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Barneys And Macy’s Investigated For Allegedly Treating Black Customers Like Criminals

Erin Fuchs

Businessinsider.com

New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman is investigating allegations that Barneys and Macy’s detain and question customers based on their race, the New York Daily News reports.

The attorney general asked Barneys and Macy’s to provide an array of information about the customers they stop and question, as well as information about their policies on detaining customers.

“Attorney General Schneiderman is committed to ensuring that all New York residents are afforded equal protection under the law,” both letters stated. “The alleged repeated behavior of your employees raises questions about your company’s commitment to that ideal.”

Both Macy’s and Barneys are being sued by customers who believe they were racially profiled because the store stopped them after they legitimately purchased items there, ABC News reported. One of those suits was filed by 29-year-old “Treme” actor Robert Brown, an African-American who says the store “paraded” him around the store in handcuffs after he bought an expensive watch, according to ABC.

Last week, a 21-year-old black woman named Kayla Phillips came forward and said Barneys called the cops when she tried to buy a $2,500 handbag with her temporary debit card, the New York Post reported. A black college student also filed a lawsuit last week claiming Barneys reported him to the police after he bought an expensive belt. (That employee allegedly believed the purchase was fraudulent.)

The allegations against Macy’s are particularly bad since it’s been accused of racial profiling before, Schneiderman’s letter said.

Then-Attorney General Eliot Spitzer sued Macy’s in 2005, claiming it discriminated against black and Hispanic customers, the Daily News noted. The suit was settled after Macy’s agreed to pay $600,000 and keep a record of all the people it has detained.

Macy’s released a statement in response to the “Treme” actor’s lawsuit, saying the store’s personnel “were not involved in Mr. Brown’s detention or questioning”, according to NBC New York. Macy’s said the actor’s detention was “an operation of the New York City Police Department”.

Barneys issued a statement last week saying that it hired a civil rights expert to review its policies. Barneys said “no customer should have the unacceptable experience of being confronted by the police while shopping”.

President Obama On Albany Avenue

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Prospect Park has not seen anything like military helicopters, including Marine One, landing on the Great Lawn as President Barack Obama arrived to speak to the students at Pathways in Technology Early College High School housed in the Paul Robeson High School building.  The president was among friends in the borough that had given him eighty-two percent of the vote and was greeted by cheering crowds along the route and in front of the school.

Time Swampland reported that among his remarks, Obama called for additional investment in education and called for Congress to take a smarter approach to budgeting. “The question can’t be how much more we can cut,” Obama said. “It’s got to be how many more schools like P-TECH we can create.”

Taking a swipe at the recent government shutdown proponents he said, “I just sat in on a class called Real World Math, which got me thinking whether it’s too late to send Congress here”.

For some Obama’s visit was no more than a photo op, and a nod to Mayor Bloomberg’s efforts to “downsize” public schools.   Too bad, there was little thought on the part of the President to acknowledge the students of Paul Robeson H.S. which is slated for phase out by June 2014, according to the DOE web site.

The replacement scenario of 2011 outlined a gradual phase out process to include co-location of schools in this building where Robeson is located.  The site further says, “Based on an extensive review of data and community feedback, the New York City Department of Education (DOE) has determined that Paul Robeson High School (Robeson) is unable to turn around and cannot provide a high-quality education to its students. The DOE is proposing that Robeson be phased out. “

Earlier this week, an education expert at a Columbia University parents’ workshop said the worst of all of this is: children are told they are not good enough.  With IBM’s millions and folks on the level of the President, the Mayor and the community leaders saying “You can do better!”  what a difference it would make.

But we also understand that those Charter Schools get the head start from parents who are pushing to get their children a better situation.  It ultimately starts at home.  But there’s something not quite right when a school loses its bearing, and its good name goes the way of oblivion.

It’s easy to take a photo with the ones who shine.  But it’s a lot harder to find the gold in the field.  How meaningful it would have been if President Obama’s community affairs advisers had found a way for him to follow in the footsteps of Mandela.  There are some good things going on at Boys & Girls High School, less than a mile away.   (DG/BG)

Entrepreneurs Open "Brooklyn Burger & Brew"

Upscale Burger Joint Caters to Families and Neighbors

By Keith L. Forest

It seems like every week there’s a new bar or restaurant opening in Brooklyn.

