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Community Activism Endures

We like to say, “Children Are Our Future.”  But are we supplying our children with the tools they need to take care of their world tomorrow?
Gabriela (Gabby) Thomas, 11, is determined to make a difference, now and in the future, for her North Bed-Stuy community.  Except for the lessons she learns with respect and patience from her mom, Gabby does not appear to be waiting to be taught about self-leadership. Nor leading the way.
In an interview with Our Time Press following a phenomenally successful community Giveaway event yesterday sponsored by Brooklyn Bank and partners, Gabby informed us, “My mom (Allison Thomas) makes sure that I always give back to the community. Community activism is a big part of the world.” And Gabby’s world is big. So is her spirit and stamina.
Gabby biked around her neighborhood Tuesday evening with her grandfather, spreading the word about yesterday’s giveaway of masks and food.  Hundreds of people showed up.

Not only is she a top student and the valedictorian of her fifth-grade class, she is a program- and project-developer, strategist and ace speaker. Her community work commenced officially during Thanksgiving week in 2018, when she made two huge Rice Krispie turkeys for the 79th precinct. Along with the special delivery came a Thankful Tree write-up on what she thought of them — “which is still in Community Affairs officer Charles’s office,” she told us proudly. 

The Brooklyn Bank enterprise distributed healthy food and personal protection equipment, including face masks and gloves, to hundreds in North Bed-Stuy, Wednesday (17). Sponsors included Fresh Direct, Rho Epsilon Sigma, NAACP-Brooklyn chapter and the 79th precinct, assisted by young Gabriela Thomas of Kosciusko Street on left. (Photo Credit: Cirilo Miller)

When Gabby’s role model, Captain Victoria Perry, transferred to another precinct (the 104th in Ridgewood, Queens), she created and hosted a “Mother’s Day” goodbye dinner for her idol.
For Father’s Day, she came up with an idea for a poker theme gift. Every male in the precinct received something, “because they are all that and a bag of chips.”
This crafter also makes her own GET Your Hands Clean sanitizer.  In case you do not “get” it: Gabby’s initials are GET, for Gabriela Evon Thomas.
Victims of domestic violence, children, seniors and other organizations have benefited from Gabby’s clever ideas and good work, so much so that at the recommendation of Officer Charles and Tremaine Wright, Miss Thomas became the youngest-ever recipient of the Woman of Distinction award at the March 2019 ceremony. She earned a trophy and three certificates.
At a major debate competition last November, she walked away with the top prize for her speaking gifts.
On her way to becoming a law enforcement official, Miss Thomas says she has several many other objectives, including lawyer, judge, dancer/actress (Gabby has studied with Jamel Gaines Creative Outlet at Mr. Pisgah Church, where she is a member). And then there’s Activist.
As a result of her community service work this week, nearly 500 families and individuals lined up in front of The Brooklyn Bank for large boxes of food donated by Fresh Direct and much-needed PPE supplies distributed by Bernard and friends.  
What’s Gabby’s message to others who may want to follow in her footsteps? She gave us several points to relay to readers her age: “Know you can achieve anything you put your mind to.  Stay more focused on school (especially since we are inside).  
“If you must go outside, follow the distance rules; be self-protective, six feet apart. Also, we need to tell everyone to not give up on dreams no matter what situation we’re going through now.

“Stay off social media. It’s not always the best motivator. And, if you are ‘of age,’ VOTE!  It’s important!”
We did not ask Gabby about politics, but she offered her thoughts anyway — not surprising since she truly likes political activism, too.
“I feel activists have a positive role to play in the community she said, “because (our leaders) really don’t pay much attention to communities like ours… (But) I would pay (attention).
“I feel Donald Trump is not hitting all points, and he needs to stay off social media.”
Then we asked her the if-you-were-president question. “I would focus on human rights,” she said, adding, “I would try to make myself like Obama.  If we could re-elect President Obama, I would totally do it.”
At the top of Gabby’s college list are: Harvard, Yale, Duke and John Jay. “I want to focus on Criminology.” But she also has an interest in history and International Affairs.
Since it is Children’s Awareness Month, we asked Gabby to name one of her favorite characters in conjunction with a favorite book.  She cited the story of a real-life hero: the late Iqbal Masih of Pakistan, considered, as noted on the website, “a symbol for the fight against harmful child labor and slavery all over the world.” 
Iqbal was enslaved in a carpet factory to pay off his sick mother’s debt, Gabby noted.  “He encouraged other children to leave their owners.  At age 12 he tried to get more children out of slavery and into education. 
Born in 1983, children’s rights activist Iqbal Masih reportedly helped free 3,000 children from slavery. He was 12 when he died.
“He understood wrong and right,” Gabby told us.  “More young people should read about Iqbal.  He is an inspiration.” 

