have won seven of their last ten games and are currently on their first three-game win streak of the year as we go to press. The question now is what has clicked for this Nets team of late?


For starters, Brooklyn’s recent turnaround is primarily due to their strong efforts on defense. In the month of December, the Nets ranked No.1 in the NBA in defensive rating and have allowed the fewest points per game. (103.1). On offense, forward Michael Porter Jr. And Nic Claxton are having fantastic years thus far.

Porter Jr. Has played like a certified All-Star in his first year with Brooklyn averaging 25.8 points per game and 27 points per game in his last seven games. Porter Jr. Was traded to Brooklyn from Denver for Cam Johnson during the summer. It’s truly remarkable to see what we have witnessed what Porter Jr is doing for his talents seem to have been overshadowed by former teammate Nikola Jokic, who continues to put up video game-like numbers every night.

In Brooklyn, Porter Jr. got his fresh start and his own stage to finally display his talents when healthy and display what he has done. Claxton has been with the Nets since he was drafted 31st overall in the 2019 NBA draft. This year without question has been his best year with consistent play on both the offense and defensive sides of the ball.

His significant growth has finally come into fruition as he has showed improvement self-creating and passing which has led to a high increase in assists and a lower turnover margin. He (Claxton) is now a more confident driver and finisher at the rim. His versatility his really been a big help for not only his development but for the team as well.


With happier days flourishing all over the downtown Brooklyn area, the big question is can the Nets continue to play this well? I don’t see why not. The team just got back another certified scorer back from injury in Cam Thomas who will most definitely add a scoring punch alongside Porter Jr. And Claxton. The team’s numerous draft picks and young players are now making great contributions, a testament to General Manager’s Sean Marks’ focus on drafting and development.

The playoffs may be out of reach for Brooklyn, but this healthy combination of youth and veterans on this team could make for not only and enticing end of the year, but something Nets fans could look forward to. The youth movement is just the beginning for Brooklyn as they currently have a significant haul of first-round draft picks over the next seven drafts (2026-2032).

The team is also projected to have about $15 million in cap space which means signing a high-value free agent could definitely be in the cards as well. We shall see what this Brooklyn team is made of as we go into 2026.


Sports Notes: (Football) The regular season will come to and end this weekend and unfortunately, there will be no playoffs for our beloved Jets and Giants. The Jets will wrap up their regular season this Sunday in Buffalo against divisional opponent the Buffalo Bills. The Jets currently stand at No.3 in the draft order. The Giants will put their own bow on their season at home against the Dallas Cowboys. With the Giants win last week, they no longer hold the No.1 overall pick in the draft order.

Sports Talk With Eddie presented by Our Time Press, returns tonight at 5pm Est. On the Our Time Press YouTube channel. Please join me for our last show of the year. Be sure to like and subscribe to the page.

Media Icon and Pioneer Thomas H. Watkins –Daily Challenge publisher, is remembered and honored

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Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn-raised Thomas Henry Watkins, founder, owner, and publisher of the New York Daily Challenge, passed away on Friday, 19th, December, 2025.
“I am sad to hear of the passing of a legitimately acclaimed Black giant in the person of Tom Watkins,” Rev Al. Sharpton told Our Time Press.


Dr. Ben Chavis, President and CEO of the NNPA–the National Newspaper Publishers Association and long-time Tom Watkins friend, associate and colleague, told Our Time Press, “Publisher Thomas Watkins was an icon in the evolution of the Black press of America. He was the former chairman of the NNPA and was an outspoken leader who cherished the value of truth-telling for freedom, justice, and equality.


Our responsibility today is to keep the legacy of Thomas Watkins alive and impactful.”
Succumbing to health challenges, a key figure in the Brooklyn community for decades, Tommy Watkins was the smooth, charismatic, cowboy hat-wearing, community-centered businessman, that many around the state can point to receiving his helping hand – both in political advancement, education and sports, small business and community achievement.


Legendary broadcaster Imhotep Gary Byrd told Our Time Press, “Giving deepest and sincere condolences to Tom Watkins’ family/extended family and thankfulness to him for embracing the ‘calling,’ he accepted and embraced as a warrior on the Battlefield of the Black Press. The Daily Challenge was the perfect complement to my daily radio broadcast: ‘The Global Black Experience’ on WLIB, and ‘Live from the World Famous Apollo Theatre.’

It was an invaluable service to the community, which gave us a critical media foundation and presence in an often hostile media environment. Tom was a true friend, and a Beautiful Brother–who we acknowledge as a ‘GBE’– a true ‘Giant of the Black Experience.’ May he rest in peace and power.”


