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The Master Steps Down, Crowns a New Leader

The great Dr. Charles “Baba Chuck” Davis, foremost dance teacher, choreographer and scholar, has transformed Brooklyn into a performance village nearly every spring for almost 40 years through his beloved DanceAfrica. He founded, developed and grew the Festival into the nation’s largest celebrating the diverse culture of Africa and its Diaspora. And for this we all should be thankful. He calls us his Brooklyn family, and we feel we love him best, yet his family extends beyond the Opera House at BAM and the marketplace that grows each year on and around Ashland and the borough of Kings. Dr. Davis has directed more than 80 companies from the Ivory Coast, Congo, Kenya, Zimbabwe, Zaire, Benin, Uganda, Ghana, Cuba, Haiti, Jamaica, Peru, Zambia, Madagascar, Brazil, and all across the US. Millions have applauded his works. This weekend, Brooklyn youth and the elders will pay tribute to him at two neighborhood landmarks. On Saturday, May 16, 1:00PM, students from Bedford-Stuyvesant Restoration will present a special tribute to Dr. Davis, who shaped their African dance program at Bedford-Stuyvesant Restoration Plaza (1368 Fulton St, Brooklyn). A Tribute to the Ancestors ceremony will be held earlier in the morning at the Weeksville Heritage Center (1698 Bergen
St, Brooklyn). This traditional ceremony, which includes dancing and music by participating artists, is an integral part of DanceAfrica that honors elders who have passed on. The event is free and open to the public.
Of course, at BAM there are the Memorial Weekend performances after weekday activities and exercises, including possibly a Rite of passage moment with Chuck extending something symbolic to the great Abdel Salaam, whose magnifi cence can be observed in his powerful “Forces of Nature”
dance company.
Yet, the language of “stepping down” is strange in describing the process of this King’s “retirement. This wise chief, powerful lion, cultural arts warrior, beloved Baba, is a preserver of the knowledge of the village.
And he is a portal to the world of his forebears; and a preserver of their traditions, their visions, their rhythms and their history.

Brooklyn’s Loretta Lynch  is Now Nation’s Top Law Enforcement Official


“I am here to tell you, if a little girl from North Carolina who used to tell her grandfather in the fields to lift her up on the back of his mule so she could see ‘way up high Granddaddy’, can become the chief law enforcement officer of the United States of America, then we can do anything.”
New U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch

Lynch Joins P.A. James in Strategic “Firsts” for African-American  Women and American History
Public Advocate Letitia A. James, the highest-ranking woman in New York City politics and the first Black woman to ever hold the title of Public Advocate, roundly congratulated Harvard-educated Loretta Lynch on her confirmation as the top law enforcement official in the United States, and being the first African-American woman to serve as the United States’ 83rd U.S. Attorney General.
Ms. James said, “Loretta Lynch is an experienced and exceptional leader who has demonstrated a mastery of our criminal justice system, and I congratulate her on her confirmation as the next U.S. Attorney General”, in a statement issued immediately following the confirmation on Thursday, April 23.
Ms. Lynch, 55, a North Carolina native, served as a U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York with offices in Brooklyn. Last Thursday, April 23 she was nominated by the Senate by a vote of 56-43, ending a five-month partisan deadlock over her nomination by President Barack Obama. She replaces Eric Holder, who left the position Friday after serving as attorney general for six years.
She was sworn in this past Monday (27) by Vice President Joe Biden at a Justice Department ceremony before friends and family, lawyers and supporters. During the proceedings, Lynch pledged that the agency would “use justice as our compass” in confronting terrorism, cyberattacks and other threats facing the country.
“We can imbue our criminal justice system with both strength and fairness, for the protection of both the needs of victims and the rights of all. We can restore trust and faith both in our laws and in those of us who enforce them,” Lynch said.
Biden said Lynch had shown grace during the months-long confirmation process, in which her nomination became caught up in Congress in a dispute over human trafficking legislation. He also acknowledged her strong professional background and her personal story as the daughter of a librarian mother and a fourth-generation Baptist preacher who would take his daughter to the courthouse to observe important cases.
She had waited for a vote longer than the last seven attorneys general combined. She was confirmed 166 days after she was first nominated for the post. Two other attorney generals waited longer: Edwin Meese, 386 days, confirmed under President Ronald Reagan, and Mitchell Palmer, 182 days, during the Woodrow Wilson Administration.
“As the first woman of color to hold this position, Ms. Lynch understands the complex challenges facing diverse communities across our nation,” referencing the new U.S. Attorney General’s becoming the first black woman to occupy the post at a time when deadly altercations between white police and unarmed black men are making global headlines.
President Obama said, “America will be better off for (Lynch’s nomination)”, adding, “ (and) as head of the Justice Department, she will oversee a vast portfolio of cases including counterterrorism and voting rights; public corruption and white-collar crime; judicial recommendations and policy reviews – all of which matter to the lives of every American and shapes the story of our country.”
Ten Republicans voted for Lynch, including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. Of the Republicans who backed her, four are up for reelection next year, three of them from states with big cities that have large African-American populations.
As attorney general, she will most likely confront civil rights cases stemming from police altercations in several U.S. cities and also faces financial cases alleging some of the world’s largest banks helped clients evade U.S. taxes and manipulated currency markets.
P.A. James said, “I am glad Senate Republicans finally got past their personal, petty politics so that Ms. Lynch can get to work”.

