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All-Black, all-female World War II battalion to be awarded Congressional Gold Medal (Reprint)

“They never got a salute,” a daughter of one of the women said.

By Deena Zaru
ABC News


The only all-Black, all-female battalion to serve in World War II in the U.S. and in Europe (was) awarded the Congressional Gold Medal after President Joe Biden signed a bipartisan bill on Monday, March 14.

Members of the 6888th Central Postal Battalion march in a parade in honor of Jean D’Arc, in France. The 6888th Central Postal Battalion was the only all African American battalion in the WAC as well as the only all African American, all women battalion sent overseas during World War II. (National Archives and Records Administration)


The bill, which was co-sponsored by the entire New Hampshire delegation, seeks to honor the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, known as the “Six Triple Eight” — a group of Black women who raised the morale of millions by sorting and routing mail for American service members and civilians in Europe and the United States.

“We helped each other. We worked with each other,” retired Maj. Fanny Griffin McClendon, who served as a supervisor in the battalion, told ABC News last month after the Senate passed the bill, which has now been signed into law by Biden.
Only six members of the battalion are believed to be alive today, including McClendon, who is 101 years old.
“It never occurred to me that we would even be considered for a medal of any kind,” McClendon said.
The battalion returned home from the war with no fanfare, but some have been advocating for the women of “Six Triple Eight” to be honored for years.
“They never got a parade, they never got a salute,” said Brenda Partridge-Brown, the daughter of Willie Bell Irvin, who served in the battalion.

Private Ruth L. James checks soldiers in at the gate during an “Open House” after the battalion had set up its facilities in Rouen, France. (National Archives and Records Administration)

Partridge-Brown told ABC News last month that she only became aware that her mother was a part of the battalion after a Google search 20 years after her mother’s death.
“I can’t explain to you what I felt that day. My heart almost stopped,” she said.
The battalion, which was created in 1944, eventually included 824 enlisted Black women and 31 officers from the Women’s Army Corps, the Army Service Forces and the Army Air Forces.
The battalion was created at a time when there was a shortage of qualified postal officers and mail was beginning to pile up, according to the U.S. Army Center of Military History.

For example, in February 1945 in Birmingham, England, warehouses were filled with millions of undelivered pieces of mail.

WACs sort packages at the 17th Base Post Office in Paris. The 6888th Central Postal Battalion was the only all African American battalion in the WAC as well as the only all African American, all women battalion sent overseas during World War II. (National Archives and Records Administration)


“Servicemembers noticed that they weren’t getting mail from home, and Army officials reported that the lack of reliable mail delivery was hurting morale,” per the U.S. Army Center of Military History, with a general predicting that it would take six months to process a backlog of mail, including Christmas packages.


That is when the U.S. military turned to the Women’s Army Corps, which was created in 1943 by President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Only white women were initially admitted, but following a push from first lady Eleanor Roosevelt and civil rights leader Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune, Black women were eventually admitted, although segregation continued, according to the ACMH.


Following recruitment efforts, the “Six Triple Eight” battalion was created under the command of Maj. Charity Edna Adams, who would later become a lieutenant colonel and change her last name to Earley after getting married.


The battalion trained at Fort Oglethorpe in Georgia, per ACMH, and set out on its first trip to Britain on Feb. 3, 1945.


The women endured difficult working conditions, including intense cold, and even faced some instances of racial bias and sexist treatment, including “hostility and rumors impugning their character spread by both white and black male soldiers who resented the fact that black women were allowed in the Army,” according to the ACMH.


For Partridge-Brown, honoring the women and their contributions to their country is long overdue.
“It just means the world to me to know that my mother’s service was not in vain,” she said.
ABC News’ Faith Abubey contributed to this report.

NEXT WEEK
Audrey Edwards: My mom was a member of the “Triple Eight”

Black News Channel Files for Bankruptcy With Up to $50 Million in Debt

Florida-based network had shut down operations last Friday just two years after launching

By Thom Geier 
thewrap.com

Black News Channel — which shut down operations on Friday, just two years after making a splashy debut — has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in Florida.
In its Monday filing, the Tallahassee-based network listed $10 million-$50 million in liabilities and estimated between 200 and 999 creditors are owed money.


“They filed for bankruptcy faster than they paid their employees the money they’re owed,” one former employee told TheWrap on Tuesday. “I received a partial payment this morning for two weeks of work. They still owe me for another week.”


That former staffer was one of roughly 230 who were let go last Friday when the channel ceased operations; the network plans to air repeats for the rest of this month.