Brooklyn Artists Create New York City’s First Black Lives Matter Street Art Mural

Historic Event Was Organized by The Billie Holiday Theatre and Council Member Robert E. Cornegy, Jr. in Collaboration with artists Cey Adams and Dawud West

Inspired by the Black Lives Matter public art piece in Washington D.C. and those happening across the country, more than 20 Brooklyn-based artists created New York City’s first Black Lives Matter street art mural last weekend in Bed-Stuy- Brooklyn. The massive mural spans Fulton Street/Harriet Tubman Blvd. between Marcy and Brooklyn Avenues.
The Fulton Street art initiative was directed by West, who famously completed the American flag mural for the opening of the National Museum of African American History and Culture. He also is directing the installation of the names of Black people who have been killed by racially-motivated violence in this country from Emmett Till in 1955 to recent killings of two Black trans women Riah Milton in Ohio and Dominique Rem Mie Fells in Pennsylvania, as well as Rayshard Brooks in Atlanta. These names will be embedded into 20 bars, representing the year 2020 and a row of caskets.


The Brooklyn visual artists who participated in the creation of the work include:
Diego Anaya, Tupell Beard, Dengil Belinle, Gloria Braxton, Monique Carboni, Ali Rose Dachis, Rashid F Dav, Falisha Davis, Yuena Despagne, Stephen Edwards, Tanda Francis, Cassandra Greene, Samra Guenmdu, Tomas Hull, Melvin Isau, Kahlil Jfantau, Sapp Jimenez, Stanley Lambert, Nicholas Love, Marienne, Donna Mason, Afalau Muhammad, Mercedes Ortega, Maninga Pekason, Imani Pringle, Richard Ramea, Devon Shell, Aaron Simius, Aleathea Antoinne Thomas, Apollonia Tikki, Ava Tomlinson, Wilma Ward, Jonanthan Weekes, Larry Weekes, Valerie Williams and Marcia Wilson … and growing.
Dr. Indira Etwaroo Executive Artistic Director, The Billie Holiday Theatre, said, “This street-sized mural with the names of Black men and women who have been killed by racially-motivated violence in this country is the act of a collective of Brooklyn artists. In order to heal, we must address the fact that the current systems in place are inadequate to ensure life and liberty for all people. That is what this mural stands for here in Brooklyn.”
Council Member Robert E. Cornegy, Jr. said, “This Black Lives Matter street mural is a memorial, a monument, and an inspiration. I hope that everyone who takes in these words and names comes away with renewed spirit, drawing strength from those whose protest and leadership that came before.”
Marcy to Brooklyn Avenue has been designated by NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio, as a pedestrians-only block for the duration of the summer.

Remembering Bed-Stuy’s “Scooter Joe”

Peace-and-Justice during the age of aggressive policing

More than forty years ago, two Bedford Stuyvesant cops – one Black, the other white – exemplified the policing the public seeks today. Joseph Willins and Kenneth Kaufman, known as The Scooter Cops of Bedford-Stuyvesant, teamed up to fight crime on the streets without putting up a “fight” or, reportedly, firing a gun. Kenny still resides in Brooklyn. Scooter Joe passed earlier this spring. Writer Eulene Inniss remembers Scooter Joe, a neighborhood legend.

By Eulene Inniss

“Two street savvy Cops Nail ‘Em with Words” was the glaring headline of a New York Daily News article written in the late 70s. No Bullets, No Choking, No Abuse. The story was about the crime-fighting methods used to apprehend lawbreakers by the late, retired NYPD officer Joseph Willins (“Scooter Joe”) and his partner Kenneth Kaufman in Bedford-Stuyvesant. It was a time when drugs were rampant and crime was high. But the crime-fighting scooter team of two found that working with the community was a better form of law enforcement than the use of deadly force.