PARTNERS: From left to right, Elliott Bey, Shaun Perkins and Henry Butler of BED-STUY.

As New York City’s most populous borough, Brooklyn is outpacing Manhattan as a major destination and entrepreneurs are taking notice. The latest restaurateur claiming his rightful stake in the Borough of Kings is Bedford-Stuyvesant’s own Henry Butler. The former Chairman and newly minted District Manager of Community Board 3, Butler, in partnership with entrepreneurs Shaun Perkins and Elliot Bey, are the forces behind Brooklyn Burger and Brew, an upscale burger joint located in the eastern section of Bedford-Stuyvesant.

On Thursday, October 24, the community came out in full force to support Butler, Perkins and Bey’s Brooklyn Burger and Brew’s soft opening.  The establishment was abuzz with civic, business and political leaders, family, friends and Bed-Stuy’s best. The proud owners kept the tap and frozen drinks pouring and mix drinks flowing.   Attending guests were serenaded by a local jazz band, while a variety of sample-size burgers were passed around.  The menu, created by renowned Chef Yahya, consists of a variety of succulent prime beef, turkey, chicken, vegetarian and even tilapia burgers.  Sides include sweet or regular potato fries, soups, salads and wings.

Brew also has a kids-friendly menu which includes sliders. “We wanted to create a family-friendly environment where parents can dine alongside their children in the comfort of their own community,” says Butler.

Located at 202 Ralph Avenue and Decatur Street, Brooklyn Burger and Brew provides an inviting ambiance with stylish table-seating and a full-service bar. The spacious and decorative interior has plenty of room for large and catered parties and can accommodate live performances.

Citywide African Burial Grounds Gain Recognition

East New York Signs Unveiled; Harlem site plaques approved by City…and More!

Can you imagine what it was like to be Black in our city before paved roads were common and ferries were the main way people crossed the river to Manhattan?  Famous and emerging open spaces across the city offer answers.  A ceremony earlier this month at African Burial Ground Square in East New York attracted national media attention.  October also saw important anniversaries in Manhattan while a congressman in the Bronx recognized a similar site there.  But don’t sleep on Staten Island: historic Sandy Ground’s founding is contemporary with Crown Heights’ mid-1800s Weeksville community.  The stories behind these heritage markers help us imagine a span of time from Dutch colonialism to Harriet Tubman’s pre-Civil War New York.  These sacred places of sustained settlements at public parks, cemeteries and even the entrance to a Harlem River bridge help us locate ourselves in history.  Let’s explore these great American stories in places like Brooklyn’s Greenwood Cemetery, the Olde Towne of Flushing Burial Ground in Queens, Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx, an African Methodist Episcopal church in Staten Island and beyond.

Brooklyn – October 12 marked the unveiling of four signs designating African Burial Ground Square located between New Lots and Livonia Avenues from Barbey to Schenck Streets.

“We are uncovering the history of East New York.  Rename, Reclaim, Our History,” rejoiced City Councilman Charles Barron.  This block has been known as an early cemetery site for some time.  Here you will find Schenck Playground generously planted with trees and appointed with many benches for restful contemplation across from the pastoral beauty of East New York Farms, a community garden.  The New Lots branch of the Brooklyn Public Library shares the space and makes reference to the burial ground in a framed historical poster hung in the vestibule.

Queens is already famous as the final resting place of musical icons Dizzy Gillespie and Louis Armstrong.  Visiting their monuments at Flushing Cemetery (which is free and open to the public in all seasons) would help you find much older ancestors, too.  The Olde Towne of Flushing Burial Ground is a public park just a few feet away and easily visible from Armstrong’s elegant black stone memorial.  This former burial site to Macedonia A.M.E. Church (founded in 1811) is showered in autumn colors this time of year.  Emblematic of its era, Africans were buried there alongside Native Americans and white citizens not welcomed in old Flushing’s main gravesites.  Thanks to the activism of retired actor-singer Mandingo Tshaka, with support from Queens Borough President Helen Marshall and then-City Councilman John Liu, the site was renovated over the last decade with $2.6 million to honor its earlier life.