The channel, known to viewers as BNC, was founded by former GOP congressman J.C. Watts and veteran broadcast executive Bob Brillante with a mission to provide news for and about underserved communities. Just months after the launch in February 2020, Brillante was ousted and Princell Hair joined BNC as CEO in the fall of 2020. Hair added several hours of daily live programming, eventually launched a short-lived streaming channel, and hired hundreds of employees.


The hiring spree came as Shad Khan, the billionaire owner of the Jacksonville Jaguars, injected a reported $50 million dollars into the network and became the principal investor. Despite the infusion of cash, insiders told TheWrap little of it was used for marketing. Instead, BNC’s management team looked to the media to get the word out, including the Tallahassee Democrat, which in September 2021 published a profile of Hair with the headline: “Black News Channel thriving under new President and CEO Princell Hair.”


Twelve weeks later — in December 2021 — the network began laying off dozens of employees.
BNC was also hit with a class-action lawsuit filed by 13 former and current female employees alleging discrimination and a “sexist” workplace (executives denied the accusations).
A Nielsen ratings analysis compiled by TheWrap found of 124 cable news channels in 2021, BNC came in 123rd with an average of 4,000 viewers on any given show. Fox News was No. 1 with an average 2.361 million primetime viewers each evening.


Last Thursday, the network’s human resources department sent out an email saying employees would not be paid as scheduled the following day. “The March 25 payroll deposit will be delayed. We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience this may cause,” said the memo from human resources VP, Nicole Collins. “We are actively working to resolve this matter quickly, and will advise you with an update as soon as possible.”


On March 25, BNC staffers learned the channel had reached the end of its journey. As employees were notified by phone that the channel was ceasing operations, Hair sent out a memo to staffers saying he was “saddened and disappointed.”


“During the past few months, we have endured very painful workforce reductions at all levels of the network as we worked to achieve our financial goal of a break-even business. This has forced all of you to do more with less, and your contributions have been remarkable,” Hair said in the memo obtained by TheWrap. “Unfortunately, due to challenging market conditions and global financial pressures, we have been unable to meet our financial goals, and the timeline afforded to us has run out.”


Pamela Chelin contributed to this report.

What’s Going On – 4/7

APRIL is a spring festival of monthly observances and special days, not the least of which are National Minority Health Month; National Jazz Appreciation Month; religious holidays of the Abrahamic religions, Ramadan from April 2 to May 1; Passover from April 15 to 23; Easter on April 17; and Earth Day April 22.

NEW YORK, NEW YORK
NYS missed its April 1 budget deadline redolent of the pre-Cuomo days and extended it to April 8. Key budget players, NYS Governor Kathy Hochul, Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie and Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins are working towards a resolution. Budget is $212 billion. Problems still dogging Albany are the governor’s $1 billion football stadium for her native Buffalo and a cash bail tweak defining “dangerousness.” NY GOP Congressmen want to overturn 2019 no bail law.
The NYS Association of Black, Puerto Rican, Hispanic and Asian Legislators will host its 51st Annual Legislative Conference on April 8-10 at the Hilton Albany Hotel. The NYSABPRHAL is the Oscars for local electeds. Weekend fare includes power breakfast/lunch events, workshops, and networking. This week’s NYSABPRHAL Conference is a high priority for all NYS stakeholders, electeds and non-electeds, during this important midterm year. Visit NYSABPRLINC.ORG

HARLEM: Harlem Congressional Rep. Adriano Espaillat, concerned about the multi-layers of dysfunction in his congressional district, announced a 10 point plan to contain it, which must be supported by NYC/NYS agencies. Especially concerning are crime along East and West 125 Street, Harlem’s main commercial corridor, where daylight shootings and shoplifting are commonplace. The NYPD gun crime task force has been deployed to northern Manhattan streets within the 23,25, 28, and 32 precincts, all within Espaillat’s congressional jurisdiction. He wants more. The special NYPD units have been deployed to 30 precincts, including Eastern Brooklyn, the Bronx and Queens. Will other NYC Congress members follow the Espaillat lead for more aggressive policing?
COVID UPDATES: There is a new COVID19 variant BA2 and it’s responsible for an uptick in COVID virus positivity rates locally and nationally. Suspect that would explain the FDA and CDC approval of the emergency application of booster vaccination shots 1 & 2. Three of the top five NYC zip codes, with the newest positive Covid tests are on Manhattan’s Upper West Side: 10023, 10024, and 10025. Will positive numbers surge after April 30 when everyone’s back from spring break and family gatherings? For many, the first in two years. Booster shots are available at home for anyone vaccination -age-eligible. Call 646-517-3205 to make an appointment.