Officer Willins joined the ancestors on April 9, 2020, but he left something behind—audio- and video-taped accounts of his experiences as an officer. The interviews also cover his views on current police conditions, behavior, and professionalism.
Willins was known throughout the Bedford Stuyvesant community as “Scooter Joe” because of his years of riding his scooter throughout the neighborhood while providing community service to residents in the 79th precinct. He was passionate about his work.

Mr. Willins’ police work has been documented in a book by Dave Fisher, The Incredible Scooter Cops, published by Fawcett. It was drafted into a stage play. A documentary called, “Scooter Cops of Bed-Stuy” — about the careers of officers Joe and Kenny as they solved crimes in the 79th — was in production at the time of Joe’s passing. The producers said the cops were assigned to write parking tickets and check potholes, but wound up solving murders.
During his career, Scooter Joe said he “never fired weapons to apprehend anyone, and … we did not have the technology that’s available today. Our jobs were not 9-5. I did lots of leg work, after hours, so when I arrested someone, I knew it was correct.”
Evidence came from eyewitnesses, associates, family, or the victim. “I put the puzzle together with skills, so the pieces fit. My partner, officer Kaufman, and I would (have seen) Eric Garner (as a leader), the eyes and ears of the community. He knew what was going on, we would have befriended him.”

Scooter Joe was born and raised in Bedford Stuyvesant. He believed that he had a moral obligation to rid the community of crime for all the good, law-abiding residents, so he went after the criminal element and made over 2,000 arrests and put over 38 people in jail for murder. “I partnered with the community to make it safe for the residents. I provided Police service not Police tokenism. Neither did I over-police the community,” Scooter reflected.

Older community residents still talk about Scooter Joe’s caring and humanity, their ability to reach out to him in times of need, or just to embrace, or talk to, their disobedient children. The community exhibited an undying love and respect. He had been the guest of television and radio talk shows, featured in print, and has a storehouse of articles, award letters and citations.
Scooter Joe and Kenny’s policing tactics and wisdom perhaps could be incorporated into the training strategies of younger officers coming onto the force.
So, as we celebrate June, Father’s Day month, against the backdrop of hellish headlines, let us remember this ex-Marine, son, brother, and uncle who epitomized the NYPD slogan: “Courtesy, Professionalism, and Respect.” Scooter Joe Wilson was a man whose essential values centered on saving lives.
When Mr. Willis retired from the NYPD more than thirty block associations, elected officials, clergy, police supervisors of all ranks, representing thousands of community residents, honored his many years of service to Bedford-Stuyvesant with an elaborate Retirement Party for him.
Editor’s Note: Mr. Willins is the father of two children, Kenya and Joseph. His partner Ken is the father of three boys: Ross of whom Scooter Joe is godfather, and Ricky and Barry.
Kauffman’s memories of working with his partner, Scooter Joe, will be shared this month in Our Time Press. For more information, visit: www.scootercops.com.

(Editor: Bernice Elizabeth Green)

What’s Going On

WHAT A WEEK!

The fortnight from May 25 to June 7 will be one for the history books. Was last week akin to an Arab Spring for America and/or the world — or was it just an isolated incident? Cannot remember any comparable experience. The story unfolds as George Floyd, a handcuffed African American, was killed by a white Minneapolis policeman and three accomplices. They were fired, but not charged with any criminal offense. The murder was videotaped and posted to social media. It took four days for authorities to charge the offending ex-cop with third-degree manslaughter, and another week to press charges against the three cop accomplices.
The floodgates of American rage, of African Americans and all Americans, opened. What followed was a week of marches, protests, taking the knee and assorted acts of kindness, COVID-19 notwithstanding. That ran parallel to reprehensible acts like torching police stations and property, aggressive anti-police behaviors, looting, riots and police overreaction. Americans of all colors seem to have understood that Floyd’s death was another senseless police killing of a man because he is Black. Those marches, the movement of solidarity with Black Americans for equality, are meaningful only if American society will embrace change and reform.