Councilman Antonio Reynoso: Behind the Bright Smile is a Bright Future

District 34’s Councilman Antonio Reynoso Holds Key to Community Empowerment, Political Success: Listening Followed by Action 

By Bernice Elizabeth Green

District 34 Councilman Antonio Reynoso isn’t smiling for the camera; he’s smiling because of the pride he has in the Williamsburg community where he was born and raised by immigrant parents from the Dominican Republic.
The Le Moyne College grad’s political success is centered on a core strategy: listening and letting the people in his district–comprising Williamsburg and Bushwick in Brooklyn and Ridgewood in Queens–have a say.
His actions on the Participatory Budget process, for example, is a case study of how the power in the people can be realized to their best advantage by letting them in on making decisions for the neighborhood where he sees them as “investors”.

In the Participatory Budgeting process, a Councilman’s constituents are given the opportunity to vote on how a portion of their tax dollars, the city’s public budget, can be spent, and what projects it can be spent on.
The idea was launched in 2011 by Council members Brad Lander, Melissa Mark-Viverito, Erich Ulrich and Jumaane Williams. It grew out of the highly successful grass-roots initiative born in Brazil in the 1980’s that’s now global.
This year, the PB fund was at $25 million for 24 participating Council Districts. Each was given $1 million dollars for projects in their districts.
This year, district residents vote on 18 projects. A tally of the final winning projects on the ballot is still being made.
Reynoso told a Queens Ledger reporter recently that he was not only listening to the community and hearing ideas for capital improvement projects that are not line items in the city’s budget. He also was looking out for “developing new community leaders through this process”.
The process of getting his district involved in voting on projects keyed to his area’s civil needs, from parks to schools to senior services and housing, was a simple one: through social media and human contact. He sends out e-mails to alert the community, and they in turn contribute to the outreach through word of mouth.
A series of “local assemblies” are organized at schools, churches and other local venues; neighborhood residents share their thoughts on projects to be funded.
Volunteer budget delegates from across the district spend the winter reviewing ideas proposed and shaping them into proposals. Also during the process, city agencies are consulted.
Not surprisingly, the project ideas are aligned with Antonio’s political commitment to achieving a better quality of life for the district he has called home all of his life. According to his Web site, Reynoso “understands that success in his district starts with strong schools, the fundamental access to affordable housing and economic growth”.
From April 11 – 19 of this year, district residents came out and voted on the projects they wanted to see in their community. They were allowed to vote for five projects from the 18 initiatives. Those projects comprise: major upgrades, renovations or project developments for four senior citizen projects; four public outdoor spaces, including playgrounds and a sidewalk; four science and tech development projects for students and development of a computer tech library and media center.
“At a young age, Antonio’s parents instilled in him the importance of hard work, education and community service. These lessons have undoubtedly influenced his core philosophy and remain with him today.”
A manifestation of those lessons are in the strategies for energizing his constituents. During the voting process, he hosted a special event with displays and poster boards by “campaign workers” that highlighted various ballot items. Booklets explaining the PB process were created and distributed.
Will Council District 34’s Williamsburg Housing Project Senior Citizens Center get a $600,000 upgrade–as proposed by neighborhood residents — to wheelchair-accessible bathroom facilities? The district’s votes are in, and the tally will show the results sometime this week.,
PB Results So Far:
The City Council Web site offers a clear definition of Participatory Budgeting: (It) is grass-roots democracy at its best. It helps make budget decisions clear and accessible. It gives real power to people who have never before been involved in the political process. And it results in better budget decisions because who better knows the needs of our community than the people who live there?
This year, the fourth for Brad Lander’s 39th City Council District in the PB process, 7 proposals won for FY2016 funding, among them: A/C for PS 124’s below-ground cafeteria ($200,000) — 1442 votes; innovative gym renovation at 146/MS 448 ($225,000) — 1200 votes; and a wireless sound system, new curtains and refurbished stage for PS 179’s auditorium ($230,000) — 1196 votes.
We should have results from Brooklyn Councilman Jumaane D. Williams’ 45th District as promised; Council member Melissa Mark-Viverito’s District 8 in Manhattan; Council member Eric Ulrich’s Queens District 32; and Reynoso’s 34th District in Brooklyn in an upcoming Our Time Press.
Final votes will determine how each district will spend $1 million or more dollars.

Establishing Park Guardians: New Move Aligned with Efforts to Make a Difference

Herbert Von King Park & Cultural Arts Center – Update #2

Bernice Elizabeth Green

Wayne Devonish (second from right), founding director of 500 Men Who Make A Difference, is being advised on conservancy-building by Doug Blonsky (center), head of The Central Park Conservancy. Jackie Brown of NYC Parks Recreation (third from left) and members of Blonsky’s team
met in Von King Park recently, where Devonish was gifted a copy of a 19th century rendering of the historic park.
(Photo: Courtesy of 500 Men Who Make A Difference)