THE NATION
The US Senate hearings to vet Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson for the US Supreme Court was a disrespectful exercise in American racism, a barometer of how much the society has regressed. Remember the inquiring clowns, Senators Lindsay Graham, Ted Cruz, John Cornyn, and their next election. Support their ouster and their opponents. Their obstructionism notwithstanding, Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson has won the support of GOP Senators Susan Collins, Mitt Romney, and Lisa Murkowski who will vote with the Democratic caucus this week to confirm her nomination!

On March 29, President Joe Biden signed into law the Emmett Till Anti Lynching Act. It makes lynching a federal crime, a law in the making for more than 100 years. It is a terrorist act. Emmett Till was a 14-year-old Black teenager lynched in Mississippi in 1955. We await the passage of the John Lewis Voting Rights bill and the George Floyd bill. The US Senate still has lots of work to do. It must pass the John Lewis Voting Rights bill which provides full protection of the Voting Rights Law of 1965 and the George Floyd Justice In Policing bill.
President Biden’s Press Secretary Jen Psaki leaves her job on April 30 and heads to MSNBC for a new job. Is Deputy Press Secretary African American Karine Jean-Pierre next in line of succession? She traveled with POTUS to Europe last month for the NATO/EU Summit on the war in Ukraine.
The Democrats are spending $102 million for ad spots nationally to retain control of the House of Representatives this year. Political pundits claim that 2022 elections will be won in about 2-3 dozen swing districts.

THE WORLD
Last week, in Africa, the Tunisian President dissolved Parliament who opposed his autocratic tendencies. Tunisia was the nation where the Arab Spring began in 2010. In Asia, April 2, Pakistan’s Prime Minister dissolved Parliament to thwart its efforts to remove him.
The Russian-Ukrainian War will have serious consequences and provoke a global food crisis. Ukraine is the fifth largest exporter of wheat. Considered the breadbasket of Europe, 71% of Ukraine’s land is agricultural. It’s a major supplier to African and Asian nations. The media keeps saying that war could continue for months.

ARTS AND CULTURE
Congrats to all 64th Annual Grammy Awardees for excellence in the music world. Jon Batiste, 35, the New Orleans-born multi-talented pianist/composer won five Grammys, including one for “ We Are,” Best Album of the Year. Other Grammy Awardees include Kanye West, who won three prizes; H.E.R., Best Traditional R&B; CeCe Winans, Best Gospel Song; DOJA CAT; Silk Sonic, Song of the Year; Jazmine Sullivan, Best R&B Album; and Esperance Spaulding, Best Jazz Vocalist.
THEATER: A Broadway revival of Ntozake Shange’s seminal 1976 theater piece, choreopoem, FOR COLORED GIRLS WHO HAVE CONSIDERED SUICIDE/WHEN THE RAINBOW IS ENUF opened in previews on April 1 and is directed/choreographed by African American Camille Brown, who choreographed the play’s 2019 revival at the NY Public Theater. The FOR COLORED GIRLS characters are named by seven colors, each a shade of the rainbow. The show opens on April 20 for 20 weeks.
A Broadway revival of August Wilson’s Pulitzer-winning drama THE PIANO LESSON, starring Samuel Jackson, Danielle Brooks, and John David Washington, opens on September 19 with LaTanya Richardson Jackson directing.
The show runs for 16 weeks.
Al Sharpton’s National Action Network hosts its Annual Convention 2022 on April 6-9, at the Sheraton Times Square Hotel, located at 811 Seventh Avenue in Manhattan, NYC. Convention boasts a marquis list of speakers and conferees.
Visit Nationalactionnetwork.net.

A Harlem based management consultant, Victoria can be reached at victoria.horsford@gmail.com

Mother pleads for help finding
killer of her son

Last week, 20-year-old college student Jenna Ellis decided to treat her 12-year-old cousin Kade Lewin and her 8-year-old niece to a Boston Market dinner in East Flatbush. Jenna had recently gotten her license and was driving Kade’s mother’s car. As the young people sat in the Toyota Corolla enjoying their meal and watching a video, a barrage of gunfire erupted between two cars. The bullets violently struck the car with the children.


The shooter fired 11 bullets into their car, striking Kade in the head and chest multiple times and killing him. Jenna was shot six times hitting her leg and right cheek and was rushed to Kings County Hospital where she is expected to survive but remains in critical condition. Miraculously the bullets missed the 8-year-old girl and she was not physically hurt.
New York City was horrified.


At a special press conference with Mayor Eric Adams, Kade’s mother Suzette Lewin pleaded with the public for help. “All I’m asking, please come forward. Please, please, somebody say something,” she cried. “I’m asking for justice for Kade.”