With the upliftment of, and constant positive communication with, the Black community, originally based in the massive offices above the Restoration Plaza post office, Watkins created the city’s only Black Daily, the aptly named Daily Challenge, in 1972.
Full disclosure, this reporter began her journalistic career in New York at the paper, and saw firsthand his genuine commitment to the community in which he was raised.


A property-owner, and well-connected businessman with a deep-rooted allegiance to the community in which he grew, a family who had houses, horses, and liquor stores, Thomas Watkins Jr., the one-time boxer, Renaissance man of this time and space, maintained community growth his raison d’etre.


With what at least one admirer describing his “Matinee idol good looks,” seen around town, striding with confidence and purpose with his signature cowboy hat, boots, and ponytail, Chavis continued that Watkins had a “Full baritone voice that always resonated with a consciousness on behalf of Black America.”


Sharpton added, “I have known Tom Watkins and his father all my life. I remember when I was growing up as a boy preacher in Bed Stuy–the New York Recorder, which his father published, and then Tom took over. People aspired to be on their most influential list every year.

They were the ones [reporting] every year, when I was 12 years old and joined Operation Breadbasket–the arm of Dr. King’s organization in New York, led by Reverend William Jones, and Rev. Jesse Jackson, I was the youth director.

The only organ that we had was the Daily Challenge and the New York Recorder, which pushed where the Amsterdam News and others would follow suit. Tom was fearless. If we were boycotting someone, he would cover it every day in the Daily Challenge. If we were dealing with a police issue, he was there.

If we were dealing with a political campaign, he was there. He had the integrity that, in my opinion, was unparalleled by anyone, and he was committed to the cause. He never wanted to bend, buckle, or bow.


I am indebted to them because they invested in me with coverage and encouragement before anyone saw any possibilities of me doing anything that would be worthy of their support. So, I join people all over the diaspora in mourning a true giant, a person that stood up for us, and told our stories, way before you got big ad dollars to get it. Tom Watkins Jr., may he rest in peace.”

Former Daily Challenge columnist the right Reverend Herbert Daughtry told Our Time Press, “I go back with Tom’s father Senior, who used to attend Operation Bread Basket, chaired by Rev. William Jones, Rev Sharpton was the Youth Leader, I was the Executive Vice Chair. The intention was to make corporate America respond to the Black community.


“The old man raised his son in the right way. He was a different kind of publisher and newspaperman. He was very active in the community. He attended private organizing meetings. I feel deeply indebted to him because he gave me an opportunity to write weekly articles in the Daily Challenge and the Afro Times, and improve my feeble writing skills. I hold him responsible because I have now written over 20 books. In every one I felt his influence.”


New York Black media in the 1990s and early 2000s followed a particular strategic playbook. Daughtry stated that, “The Daily Challenge followed the example of Percy Sutton in media, as we in the Black community who were activists, had a media outlet– Percy Sutton with WLIB, and Tommy Watkins with the Daily Challenge. We had a daily feed of information. Not only was he concerned with local affairs, he was very active in the national media trying to bring his organizing skills to that arena.”


A self-described capitalist and promoter of Black community activism and vibrant entrepreneurship, with his Daily Challenge since 1972, Watkins championed the independent Black press, supporting hundreds, if not thousands, of new, young, and established journalists and photographers. There was not a social, economic, political, educational, or other issue affecting the local, national, or international Black community that did not grace the pages of his newspapers over the decades.

Watkins allowed the showcasing of the Black perspective on a myriad of topics. The Daily Challenge became known for comprehensively covering stories and subjects ignored by the mainstream, as they were often popular front-page articles, reporting on, and even stimulating grassroots activism around issues like police brutality, the I-95 gun pipeline, housing and educational inequity, inner city disparities, and movements to challenge violence in the five boroughs.

Watkins allowed for the coverage of politicians and their campaigns, and those of judges, union and business leaders, neighborhood-based leaders and community-focus organizations. Internationally, too, Watkins was not afraid to run analyses and narratives that exposed entrenched false narratives about members of the Black community, leaders, and elected officials. He pushed the envelope to permit accurate reporting void of institutionalized racist bias, forming the foundation.

From national awards like the National Newspaper Publisher Association (NNPA) for articles written about President Robert Mugabe, to giving voice to people like the late educator activists Jitu Weusi, Charshee McIntyre and Herman Ferguson, grassroots advocates Minister Khalid Abdul Muhammad, Abubadika Sonny Carson, and Mumia Abu Jamal, and organizations like CEMOTAP, the Nation of Islam, the December 12th Movement, African Helping Africans, the Patrice Lumumba Coalition.