Read the Northwestern University Professor of African Studies Kihana Miraya Ross’ NY Times opinion piece, “Call It What It Is: Anti-Blackness — When Black people are killed by the police, racism isn’t the right word.” Also, the David Gelles 6/7 NYT essay, “Corporate America Has Failed Black America,” with comments and insights by “elite Black executives” like Darren Walker, Ford Foundation; Mellody Hobson, Ariel Investments; Ursula Burns, former Xerox CEO/Chair; billionaire Robert Smith, Class of 2019 Morehouse College benefactor; Vernon Jordan; and real estate executives Robert Refflin, COMPASS, co-founder and Ryan Williams, CADRE, co-founder. A big part of the change that is necessary to transform the nation will have to begin with Corporate America. Please note whom the other sees as “elite Blacks.”

Didn’t billionaire HIPHOP mogul Jay-Z declare last year that, “we are past kneeling,” after he signed a deal with the National Football League? Erstwhile Colin Kaepernick supporter Jay-Zee abandoned the quarterback for a deal. Wasn’t Kaepernick the NFL player who started “taking to the knee” during the National Anthem to protest police brutality towards Blacks, and then was ostracized by the NFL? However, last week NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell revoked the ban on taking the knee at games, having learned something about racism after experiencing the enthusiastic American marches and protests for racial equality. Let’s see what happens to Colin Kaepernick and the NFL.
Saw JP Morgan CEO/Chair Jamie Dimon, Goodell, governors, mayors, police brass, taking the knee last week. On Capitol Hill, Democrats like Nancy Pelosi, Kamala Harris, Chuck Schumer, Hakeem Jeffries convened on 6/8 to craft their “Justice In Policing Act of 2020,” while donning kente cloth scarves, took the knee. Guess that Jay-Z misspoke last year. Rest In Peace, George Floyd, who was COVID-19 positive; but he died from the incurable American disease, racism. Yes, Black Lives Really Matter!

On May 25, NY had another ugly racial incident when a Canada-born woman, Amy Cooper, took offense to Black birdwatcher Christian Cooper, who asked her to leash her dog in Central Park. She called NYPD, begging for help because an African American man was threatening her. Huh?! Fortunately, Mr. Cooper recorded her threats before leaving the park. Neither one was in park when NYPD arrived. He went and uploaded Amy’s tirade and posted to social media. Imagine what could have happened if the police arrived and listened to Amy! Bad deeds have multiple unintended consequences. Amy lost her adopted dog, lost her job at a Wall Street firm. Again, racism was at play. It is interesting to note that foreign whites learn how the game of white privilege is played and the unequal status of Blacks in America. Christian Cooper is a Harvard graduate, an Audubon Society trustee who is vulnerable to the whim of white malevolence.

New York City comes out of the COVID-19 doldrums on June 8, as it enters phase one of business re-openings after the two-month quarantine. Subways trains are crowded and the bus rides are still free. The Class of 2020 June graduates still balk; many do not know if they will attend a college campus in September or begin their freshman year by remote learning.

Congrats to Caribbean Americans during Caribbean American Heritage Month: Colin Powell, Susan Rice, Robert Horsford, Senator Brian Benjamin, Roy Paul, Cents Ability; Laurent Delly, Beatrice Sibblies, Harold Doley III, Russell Grey, Edward Sisters Realty, Frank Hernandez and Cheryl Smith, MD

CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC
The virus has been detected in most nations on the planet. The worldwide coronavirus pandemic statistics on June 8 follow: Total number of infections is more than 7,100, 000, with 406,594 deaths. In the United States the total number of infections is 1,970, 613 with 110,966 deaths. In the US and around the world, there has been a recent surge in infections, many of which could be related to the large groups of protestors for almost 10 days, many not observing the social-distancing rule and some without face masks. All protest participants are encouraged to take a COVID-19 test immediately.

JUNE 23 NY PRIMARY
Congressional seats, NYS Assembly and NYS Senate races are on the ballot. Will the Democrats keep their two-chamber majority in Albany? Are Congressional seats safe for incumbents like Yvette Clarke in Brooklyn, firebrand Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez in the Bronx? Who gets the coveted seat vacated by Progressive Democrat Jose Serrano? Will it be Bronx Afro Latinos NYC City Council members Ritchie Torres, who is openly gay, or Ruben Diaz, Sr, veteran politico who is a conservative evangelical? Or will Assemblyman Michael Blake, who represents the district in Albany, prevail?


