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Skulls of 19 individuals returned to U.S. after being sent to Leipzig, Germany for Racial pseudoscience of 150 years ago

NEW ORLEANS – Earlier this month, Dillard University, in partnership with the City of New Orleans and University Medical Center New Orleans, hosted Kumbuka Dancers honored 19 individuals whose crania were taken from New Orleans and sent to Leipzig, Germany for racial pseudoscience over 150 years ago.


The following individuals were laid to rest at Katrina Memorial: Adam Grant, Isaak Bell, Hiram Smith, William Pierson, Henry Williams, John Brown, Hiram Malone, William Roberts, Alice Brown, Prescilla Hatchet, Marie Louise, Mahala, Samuel Prince, John Tolman, Henry Allen, Moses Willis and Henry Anderson. Individuals finally received long-overdue recognition in full New Orleanian spirit with Jazz band, second line, performed by Black Men of Labor, and Kumbuka Dancers.


“Dillard University is deeply honored to serve as a steward in the sacred process of cultural repatriation,” said Dr. Monique Guillory, President of Dillard University. “This moment calls us to bear witness to a painful chapter in our collective history while recognizing the unique role our institution plays in preserving the dignity and legacy of those who were wrongfully taken. This is more than an act of remembrance – it is a restoration of humanity.”


“We honor the lives of those who have gone before us and place in remembrance with dignity and respect the sacred remains of those nineteen people,” said New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell. “As Mayor of New Orleans and on behalf of our citizens in the spirit of divine love, we pray that they will forever rest in God’s perfect peace.”


“It is a profound honor for a coalition of community partners to work alongside the University of Leipzig to ensure that these individuals are returned home with the dignity and reverence they were long denied,” said Dr. Eva Baham, Chair of the Repatriation Committee. “This collaboration is not only an act of justice – it is an act of healing, rooted in a shared commitment to truth and historical accountability.”


“At University Medical Center, we are proud of our deep roots in Charity Hospital and remain committed to honoring that legacy by partnering with institutions that share our history and dedication to our community,” said Charlotte Parent, Vice President of Business Development at University Medical Center New Orleans.

“We are honored to join Dillard University and the City of New Orleans in recognizing and respecting the individuals and families impacted by racial inequities, as we work together to create a more just and compassionate future.”
The visitation took place on Saturday, May 31 at 9am at Dillard University Lawless Memorial Chapel followed by a Memorial Service at 11am.


In the 1880s, New Orleans physician Dr. Henry D. Schmidt provided 19 crania to Dr. Emil Ludwig Schmidt of Leipzig, Germany. These human remains, belonging to African Americans, and were acquired and used for racially biased scientific research. In 2023, the University of Leipzig contacted the City of New Orleans Archaeologist with an offer to repatriate the remains, prompting the formation of a multi-agency effort.

This collaboration includes Dillard University, the City of New Orleans, University Medical Center and other community partners.
During the 1800s when racial injustice was at its height, Charity Hospital did not deny care regardless of race, nationality, religion, sex or character. In continuation of that legacy, University Medical Center is honored to grant these 19 individuals the respect and peace they deserve.

Big G is back

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By Eddie Castro
You can say it’s been a good news/bad news type of week for the New York Yankees as they made their way back to New York to begin a 4-game set with the Los Angeles Angels. Part of the good news is that, at least for the foreseeable future, the team does not have to worry about slugger Rafael Devers causing them havoc in their division.

After the Yankees loss to the Red Sox on Sunday afternoon, Boston traded Devers to the San Francisco Giants for pitcher Jordan Hicks and prospects. Why is this good news for the Yanks? Well, does David Ortiz ring a bell to Yankees fans? Devers has been the 2.0 version of Ortiz. He has 31 career home runs against the Yankees, as he was constantly a thorn in the team’s side for years. The other good news is the return of Yankee slugger Giancarlo Stanton.

Stanton made his season debut for the Yankees on Monday night. Stanton missed the first 70 games of the season due to Tennis Elbow (irritation of the tissue connecting the forearm muscle to the elbow). Stanton’s bat in the lineup not only deepens the lineup but also adds another dangerous element for opposing pitchers. Stanton was arguably the team’s best player in last year’s postseason.