The Bronx holds at least two sites where African burial grounds lay in part or whole.  Confirmed though yet unsigned sites include Van Cortlandt Park (by the landmarked plantation mansion) and Joseph Rodman Drake Park in Hunts Point. There, Congressman Jose Serrano’s office is supporting research on this fragment of a mostly paved and built-over sacred space.  University Woods Park, near Yankee Stadium, encompasses or abuts a similar site.  Also, Woodlawn Cemetery (like Green Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn)  has at least one burial of persons who may have been born into slavery, however, died free.

Staten Island showcases its free pre-Civil War landowning population at Sandy Ground Historical Society and Museum.  Their earliest inhabitants are buried at Old A.M.E. Zion Cemetery dating to 1850.  This self-sustaining community of farmers started in the late 1820s at a formerly forested high area.  Its sandy soil was perfect for superior strawberry-growing which won them regional recognition; walkable access to nearby waters meant economic independence as tenured Black oystermen from Maryland joined the community by the mid-1850s.  This community continues to worship at the landmarked Rossville A.M.E. Zion Church.

Manhattan – Have you been following efforts to honor ancestors at the Harlem African Burial Ground?  The coalition there has not gotten as much attention as those active at the African Burial Ground National Monument near City Hall, however, they are winning!  As at East New York, a similar half-decade march to official designation is bearing fruit.  Commemorative plaques have been approved by the NYC Dept. of Transportation for the Willis Avenue Bridge near 125th Street.  NYS Senator Bill Perkins, City Councilwoman Melissa Mark-Viverito, local clergy and others champion this sacred site.

The presence of earlier Black New Yorkers at key agricultural, craft and trade sites construes a picture of these Americans as both lively and economically consequential.  Their love, music and toil helped lay the foundations of all we enjoy in this city and country.  Would you like to go and touch history for yourself?  Each site described in this article is accessible by public transportation.  These places of remembrance means we are heirs to an eclectic heritage; they tell us New York has been our home for a long time.  Every steady step we take today rests on stones well-laid.

Thomas Sankara And The Assassination Of Africa’s Memory

By Dr. Chika A. Ezeanya

Thomas Sankara was Burkina Faso’s president from August 1983 until his assassination on October 15, 1987. Perhaps more than any other African president in living memory, Thomas Sankara, in four years, transformed Burkina Faso from a poor country, dependent on aid, to an economically independent and socially progressive nation.

Thomas Sankara began by purging the deeply entrenched bureaucratic and institutional corruption in Burkina Faso. He slashed the salaries of ministers and sold off the fleet of exotic cars in the president’s convoy, opting instead for the cheapest brand of car available in Burkina Faso, Renault 5. His salary was $450 per month and he refused to use the air conditioning units in his office, saying that he felt guilty doing so, since very few of his country people could afford it. Thomas Sankara would not let his portrait be hung in offices and government institutions in Burkina Faso because every Burkinabe is a Thomas Sankara, he declared. Sankara changed the name of the country from the colonially imposed Upper Volta to Burkina Faso, which means land of upright men.

Thomas Sankara’s achievements are numerous and can only be summarized briefly; within the first year of his leadership, Sankara embarked on an unprecedented mass vaccination program that saw 2.5 million Burkinabe children vaccinated. From an alarming 280 deaths for every 1,000 births, infant mortality was immediately slashed to below 145 deaths per 1,000 live births. Sankara preached self-reliance, he banned the importation of several items into Burkina Faso and encouraged the growth of the local industry. It was not long before Burkinabes were wearing 100% cotton sourced, woven and tailored in Burkina Faso. From being a net importer of food, Thomas Sankara began to aggressively promote agriculture in Burkina Faso, telling his country people to quit eating imported rice and grain from Europe. “Let us consume only what we ourselves control,” he emphasized.  In less than 4 years, Burkina Faso became self-sufficient in food production through the redistribution of lands from the hands of corrupt chiefs and land owners to local farmers, and through massive irrigation and fertilizer distribution programs. Thomas Sankara utilized various policies and government assistance to encourage Burkinabes to get education. In less than two years as president, school attendance jumped from about 10% to a little below 25%, thus overturning the 90% illiteracy rate he met upon assumption of office.