“Whose child is next?” Adams demanded. “We can replace the name of Kade with so many other names. Promising young people snatched away from us… For no other reason — too many guns on our streets, too many people who are willing to use those guns to harm innocent people.”


The assailants were looking for a different Toyota Corolla in East Flatbush. Shocked by Kade’s killing, New York Public Advocate Jumaane Williams stressed that gun violence is literately killing people. “He’s 12 years old. His mother raised him as best as she could — ‘A’ student, not in the street, doing everything right, just like Jenna,” said Williams. “They paused in their community to eat something and were shot. That is unacceptable by any stretch of the imagination. There has to be consequences and accountability for that.”


Police Commissioner Keechant Sewell asked for the public’s assistance. “Murders, shootings, robberies, assaults go against everything we should believe ourselves to be,” she stated. “Your NYPD is doing everything it can and knows how to do well to deter and prevent and apprehend those responsible, but we need your help. Kade’s mother needs your help.”


Anyone with information in regards to this incident is asked to call the NYPD’s Crime Stoppers Hotline at 800-577-TIPS or by visiting the NYPD’s website.

Black Organizers Launch First Amazon Labor Union

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By Fern E. Gillespie
Early in the COVID pandemic, Christian Smalls, a worker at Amazon’s warehouse JFK8 in Staten Island, planned a small walkout over safety conditions at the fulfillment center. It is Amazon’s largest center in New York City. Saying he had violated quarantine rules by attending the walkout, Amazon fired Smalls. Then, Amazon’s chief counsel sent out a racially coded email describing Mr. Smalls as “not smart, or articulate.” The email scandalously went public.


It didn’t deter Smalls and his best friend from the warehouse, Derrick Palmer. They continued with their sights on unionizing. Without the affiliation of a national labor organization, for almost a year the friends rallied for the Amazon Labor Union. Amazon is the second-largest employer in the U.S. with over 1.1 million employees. Last February, Our Time Press was at Brooklyn’s rally planned by the Southern Workers Assembly. The protest rally was one of 50 held at Amazon sites across the country. Demonstrators rallied in solidarity with workers at Amazon’s Bessemer, Alabama plant who were fighting to unionize.


However, Alabama is not heavily union like New York City and the vote failed, but a do-over has been ordered. Last week, Amazon’s New York City workers cast 2,654 votes — or about 55% — in favor of a union, giving the Amazon Labor Union enough support to pull off a victory.
This Wednesday, President Joe Biden expressed support for efforts to unionize Amazon workers. He spoke at the national conference of North America’s Building Trades Unions. “The choice to join a union belongs to workers alone,” he said. “By the way, Amazon, here we come. Watch.”
Our Time Press reached out to New York labor and political leaders on their insights regarding this landmark union victory headed by Black community organizers.

Charles Jenkins, President, New York Chapter of Coalition of Black Trade Unionists and Union Organizer of TWU Local 100
“It’s important for all workers to have the right to organize, to have the right to a union. We know that is the gateway to the middle class. Unions come with better wages, better benefits, and what is critically important it comes with a safe workplace. What good is it if you’re making great wages and you’re at risk when you come to work? A unionized workforce will bring those protections. In marginalized communities and communities of color, we need to make sure that workers are not exploited. Not exploited in being paid differently for doing the same job.”

Vinson Verdree, December 12th Movement
“There is a resurgence of working-class people in the United States and around the world understand their value and the wealth that our labor generates. We have to realize that Black labor is the source of this country’s being. Without Black labor, there would be no America, because our labor built this country. And we must realize that our labor has value. Those who set up the system realize it and try to keep people down. But, when the masses of Black working-class people realize that the power, like Adam Clayton Powell said “is in your hand” and when we use that power nothing can stand in our way.”

Tristan Dutchin, member, Amazon Labor Union 
“The important thing about me being involved with the union is growing as an individual, spreading the word out, helping other workers, giving back to the community, and speaking for what is right. Every job corporation needs a union for higher pay, better working conditions, and better job security. We are making a difference in this world. Be inspired, take initiative action to unionize wherever workplace you are.”-

Charles Barron New York City Council Member, Brooklyn 
“What do I think about the diligence of Christian Smalls and Derrick Palmer in successfully organizing the Amazon Labor Union? I hope this is contagious. I hope it catches on all over the country. Not just at Amazon, but Walmart as well. And, all of these corporations that are fighting against unionizing. These two brothers need to be highly commended. They need to be recognized throughout our communities because they have set the model of what workers should do in a place to organize. Whether you organize the workers voting or organize around legal assistance. Whatever it takes they have set the example. They are champions of the Black working class.”