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AJASS Men: Millennial Style

by NZINGHA
June is the month where we celebrate Father’s Day. It’s the day we honor men who embody the task of not only siring children but also serving as an example of responsible manhood by the character and integrity that they possess. They are ministers of change and honor.


There is a hierarchy in the making of Gentlemen and Kings. You may be born male, but time, life lessons, and wise, honorable elder men who are respectable advisors with impeccable character make males into Gentlemen and Kings. Some are Fathers, Uncles, Brothers, Future Fathers, and males who reach for that honor that only a few wear as a crown worthy of respect. They are Kings in their businesses, personal households, families, and communities.


I’ve been thinking about the qualities and characteristics that made up the Gentlemen of the African Jazz Arts Society and Studio, also known as “AJASS.” AJASS men were not just Artists but Community and Social Activists who created change through the Arts. The Civil Rights Era had more than one movement happening at the same time. AJASS Executive Produced Live Jazz performances by some of the greatest Jazz Musicians of the Century. Executive Produced The Naturally Shows, which introduced The Grandassa Models. They also founded The Black Arts Movement and coined the phrase “BLACK IS BEAUTIFUL” and turned “BLACK IS BEAUTIFUL” into not only a slogan but a movement.


The AJASS men, Elombe and Kwame Brathwaite, Robert “Bob” Gumbs, Chris, David Ward, and Frank Adu, were committed to their wives until their transition from life.
And their wives, children, nieces, nephews, extended family, and admirers continue their work. They were inspired by The Honorable Marcus Garvey and Carlos Cook’s ANPM and my Father Charles Issac Nwokkiojjii Peaker.


In 1952, a little street once named Kelly Street, located in New York, in the South Bronx, on what has now been renamed “AJASS WAY,” gave birth to AJASS. There were six young men, all teenagers, with the goal of creating great artwork. Little did they know their dreams would spark multiple movements and generations.

Their skills in graphic arts and design made them firsts in their fields, breaking into the advertising, film, theater, and animation creation world. All of this at their young age and being young black men in the 60’s during the civil rights segregation era was a first through their fluency and love for all forms of the arts and, in particular, Jazz, which springs from the Black experience as Hip Hop, at its most positive.


The Arts have long been a means of communicating what’s happening in various social sectors that convey culture and nationalism, and also mirroring what’s happening in everyday people’s mindsets.


Not all Movements are clanging cymbals announcing their arrival. Nor are some Movements arrogant or self-serving about changing the culture. Some move in silence at first, then roar as it builds steam. Moving stealthily to become movements of change. Patrons of these foundational Arts are stealth movers and shakers with a wellspring already pouring out with eyes that see and hearts that beat for what is new…the future!


They are the influential people who fearlessly set thought in motion. They are community activists and supporters of community healing and growth.


They support building health conscious communities, education in all aspects of learning, they support and create community development programs and businesses. Changing the social political landscape through the Arts with a grass roots movement in their hearts that tackle community concerns and replacing it with cultural pride and the recognition of diasporic historical value.


These men understand and adhere to the assignment of protecting their women and children from harm and abuse. They are men who value the concept of legacy building in communities and shaping their children into assets that will take their family mission statement into the future to benefit the community at home and in the diaspora.

These men value their women for their intellect, beauty and spirit. They understand the importance of their marriages core values that they and their wives build. And those core values shape the social collective.
So now I present to you the millennial generation of what AJASS looks like. Tell us what you think in your comments.



Mentioned but not shown:

Rizza Islam – (Producer, Community
Leader, Health Ambassador,
Entrepreneur, Writer and Author)

Simon Fredrick – (Executive Film
Producer, Director, Creative
Director, Photographer, Writer,
Narrator)

Steve McQueen – (Executive Film
Producer, Director, Creative Director)

John Boyega – (Actor, Community
Activist)

Daniel Kaluuya – (Actor)

Jessie Williams – (Actor,
Community Activist)

June is the month where we celebrate Fathers Day. It’s the day we honor men who embody the task of not only siring children but also serving as an example of responsible manhood by the character and integrity that they possess. They are ministers of change and honor.

  • Bernice Elizabeth Green,
    Editorial Curator

Baba Obediah Wright to Host Central Brooklyn Juneteenth Arts Festival, June 14th

Baba Obediah Wright, founder and director of Brooklyn’s Balance Dance Theatre, is beloved in Brooklyn. A renown, choreographer, director and educator, Wright marvelously weaves dance, spirituality, education and Black culture to create uplifting edutainment. This month, he’s returning to the Central Brooklyn Juneteenth Arts Festival Saturday, June 14th at Herbert Von King Park as the host of the cultural celebration.


“Last year at Juneteenth, when I hosted, there was a young man who got an award and was going to college. So, I got all of the elder women to encircle this young man. I put them up on the stage and they prayed for him. Then I got all the teenagers to get in the circle as well,” he told Our Time Press. “It wasn’t planned. It was the cultural and African ancestral spirit.”