Living way ahead of his time, within 12 months of his leadership,  Sankara vigorously pursued a reforestation program that saw over 10 million trees planted around the country in order  to push back the encroachment of the Sahara Desert. Uncommon at the time he lived, Sankara stressed women empowerment and campaigned for the dignity of women in a traditional patriarchal society. He employed women in several government positions and declared a day of solidarity with housewives by mandating their husbands to take on their roles for 24 hours.  A personal fitness enthusiast, Sankara encouraged Burkinabes to be fit and was regularly seen jogging unaccompanied on the streets of Ouagadougou; his waistline remained the same throughout his tenure as president.

In 1987, during a meeting of African leaders under the auspices of the Organization of African Unity, Thomas Sankara tried to convince his peers to turn their backs on the debt owed to Western nations. According to him, “Debt is a cleverly managed reconquest of Africa. It is a reconquest that turns each one of us into a financial slave”.  He would not request for, nor accept aid from the West, noting that “…welfare and aid policies have only ended up disorganizing us, subjugating us and robbing us of a sense of responsibility for our own economic, political and cultural affairs. We chose to risk new paths to achieve greater well-being”.

Thomas Sankara was a pan-Africanist who spoke out against apartheid, telling French President Jacques Chirac, during his visit to Burkina Faso, that it was wrong for him to support the apartheid government and that he must be ready to bear the consequences of his actions. Sankara’s policies and his unapologetic anti-imperialist stand made him an enemy of France, Burkina Faso’s former colonial master. He spoke truth to power fearlessly and paid with his life. Upon his assassination, his most valuable possessions were a car, a refrigerator, three guitars, motorcycles, a broken-down freezer and about $400 in cash.

In death, Thomas Sankara’s burial place is unkempt and filled with weeds (click to see Thomas Sankara’s graveyard http://youtu.be/bY2UpSxXPlw ). Few young Africans have ever heard of Thomas Sankara. In reality, it is not the assassination of Thomas Sankara that has dealt a lethal blow to Africa and Africans; it is the assassination of his memory, as manifested in the indifference to his legacy, in the lack of constant reference to his ideals and ideas by Africans, by those who know and those who should know. Among physical and mental dirt and debris lie Africa’s heroes while the younger generations search in vain for role models from among their kind. Africans have, therefore, internalized self-abhorrence and the convictions of innate incapability to bring about transformation. Transformation must run contrary to the African’s DNA, many Africans subconsciously believe.

Africans are not given to celebrating their own heroes, but this must change. It is a colonial legacy that was instituted to establish the inferiority of the colonized and justify colonialism.  It was a strategic policy that ensured that Africans celebrated the heroes of their colonial masters, but not that of Africa. Fifty years and counting after colonialism ended, Africa’s curriculum must now be redrafted to reflect the numerous achievements of Africans. The present generation of Africans is thirsty, searching for where to draw the moral, intellectual and spiritual courage to effect change. The waters to quench the thirst, as other continents have already established, lies fundamentally in history –  in Africa’s forebears, men, women and children who experienced much of what most Africans currently experience, but who chose to toe a different path. The media, entertainment industry, civil society groups, writers, institutions and organizations must begin to search out and include African role models, case studies and examples in their contents.

For Africans, the strength desperately needed for the transformation of the continent cannot be drawn from World Bank and IMF policies, from aid and assistance obtained from China, India, the United States or Europe. The strength to transform Africa lies in the foundations laid by uncommon heroes like Thomas Sankara, a man who showed Africa and the world that with a single-minded pursuit of purpose,  the worst can be made the best, and in record time, too.

You may like Chika on Facebook at  www.facebook.com/chikaforafrica.