Stanton’s return could not come at a better time, which leads me to the bad news. As we go to press, the Yankees are currently on a 4-game losing streak. They lost all three games to the Red Sox this past weekend in Boston, in which Aaron Judge had only one hit and nine strikeouts in the series.

As a team, the Yankees scored just four runs in the three games, leading to their first series sweep loss of the season. In other words, the team’s offense has been as off as the New York weather in the month of June thus far. Manager Aaron Boone is hoping the Yankees will start to heat up again with Stanton’s return. Their first-place lead in the American League East is now down to 2.5 games.


The Yankees must find a way to get back to winning baseball. The other teams in the AL East appear to be figuring things out. The Rays are on a 4-game winning streak. The Red Sox are on a 6-game winning streak, which is the longest streak currently in the majors.

The past two or three seasons, this Yankee team has always seemed to go through these monthly droughts, which makes Yankee fans question the coaching style of Aaron Boone. The fact of the matter is, the offense needs to get better. Sure, their top pitchers, Max Fried and Carlos Rondon, have had some challenging games in their last two starts, but let’s get real for a second. This team’s bread and butter is its offense.

Judge will be better you would think. If Stanton can find that 2024 playoff magic and add it to this lineup along with a strong supporting cast from the other players, this Yankee team very much so has the capability of holding off the opposing teams in the AL East and capturing another division crown.


Sports Notes: (Basketball) Suns forward Kevin Durant is reportedly interested in joining the Knicks. However, according to reports, the Knicks have NO interest in Kevin Durant. Should the Knicks have an interest in KD? (BASEBALL) The Mets are in Atlanta to play Ronald Acuna and the Braves tonight. The Yankees play the Los Angeles Angels in Game three of a four-game set.


Tune in tonight for another Episode of sports talk with Eddie tonight. We’ll discuss the Knicks’ alleged “disinterest” in Kevin Durant, the Yankees, and I’d tonight, the night the Oklahoma City Thunder capture their first NBA title? Catch and All-new Episode tonight at 5PM EST presented by Our Time Press.

Chandler-Waterman and Myrie Legislation Created NYS Office of Gun Violence Prevention

By Mary Alice Miller

Assemblymember Monique Chandler-Waterman recently announced a permanent New York State Office for Gun Violence Prevention at her Public Safety annual Public Safety Community Taskforce Meeting. The statewide office and an expansion of victim services were codified into law in the 2026 NYS budget.

Chandler-Waterman in the Assembly and Zellnor Myrie in the Senate both introduced the bill.

“The governor saw it, liked it, and took the language in our bill and put it in the budget,” said Chandler-Waterman. “We authored the bill with advocates and our community members. The legislation developed from a collaboration with her district-based monthly public safety task force and a roundtable discussion in Albany in which stakeholders from agencies all around the state, community-based organizations, and survivors, all come together to discuss what they wanted a permanent office of gun violence prevention to do.

“We meet once a month and discuss priorities and what the needs are in the community. That collaborative work is what got the language,” said Chandler-Waterman. “Zellnor and I were able to advocate for it and get it put in the budget. And now it is law.”

“Unfortunately,” lamented Chandler-Waterman, “we have too much gun violence.”

The Assemblywoman spoke of the citywide impact of a New Year’s celebration in which ten people were shot in Queens. That incident in Queens had connections in Brooklyn, the Bronx and other boroughs.

“So, I put together with my taskforce a city/state collaboration and notified all the elected officials that those victims came from their district,” she said. “That is something this Office of Gun Violence Prevention will do on its own in collaboration with our elected officials.”

Hidden in the plethora of executive orders that Trump signed on the first day of his second term was the elimination of the White House Office of Gun Violence Prevention that was established under President Biden.

On April 23, the U.S. Dept. of Justice cut funds to non-profits on the ground doing anti-violence work, including hospitals, who are responding to violence.

“They cut the funding in the middle of the contract,” Chandler-Waterman said.