When working with Black youth, he likes to include some of the history of Juneteenth. “It’s hard for younger people to even grasp slavery nowadays,” he said. “So again, our history being lost, the history being misplaced, the history being hidden.”


To creatively explore Black history in America, in 2001, Wright premiered his multimedia dance and music production “Higher Ground, Still Rising!” at the Schomburg Center in Harlem. “It goes from Africa, through the Middle Passage up until the present,” he said.

“It’s spoken word. It’s a multimedia work. There’s live singing, music and dance. So,it’s also a lesson in history in African tradition and culture and a performance in African American culture.”
A native New Yorker, Wright has studied dance at the LaGuardia High School of Performing Arts, Alvin Ailey, Dance Theater of Harlem, and the Julliard School.


He has choreographed and taught master classes throughout the U.S, Asia, Europe, Africa and the Caribbean. Wright has been mentored by dance choreographer icons Geoffrey Holder, Chuck Davis and Otis Sallid. He has performed in leading venues in New York City and around the world. He’s become known for a choreography and performance style that is an eclectic mix of his extensive training in Ballet, Modern, Jazz, Swing, and Afro-Cuban dance.

High profile choreography and directing projects include Ray Charles, Dionne Warwick, Aretha Franklin, Diana Ross, Janet Jackson, Erykah Badu, Ashanti and was assistant choreographer for the film “Harlem Nativity” with Angela Bassett.


For 20 years at the Balance Dance Theater, he has instructed and mentored children, teens and adults in dance and culture. It’s balancing a professional component and a community component. “There is the concept of taking people and giving them artistic lessons, but also giving them cultural and social etiquette of understanding themselves a bit better. To help them be a better and more well-rounded kind of person,” he said.

“At Balance Dance Theater, I’ve taken my children to perform at the World Financial Center, Schomburg Center, and ABC-TV’s “The Chew. I put my children in music videos. Their parents are involved in a lot of the projects.” Several years ago, on his first visit to South Africa, he brought ten children and two parents for the cultural tour.


“I like intergenerational work because it we need community around art, we need community around culture. It shouldn’t just be the teenagers or the professional dancers, it needs to be the seven-year olds, the five-year-olds and two-year-olds. It needs to be their parents, it needs to be their grandparents.”


For 16 years, he has taught special needs children on the spectrum at Long Island’s Roosevelt Union Free School District. “Some of those young men that I’ve mentored are still very close to me,” he said. “When they were not doing well in school, I would go and sit down and have meetings with the principal on the mother’s behalf when they weren’t acting right.”

Wright’s dedication has earned many accolades. In 2006, Newark’s Mayor Sharpe James presented him with a special proclamation at the city’s Juneteenth Day at NJPAC. This year, the nonprofit Global International Alliance presented him with a doctorate in humanitarianism.


Recently, Wright was invited to perform and teach in South Africa. “When I was in Johannesburg at the Johannesburg Ballet, it was like me teaching at the equivalent of the Alvin Ailey School. When I was in Soweto, it would be the equivalent of me going into a community center in Brownsville. I’ve done both.

I’ve taught at the Ailey School and I’ve taught at community centers in Brownsville. I was at home in either place,” he said. “One of my dreams of the things that I want to do is travel extensively around Africa and learn dances, cultures and begin to bring them back here.”

Kidd ‘n Play

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As we went to press last week, there was some breaking news that sent shock waves through the entire New York basketball community when the Knicks decided to fire Head Coach Tom Thibodeau. As I reiterated on my podcast last week, Thibodeau took the Knicks franchise to heights they have not been able to reach in 25 years. His 24 playoff wins are the most by a Knicks coach in 25 years. The previous 12 head coaches had seven playoff victories combined. With Thibs now out in New York, the question now is who the Knicks organization has in mind to be his successor?


During the podcast, I put together a list of coaches that could fit in as a potential replacement; however, there is one name that his picked up a lot of steam, and this name was NOT on my list. According to many sources, the Knicks’ first priority is to lure Jason Kidd from Dallas to be their new coach. Both sides seem to have a mutual interest.

Kidd has some ties to some current Knicks players, more notably, he coached Jalen Brunson when he was a member of the Dallas Mavericks as a rookie. For this to come to fruition, there are a few hurdles the Knicks will have to go through if Kidd is indeed their number one option to be their next head coach. One is actually getting permission from Dallas to interview Kidd, and the fact that Kidd is under contract with the Mavs for the next 2 years.

Although it is quite rare in sports, if the Knicks were to get the green light from Dallas, they could seal the deal in a trade. To refresh all the Our Time Press, universe memories, while Kidd was the head coach in Brooklyn, he was traded to Milwaukee for draft compensation. During his playing days, Kidd was one of the best point guards to ever play the game. With his experience at point guard, could he be the one coach to unlock another level to Brunson’s game?