Sixteen-term Congressman Eliot Engel, Chair of the Foreign Affairs committee, faces challengers, including African-American Jamaal Bowman, who is supported by AOC. Strange things are happening in Brooklyn political machine. Why is recently ousted NYS Democratic Senator Jesse Hamilton, who caucused with the GOP, challenging incumbent Assembly member Diana Richardson?
In Central Harlem, Assembly member Inez Dickens and Senator Brian Benjamin have no serious contenders. Hopefully, Donovan Richards wins the Queens borough president race. It would be good to have an African American Queens boro prexy again. Brooklyn and Bronx borough presidents, Eric Adams and Ruben Diaz, Jr., respectively, are term-limited by end of 2021.

The Good in it All

Protesting has become the new social outing

After three months of being quarantined into a bubble that consisted of the people you live with and a few close friends or family, the dozens of protests in our city haven’t just been an opportunity to express our collective outrage. They have been an opportunity to just once again be part of a collective. Social interaction is a part of natural human development. Science will tell you that social interaction lowers stress and anxiety, and even increases our endocrine immune systems, but you don’t need to be a scientist to know that children crave the ability to interact amongst other children. It’s a necessary part of a child’s upbringing, their adventures with other children.

I went to two protests this past week. The first one was on Sunday, a well-kempt unit of Bed Stuy residents marching from the park on Stuyvesant and Fulton over to Restoration. The second was a much larger representation that began in Fort Greene Park, traveled to Borough Hall for a set of speeches and then walked over the Brooklyn Bridge and onto City Hall. In both cases the youth were prominent in the crowd; the second protest was actually a youth protest. The children of our borough displayed enormous creativity in their design of their protest posters and signs. They displayed that sparkling youthful energy in maintaining loud chants and a swift pace as they walked for miles under the early-summer sun. They displayed a working knowledge of the issues — police brutality, systemic racism, oppression in all forms. They are aware of who George Floyd was, and Breyonna Taylor, and Ahmad Aubrey and Eric Garner, and Emmit Till. White and Black alike, these kids know the stories and they understand the perspective enough to form a rational opinion.

I was 14 years old when Keith Mondello and his friend Joseph Fama murdered Yusef Hawkins in Bensonhurst. I remember being hurt, confused and angry. Yusef was around my age. At the time, I had an uncle that lived in Bay Ridge, right on 92nd street and 4th avenue. I had gone out there from time to time to spend the weekend with him and my cousin. I knew the white kids out there were racist. I knew that I could’ve been in the same situation as Yusef. That scared me — not the death part, because growing up in Bed Stuy meant that you were confronted with death early on, but the part that said that I could be killed just because I’m Black. You could avoid the drug game, and the gangs, and the bad kids. But, you couldn’t avoid being Black, right?

There were protests all over Brooklyn after Yusef’s death. I remember that at one of the protests in Bensonhurst, they were saying that white men were throwing bottles at the Black protestors. I remember hearing that as confirmation that there was a real problem of race right here in Brooklyn. This was 1989, the summer of Do the Right Thing, the summer of “Fight the Power.” Our music and our movies were teaching us to rebel. And so, when protests and rallies were organized in the name of Yusef Hawkins, my friends and I were there.
Huey Newton said that the revolution has always been in the hands of the young. For as far back as you want to go in the civic history of Blacks in America, it has always been the youth that pushed the issues forward, into the streets. Also, it is the experience in protests that turns rebellious teenagers into civic leaders. So, when I see the children angry about our government, and upset at the wanton killing of Blacks at the hands of racist whites, and they are outraged enough to make their own signs and to ask permission of their parents to go to a protest, that excites the optimist in me. Because the one thing we are sorely lacking in this country is leadership, and to know that the youth realize this as well, means that a definite change is on the horizon.

Summer school will be online. Summer Youth Employment has been cut from the budget. Our children have a precarious summer ahead of them. Let them protest. Let them make signs and walk over bridges and scream chants on the steps of buildings that represent the disconnect between government and citizen. Let them protest. We will all be better for it.