The purpose of the NYS Office of Gun Violence Prevention is multifold. Part of its function is to make sure it gets funds and grants to the people on the ground who are doing the cure violence work. The office will also engage in data collection, analysis, public education, and collaborate with stakeholders (community members, community-based organizations and state and local agencies) to provide recommendations on how to reduce gun violence.

When a mass shooting occurs, by federal definition four or more people murdered by gun violence, the incident activates resources for that community. But when injuries, not murder occur, those resources were not available.

To solve this problem and address the needs of injured gun violence survivors, Chandler-Waterman and Myrie created a new term: Mass Gun Violence. Mass gun violence, codified into law, means three or more injured or three or more people injured within seven days in multiple shooting incidents that are related to each other.

A mass gun violence incident would activate the NYS Office of Gun Violence Prevention to coordinate stakeholders to respond and address community needs.

Chandler-Waterman said that during roundtable taskforce discussions, “Survivors felt like when you take out the word injured from mass shooting, they don’t care about the survivors. It shows that they don’t care. Survivors have been known to clean up the blood of their loved ones.” 

Some survivors don’t even know that there is an office of victim services, so they don’t even get the services they are eligible for.

“We put into legislation that under the Office of Victim Services burial will be raised from $6,000 to $12,000 because no burial costs $6,000. We got that passed in the budget,” said Chandler-Waterman.

“Then we also wanted to make sure that there is no judgement,” she added. “If you are contributory to your injury or your death often people say you are a gang member even if you are not. And once that is said you are judged. You will not be able to get the fullness of compensation. They may reduce or reject you, nine times out of ten they reject it.”

She continued, “So with this bill that the governor included in the budget, if you are murdered then your family will be able to get the full benefits.”

Also, now an individual who pays for crime scene cleanup can get reimbursed for that cleanup service. And there is an intentional expansion of services related to location, transportation, lost wages, and property damage.

They were able to get $25 million, a five-year commitment of five million a year for gun violence prevention that goes from the state directly to the city (DYEP) to help with cure violence groups and crisis management.

Clergy got $1.5 million of that money because clergy and pastors are part of anti-violence work, too.

It also provides technical assistance, support, it helps them build capacity across the board across the five boroughs in the city.

Your vital voice can be so important to change law and to make sure things are happening better.

And no one else has to go through what they are going through. Some people feel hopeless or that nothing is going to change.

Taskforce model is individuals lived experiences, volunteers from the district, those who work in my district as well come together and set priorities for my district. I listen to their voices to pass legislation.

They also help with funding. “Public safety is a shared responsibility between agencies, community members and elected officials,” she said.

A Salute to Good Fathers and Other Men of Honor and Change

Our Time At Home

Barry L. Mason

Congratulations to fine artist and professional photographer Barry L. Mason, a staff member of Our Time Press, Chief Photographer for Legacy Ventures publications since 2006, and a friend of more than three decades. Barry has received multiple honors this year, including the Westchester County NAACP-Act So Award for Distinguished Community Service. He is the featured interview subject in several high-profile magazines, including the 2025 Harlem Fine Arts Show’s Spectrum, and, currently, as a feature story subject in the high-profile Westchester Magazine. Danny Simmons described Barry as the Basquiat of our times. His work hangs in collections throughout the nation.(Photo Credit: Bernice Elizabeth Green)
barrymasonart.com