Now printed weekly, the offices relocated from Restoration Plaza in the late 1990s to their current location on Atlantic Avenue, between Nostrand and Bedford Avenue.
Born in 1937, raised in Bedford-Stuyvesant, the influential Watkins family worked in media and the community. From the co-founding of Restoration Plaza, and supporting the Central Brooklyn Coordinating Council. Thomas Watkins Sr., who worked at The New York Amsterdam News, went on to create The New Recorder, and Tom Jr. followed up with the New York Daily Challenge, the Afro Times, and the New American.


Former managing editor of the Daily Challenge, Dawad Philip, said, “The passing of Thomas H. Watkins Jr, at age 88, is a significant personal blow. On December 20th, 1986, when a mob of white youths chased 23-year-old Trinidadian Michael Griffith from a pizza shop in Howard Beach, and running for his life alongside his stepfather, Cedric Sandiford, Griffith was struck and killed by a speeding car.

That incident sparked a volatile and bitter climate in racial and political tensions citywide over the winter, and brought The Daily Challenge into the national spotlight, signaling the rise of Rev. Al Sharpton, attorneys Michael Warren, Alton Maddox, and C. Vernon Mason, and activist Sonny Carson and Rev. Herbert Daughtry to the forefront of the fight for justice.

It is well chronicled that the city’s Black media with Peter Noel, Lem Peterkin, Nayaba Arinde, Andre Pennix Smith, Wilford Harewood, Utrice Leid, and Andy Cooper [City Sun), Gary Byrd, Vinette Pryce, and so many others would have led that clarion, often with life threats and bomb scares.”


Philip, who led the paper with socially and politically impactful and culturally relevant content continued, “Tom was your classic capitalist, concerned with the bottom line, but when history demanded more, to his credit, Tom stepped up, time and again stood up to wannabe presidents Bill Clinton piggybacking on Sister Souljah all the way to the White House, the Tawana Brawley case, Trump and the racist New York media in the contentious Central Park rape and so much more. The Daily Challenge and Black media stood firm.


For those reasons (for telling our story and coverage of liberation struggles from Namibia, to Zimbabwe, South Africa, Cuba), we owe Thomas H. Watkins a huge debt of gratitude.
My sincere condolences to the Watkins family, his son TJ III, daughter Kerry, and his grandchildren and family. A champion in Black media is no more. Still so, so much to say. Go Brave, Tom!”
Editors, writers, clergy folk, businesspeople, electeds, community activists, and longtime Daily Challenge readers waxed lyrical this weekend over the historic legacy Watkins created.

“Working with Tom Watkins meant bearing witness to some of the most critical moments in Black New York that I’ve experienced from the mid-1980s through the 2000s,” WBLS-FM Openline host and producer Brother Fatiyn Muhammad told Our Time Press.

“Tom covered stories that deeply affected our community—police brutality cases, housing displacement, education inequities, the crack and HIV/AInDS crises, and the ongoing fight for political and economic justice—always with balance, dignity, and truth.”


Reiterating Watkins’ status as a media pioneer, Muhammad continued, “His work reinforced why the Black press matters: to tell our stories when others would not, to challenge power when it failed us, and to ensure our community’s pain, resilience, and progress were never erased. Tom Watkins helped document the real history of Black NYC, and that legacy continues to matter.”

For the most part, many Black journalists always know each other, whether it is through working in the field, covering current affairs, or meeting up at National Newspaper Publishers Association (NNPA) or National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ) events.


Veteran Daily News columnist Jared McCallister told Our Time Press that Tom Watkins “was an innovative businessman and Black press advocate who allowed the stories of the community to be told for decades on his many platforms.
“Tom Watkins was a news icon and an invaluable source of information for the Black community through the Daily Challenge, the Afro Times, and other publications.”

Reporter, editor, and October 22nd Coalition to Stop Police Brutality member J. Andrée Penix-Smith told Our Time Press that she joined Watkins’ Challenge Group in late 1993 as managing editor of the Afro Times, and later an editor and writer for the Daily Challenge, with an intention “to cover every segment of the community, from the Black bourgeoisie to those who suffered the brunt of poverty, discrimination and racism in America.

In my then 25 years as an editor, I had spent many a day fighting with newspaper publishers and broadcast executives who seemed to cater more to the former while skimming over the struggles of the Black community.”