500 Men Who Make a Difference, founded and helmed by Wayne Devonish, is in the process of making a huge difference in the appearance of Herbert Von King Park while adding another chapter to its two-century history: creating the first official conservancy to protect and raise funds to upgrade the park’s natural resources and preserve the parks extraordinary history.
Devonish’s idea includes his 500-men “grunt workers” and is being embraced by an increasing extended family of seasoned “official park guardians” ranging from New York City Parks and Recreation commissioners to the head of the upscale Central Park Conservancy.
“We’re stewards of the park,” said Bedford-Stuyvesant native Devonish of the 501(3) organization’s role in activating the idea that’s been growing in his mind for three years. “500 Men has been working in the park for nearly 4 years and we’ve been talking about it for two years with Henry Butler, Keith Forest and others.”
The volume began to turn up when Devonish (in 2013) talked about the idea in a casual conversation with Phillip Banks III, then-Chief of the New York City Police Department. “I know the best conservancy works in the world – the Central Park’s Conservancy,” Banks, who retired last fall, told Devonish. A meeting with Doug Blonsky, President of the Central Park Conservancy, followed. And Devonish says he began to learn “a lot”, including the fact that Central Park, Prospect Park and Von King Park were all designed by the same landscape/architects, Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux. And also that Central Park was the most visited park in the United States.
“I felt I was surrounded now by the gold standard in parks governance,” Devonish told us, recalling his thoughts at the time. One of them was about size: Central Park consists of 843 acres, is 2.5 miles long and 0.5 miles wide. “Von King Park is only 7-plus acres.”
“Central Park,” he continued, “is an exceptional example of parks management and maintenance. I am learning from the folks at the very top who {govern} Central Park, Prospect Park, Madison Square Park, Fort Tryon, and these people are actually talking to me directly, offering advice, taking my calls and giving me formal training.”
Devonish and some members of 500 Men are enrolled now in a Central Park Conservancy program and a Partnership for Parks fellowship program. They will complete the mentoring program in August. “It’s unbelievable what they do, and we’re getting special treatment.”
Blonksy, who travels the country keynoting on the importance of private-public partnerships in the governance of the nation’s parks, has visited Von King on a couple of occasions at the invitation of Devonish. Most recently, he and his staff brought a copy of the original Vaux-Olmsted drawings as a gift.
Other gifts, according to Devonish, have come from the daughter of the late Herbert Von King, called during his lifetime, the Mayor of Bedford-Stuyvesant. “She gave me a bunch of memorabilia from him.”
The support of such key community leaders as Tremaine Wright, President of Community Board 3, and Reggie Shell of the Brownstoners of Bedford-Stuyvesant is a gift as well. They were present at last Saturday’s Parks’ cleanup day.
Devonish, as the youngest board member of the Magnolia Tree Earth Center of Bedford-Stuyvesant, is a building and construction specialist. Observing Von King, across the street from Magnolia, through the prism of the changing seasons, Devonish was determined that the landmark needed more than annual spruce-ups, green observances; its emerald qualities needed honing by 21st century sensibilities.
Currently celebrating its 35th year, the Central Park Conservancy was formed by individuals who came up with the strategy to preserve the Manhattan landmark with a public-private partnership that soared beyond just fundraising as a way to halt the park’s then- “dramatic deterioration” in the 1960’s and 1970’s.
Devonish says he presented the idea of a conservancy to Community Board 3 and its Parks, Arts, Culture Committee Chair Marion Little last winter. Then he immediately began activation of his 500 Men who are now the core of the Von King Conservancy.