Stars Shine Bright on Fulton St. in Bedford-Stuyvesant: Boys & Girls H.S. teacher wins Tony for Excellence in Theatre Education
Gary Edwin Robinson, head of the Theatre Arts Program at Boys and Girls High School in Brooklyn, received the Excellence in Theatre Education Award at the Tonys on Sunday, June 8.
Robinson made history as the first New York teacher to be awarded the honor at the 78th annual event, presented jointly with Carnegie Mellon University.
“I’m getting an award for going to work and enjoying what I do. I love it,” Mr. Robinson told the media.
The Baltimore, Md. native credits his dance instructor, Miss Jackson, with igniting his interest in theatre. He started tap dancing at age eight and quickly fell in love with theatre. Robinson went on to study music at Intermediate School 59 and Andrew Jackson High School in Queens before joining the Dance Theatre of Harlem chorus.
While studying with dance great Arthur Mitchell in Harlem, Robinson decided to pursue vocalist/theatre performance and later went on to study theatre education at Howard University.
“I am charged with the fact that I’m teaching theatre, and I love theatre. That’s what gets me ticking, tocking, that’s the love,” Robinson told Carnegie Mellon University.
According to Yahoo.com, Robinson previously received an honorable mention at the 2025 Tony Awards and an honorable mention in the education category in 2023.
The Excellence in Theatre Education Award honors one educator in the United States every year who demonstrates exceptional commitment, innovation, and impact on students’ lives through theatre education.
And that is what he does every day for his students. Congratulations, Mr. Jackson, from Our Time Press.


Work in progress: Artist Joe Grant is bringing the fading mural of the late urban ecologist Hattie Carthan to life.
Grant told Our Time Press yesterday afternoon that the completion date is June 21st, just concurrent with the blooming of the Magnolia Grandiflora Carthan and the Bed-Stuy community saved in the 70s, and the Board’s fundraiser. (Credit: Bernice Elizabeth Green)

View From Here

In July of 1917, Civil Rights and literary leaders James Weldon Johnson and W.E.B. DuBois led the NAACP’s Silent Protest Parade, protesting the lynchings, white riots and terrorism of the time.


Up to 15,000 African Americans had lined up on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan, women in white, men in suits, carrying signs saying “Your hands are full of Blood,” “Mr. President, why not make America safe for democracy?,” “We own 250,000 farms with 20,000,000 acres of land worth $500,000,000,” and “Race prejudice is the offspring of ignorance and the mother of lynching,”


The protest, conceived by Johnson, had to be absolutely quiet and disciplined in that time of terror, lest any excuse be given that there was a hair out of place, necessitating a police response. We are at that time again. And once again, it is the peaceful demonstrations that will win the day.


It’s only been six months, and already there are four thousand National Guard troops and 700 Marines on the streets of Los Angeles, guarding federal buildings in full battle gear. All the Trump administration needs now is an agent provocateur to provide the pretext for increased and even lethal force. Useful as a distraction from the budget bill now in the Senate.


This weekend could be exceptional. A long-planned national demonstration against the administration’s roundups of undocumented persons and those in the vicinity, even if they are citizens or legally allowed in the country, will be kicked into overdrive by the reactions to ICE agents removing friends, neighbors, coworkers, and families from communities across the country.


In a Los Angeles area composed of just a few blocks, we are seeing scenes of car burnings, graffiti, and protestors reacting to ICE actions and then to having militarized forces on urban streets, such as we have watched on television in totalitarian regimes around the world. It never ends well for those in power, as it signals the end of their ability to rule.


Trump has brought the nation to the edge of the cliff of full-out authoritarianism backed by guns, zip ties, and body armor. The only “card” he has left himself to play is increasing the pressure he feels necessary to control the millions of people rising up against him.


His anger at being told “No” is boundless and runs deep in his psyche, he is a child in this regard. And like a child, he’s throwing a tantrum with this deployment of troops in Los Angeles.


He will now be met with a very strong “No” delivered in protests across the country on Saturday, a day he has set aside for a military parade, celebrating his birthday. But there wlll be no Happy Birthday for him. This will make him even angrier because he hasn’t matured into any other way to cope.


And now the courts will have to step in with an even firmer “No!” If that fails to stop him, then we’ll have to call in the authorities, the congress, and have them repair as much of the damage as they can, and remove his powers to inflict more.


The problem with that solution are the MAGA Primary voters in tightly gerrymandered districts. They are in the thrall of Trump, and their representatives live in political and physical fear of them.


The only thing that can change the political calculations of just a few of the Republicans in Congress is voters in their districts telling them to.


Like James Weldon Johnson in 1917, we’re living in dangerous times, with a rogue federal government with no shame or boundaries, and it is capable of anything. Be careful out there. Just know we will win.