Frontline grassroots activists knew that they could turn to the paper with their news and agendas from addressing socio-economic disparities throughout the inner-city traumas, to fighting for improved housing, to supporting political prisoners, to advocating for parental control of schools, to confronting neo-colonial machinations on the Continent, and reporting on everyday people’s victories and struggles across in the Caribbean. Daily Challenge writers had their ears close to the ground and stayed on top of the stories in the community.


“After working several months at the paper, I took a chance and, without Tom’s permission, changed the tri-colors of the banner from red, white, and blue to Red, Black, and Green, knowing that it may have been the last edition I sent to the printer,” said Penix-Smith. “Remarkably, it was fine with Tom, and I remained with the Challenge Group for nearly a decade.“

“Nana Thomas Watkins, his family and team have been stalwarts of journalism, and giants in African American media institution building,” Dr. Segun Shabaka told Our Time Press. The Executive Director of the International AFRICAN ARTS FESTIVAL, formerly the executive director of the East Cultural Center and editor of its communication organ, Black News.


“To envision, build, and maintain a decades-long daily newspaper with a focus on the issues of the Black community is more than admirable; it calls for high praise. Having edited a monthly newspaper (Black News) for a number of years, I think about the daily task of pulling together the content around local, national, as well as international issues of politics, economics, education, religion, arts, culture, sports, etc. Then, the finances to print the newspaper and distribute it.

It seems overwhelming. But he, picking up and carrying forward the legacy of his father, has done it for decades. May God be good to him and the joy he left lasts forever.

Cinque Brath, activist and son of the late Pan Africanist advocate and educator Elombe Brath, told Our Time Press, “I was saddened by the passing of Tom Watkins, a legendary publisher and tireless advocate for Black journalism and community empowerment. As the publisher of Daily Challenge, Afro Times, and New American, Tom often allowed my father Elombe Brath to get his stories published. For several years, the Daily Challenge was a ritual for him.

My father loved to provide content because he believed Tom had dedicated his life to amplifying the voices of Black New Yorkers and ensuring stories that mattered most to our communities were seen and heard. His work helped sustain independent Black media in Brooklyn and beyond, shining a spotlight on issues of justice, equity, and opportunity for generations of readers.

Known for his entrepreneurial spirit and deep commitment to community, Tom leaves behind a powerful legacy of advocacy, connection, and unwavering support for the freedom of the press. His contributions will continue to inspire journalists, activists, and citizens alike. Rest in power, Tom Watkins — your impact will not be forgotten.”

Kwasi Akyeampong. Editor/Publisher at TheBlackList.net, said, “No other newspaper compared to The Daily Challenge. It was the only paper to get the real news from Africa and the diaspora. I used to travel from the Bronx to Brooklyn and I would change trains at Columbus Circle just to buy the Daily Challenge. It inspired me to create TheBlackList.


Speaking on the passing of Assemblyman Al Vann in July 2022, Watkins could have been quite easily describing himself when he said, “Al Vann, a man who always focused his energies for the betterment of the community.”


“My experience with Mr. Watkins was that he injected capital into my business when I was starving for funds. In addition, he sent lots of business my way that gave me life support throughout my early days of my business,” businessman Kwame Odesanya told Our Time Press. In the 2000s, he was the founder of Clinton Hill’s OBE Computers, which offered computer time for hire and printed everything from newspapers to posters and pamphlets. “A very strong community fighter of small Black businesses. Thank you, Mr. Watkins, for all your help and commitment to the Black community.”

High Horse: The Black Cowboy does what great documentaries should do…

Executive produced by Jordan Peele, this three-part docuseries reclaims the Black cowboy’s rightful place in American history.

What High Horse makes clear is that this isn’t about lost history — it’s about erasure. I’ll hold your hand when I say this: The story of the American West wasn’t vaporized, it was just stolen. While American culture fed us the Lone Ranger, Gunsmoke, and Maverick, the real foundation of the West included Black cowboys, ranchers, and lawmen like Bass Reeves, U.S. Marshal, whose legacy inspired the legends Hollywood chose to center instead.

This series doesn’t just recount history; it corrects the narrative. Voices like Tina Knowles, Bun B, Pam Grier, and the Compton Cowboys remind us that Black cowboys weren’t a quirky footnote but were actually central to American culture itself. For many of us, the last time we saw a Black cowboy on screen was Wild Wild West with Will Smith, later Django, and more recently films like The Harder They Fall. By dismantling the Hollywood version of the Wild West, High Horse replaces myth and fantasy with fact. It rides the line between history lesson and cultural reckoning — confident, unapologetic, and overdue. Definitely a must-watch.