The idea, however, is not a new one. Others have attempted to form a grass-roots-focused “Friends of the Park” and, most notably, respected Vernon Avenue gardener and former CB3 Parks Committee Chair Eva McPherson, several years ago held a meeting in the park with community stakeholders, which included the publisher of this paper, David Mark Greaves, who chairs the Magnolia Tree Earth Center Board. It was determined then, with Tupper Thomas, former leader of the Prospect Park Alliance, in agreement: that the park was the people’s park and a conservancy should reflect their recreational needs with programs and projects in accordance to those needs.
Devonish says he’s been thinking about this for years, and figured out a way to strike a balance of the two thoughts: building a managed garden park that will become a jewel for the city and attract funds to the area on one hand, and preserving a space for the people who live near and around it.
In 2008, this writer and James Durrah (then-Chair of the Neighborhood Housing Services of Bedford-Stuyvesant) drafted a community environmental awareness initiative on a napkin at a community development conference in Boston. The program, supported by NHS for the five years of its existence, was bolstered by the creative genius … and largesse … of then-Herbert Von King Park Manager Lemuel Mial, who grew up in North Bedford-Stuyvesant.
“Project Green” program participants included compassionate ecology genius Yonnette Fleming and her well-organized and internationally known Hattie Carthan Community Garden, Demetrice Mills and his Brooklyn Land Trust organization, six targeted area public and charter schools and the Magnolia Tree Earth Center. (More on “Project Green” in future stories about Von King Park and Von King Park Cultural Arts Center.)
With community organizations involved in the project, it was Mr. Mial who declared at one Project Green workshop that Von King Park was the nucleus of Central Brooklyn’s “largest greenspace”. And it is Mr. Mial, observers say, who Devonish may call on to be a kind of community mentor.
So who forms Devonish’s Conservancy? The 500 men, a diverse group which comprises members who live right across the street from the park, are the core of the conservancy, he says proudly. “A kind of task force.”
Although he does not reveal who else may be on Von King’s new Board of Guardians, he notes the great support of such forward-thinkers as Henry Butler and Keith Forest. He also has met with NYC Parks Brooklyn Commissioner Kevin Jeffrey and NYC Commissioner Mitchell J. Silver with whom he meets “pretty much weekly”.
Devonish can hardly contain the excitement of this new venture that promises new life for the park: “The Central Park Conservancy is a big operation: they raise 75% of their budget privately. Over the past 35 years, it has raised $750 million of capital work for the park. Central Park is magnificent, especially the north side that doesn’t get used that often. The park is clean. I go to Central Park often just to educate myself, and two weeks ago Blonksy came out to Von King with his staff; they walked the park and took soil samples.”
Yet, Devonish is the first to admit that although he has ventured further along the path of developing an organizational think tank for Von King Park, it is strongly supported — and nurtured by –established seedlings, including the constant hard volunteer work of his own 500-Men team, the dedication and work of the late Bed-Stuy environmentalist/ecologist Hattie Carthan and others such as Mills, Fleming, Lemuel and his wife, Charlotte.
But he is determined to go the distance… beyond touring the park’s 7 acres:
“One of the first big projects for Von King Park will be the establishment of a Von King Park Conservatory Garden at Greene Avenue and Marcy, the park’s southwest side.
This week, architect Michael McCaw’s preliminary drawings for the showcase garden area will be submitted to Devonish who, through 500 Men, is underwriting the cost of McCaw’s design.
Devonish promises that it will be 9,000 square feet of “beauty” designed for events like weddings and receptions. “I met with Parks’ gardeners last week.”
In the past, 500 Men have secured grants for work in Von King Park for painting buildings and conducting other work. To reach out to Devonish, call 917-297-2365 or e-mail: wmdkaos@aol.com.