Along with Kidd, the Knicks will obviously be looking to improve the roster after coming up two games short of their first NBA Finals appearance since 2000. With the NBA Draft just two weeks away, could a veteran superstar possibly be on his way to New York?

Kevin Durant’s name has been linked to the New York Knicks since this year’s trade deadline. Durant 37, is still one of the most dominant scorers in the league and could mesh well paired with Brunson. Durant has one year left on his current contract. The next two weeks could answer these two questions as to whether these scenarios actually happen.

Is Jason Kidd the guy to take the Knicks back to the finals? How realistic is the possibility of Kevin Durant in a Knicks uniform? This could set up to be one of the most interesting drafts in recent memory. Stay tuned!

One Brooklyn Health Hosts National Trauma Awareness Month Event: Uplifting Survivor Voices and Strengthening Community Resilience

BROOKLYN, NEW YORK, May 16, 2025 — One Brooklyn Health Brookdale Hospital is proud to announce the 3rd Annual National Trauma Awareness Month event, held on Friday, May 16, 2025, at the Brookdale Campus’s Kahn Auditorium. The event gathered survivors, healthcare professionals, advocates, and policymakers for a day of reflection, education, and action.

This month marks National Trauma Awareness Month, a nationwide initiative dedicated to highlighting the impact of trauma on individuals and communities. As a Level 2 Trauma Center, OBH Brookdale Hospital serves Central Brooklyn neighborhoods including Brownsville, East New York, East Flatbush, and Canarsie—offering critical trauma care and advancing awareness around healing and prevention.

Led by OBH’s Violence Intervention Through Advocacy and Leadership (VITAL) program, the symposium—titled The Shift—offered a full day of programming. The event featured opening remarks from hospital leadership, a keynote address by Dr. Rob Gore of Kings County Hospital and KAVI, and panels centered on trauma-informed recovery through survivor-led healing, community care, and systems change.

Panels were moderated by respected leaders, including NYS Assembly member Brian Cunningham, who facilitated a policy-driven conversation on building safer communities and strengthening the future of violence intervention in East Brooklyn.

“ How do we transition our workforce to be, to move from violence interrupters to check in, to get early, to be researchers, and those other folks? asked NYS Assembly member Brian Cunningham?” His question sparked conversation about evolving the role of community-based workers.

One of the most powerful moments of the day came during the Trauma Survivors breakout discussion, where community members courageously shared their journeys. The discussion was supported by OBH’s VITAL program, which provides bedside crisis support, case management, access to counseling and culturally relevant mental health services, and leadership development. By connecting survivors to housing, legal aid, and education or job training, the program helps break cycles of violence and foster long-term healing.

“Continued advocacy, clear communication about the impact, and recognizing the leadership and value of front-line workers in community violence intervention are essential. Supporting our workforce requires a community effort to stay connected, build strong networks, and ensure programs provide staff with the resources, benefits, and support they need to succeed,” said Princess Fortin, Senior Director of Organizational Growth & Equity and ( HAVI) Health Alliance for Violence Intervention.

Dr. Rami Abdel-Naby, Chief of Trauma Surgery and Trauma Medical Director at OBH, emphasized the importance of continued education and collaboration in addressing the community’s trauma recovery needs. The only way we can continue being successful as a trauma program and as people who deliver high quality and high standards of healthcare to our community, is by everybody sitting here, because everybody here knows our patients, knows our community, knows what we go through” said Dr. Abdel-Naby.

The day also included breakout sessions like the Wellness Healing Circle led by All Kings Inc., and a Summer Crisis Response Strategy Session led by OBH VITAL—both aimed at encouraging cross-sector collaboration among local organizations, clinicians, and elected leaders.

In closing, OBH Brookdale Hospital honored front-line healthcare workers—including emergency department staff, ICU teams, surgical nurses, and case managers—along with community-based organizations like Elite Learners, God Squad, and Central Brooklyn Development Corporation, for their ongoing contributions to trauma care and recovery.

One Brooklyn Health Brookdale Hospital remains committed to Central Brooklyn to provide exceptional healthcare, advancing education and trauma awareness to help keep communities safe. This important event will be live-streamed for those unable to attend in person. Live Stream link:

About One Brooklyn Health

One Brooklyn Health was established to preserve and enhance health care services in the communities of Central Brooklyn and is composed of three hospitals and their affiliated

facilities, Interfaith Medical Center, Brookdale Hospital Medical Center and Kingsbrook Jewish Medical Center. All three hospitals have historic ties to the communities they serve and are working together to build a system that will enable OBH to provide the highest quality and widest breadth of healthcare services to those in need. To learn more visit us at onebrooklynhealth.org.

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