Herbert Von King Park & Cultural Arts Center Update #2

On the True Saviors of Von King Park — the Largest Greenspace in North Brooklyn

From These Roots: Composting Day in Herbert Von King Park, circa 2009, with VK staff and local gardeners. Photo: Bernice Green

Rumor — steeped more in truth than fantasy — abounds around the formation of a Herbert Von King Park Conservancy, modeled after the New York Central Park Conservancy. Some would think: “Oh, the park has come of age.”  Our Time Press feels conservancy promoters need to do some homework, and we’re here to help. So …

Our Time Press asks: If a conservancy is an organization that works to develop strategies to conserve natural spaces in an area, will this rumored Von King Park organization be comprised of people who have had a vested interest in the park’s life most of their working lives? People like Lemuel Mial, Sidney Moshette, Yonette Fleming and the social heirs to Almira Coursey, Elsie Richardson, Shirley Chisholm, Hattie Carthan.  Or will it bring in outsiders who have no knowledge of its investor history or even care about it?

This paper has covered the park for nearly a decade in images and text, so in presenting photos of some of its community investors over the years in these upcoming images, we also are suggesting that the community itself, and workers from the past, people who live around the park, are a great wellspring for conservancy membership.  That’s, if it is true!  Meanwhile, we applaud those workers and individuals who have grown the Herbert Von King Park into the attractive botanical that is attracting a new gentry, and so in future issues we will highlight the work of past Tompkins/Von King Park Conservancies, starting with the Almira Coursey years of the 1960s to the present.

In other news, the FDNY, in the midst of celebrations of its 150th year, has responded to our request for answers to questions concerning the closure of the Cultural Arts Center.  They respectfully apologized for the late delivery of answers, with the understandable explanation that they are doing the research necessary to properly respond to our questions.  We will keep you posted.   (Bernice Elizabeth Green)

For more images, visit: www.ourtimeathome.com.