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Self-Empowerment Youth Program Encourages Future African-American Engineers

By Stephen Witt

Three hundred of the brightest young African-American minds throughout Central Brooklyn, along with 200 parents, packed the cafeteria/gymnasium at P.S. 5 Dr. Ronald McNair Elementary School in Bed-Stuy last Saturday morning for orientation to a mentoring program that will nurture the next generation of African-American engineers.

The Summer Engineering for Kids (SEEK) program, which Bed-Stuy’s Magnolia Tree Earth Center piloted last summer with 20 third- to fifth-grade students, is part of the National Society of Black Engineers (NSBE) initiative to encourage African-American youth to enter the field of engineering.

“This is our signature literacy program that started in Washington, DC and has now expanded to 10 cities across the nation including Brooklyn, Philadelphia and Jackson, Mississippi, which were added this year,” said Frank O. Moore, director of SEEK.

Moore said NSBE is hoping the program will grow African-Americans entering the engineering program, which he characterized as “dismal”, with only about 3,000 of 80,000 engineering college graduates each year being African-American, and only one in eight being female. Additionally, only 30 percent of African-Americans entering the engineering field at the start of college finish after five years and we want to increase this field, he said.

The free three-week program, led by NSBE engineering students and technical professionals, utilizes a hands-on design curriculum developed by SAE International (Society of Automotive Engineers). Campers will work in teams, using their knowledge to solve problems and create products while discovering the underlying math and science principles involved in these processes. Each week, the campers will take on a new project, culminating with a presentation and design competition that all parents are invited to attend.

In Brooklyn, the team projects are the design of three toys – a solar-powered vehicle, a gravity cruiser and a glider plane. The African-American engineering  teachers are from schools across the country and are being housed at the Downtown Brooklyn Long Island University dorms.

“It is very important that young people within the African-American community see young people of color and African-American women entering the field of engineering,” said William Suggs, a Crown Heights resident, Con Ed senior specialist and regional director of the American Association of Blacks in Energy.

Suggs noted that the field of energy, which is associated with engineering, has growing career opportunities, and encouraging local youth in this direction prepares them for energy and engineering jobs both nationally and in the growing global marketplace.

And Suggs, like all the organizers, were inspired by the huge turnout on a scorching-hot July Saturday morning.

“They can be doing anything else on a Saturday. Their being here shows that parents are very concerned about their children’s welfare and future.  Their responsibility (as parents) shows right here in making sure their children are here,” said Suggs.

Cheryl Todmann, whose son, Zion, is a third-grader at the Trey Whitfield School in East New York, said she learned about the program from a parent friend.

“My son always excelled in science and math in school and I think this is a great opportunity for my son to learn the nuts and bolts of engineering,” said Todmann, adding her father was an engineer at AT&T for 25 years.

Mark Davis, an exterminator from Brownsville, said he learned about the program through a friend of his wife and immediately signed up his son, Chad, who is an excellent student.

“Math and science is the wave of the future so I think engineering is critical,” said Davis. “We have a lot of problems in the world that need to be solved today and engineers are needed to solve these problems.”

Chad, a fourth-grader at the Achievement First Charter School of Brooklyn, said he enjoys playing video and computer games, but is also interested in how these games are made.

“I like science because it teaches you about a lot of different things. Like the human body is something to one person, but it’s also something scientific,” said the young engineer in the making. “I also like astronomy because you get to see hypernovas, which is when a giant star explodes.”

African-American, Hasidic Jew relationship in Bed-Stuy contentious Allegations of preferential treatment, sexual misconduct & predatory real estate practices persist

By Stephen Witt

A cultural and economic turf war between African-Americans and Hasidim Jews continues to brew in Bedford-Stuyvesant with the park attached to the Marcy Public Houses along the Myrtle Avenue corridor being the latest battleground.

The difficulty began about a year ago, according to Marcy Houses Tenants Association President Naomi Colon, when about 40 Hasidim Jewish kids from the Satmar sect, who has been buying up, developing and moving into a large swath of northern Bed-Stuy, took over a basketball court.

“They seemed to think when their kids go on the playground our kids had to leave,” recalled Colon.

Colon said she had a meeting with a local rabbi and things settled down after the rabbi agreed to not bring so many kids in the park at one time. However, problems continue, she said, particularly in a perception that the housing police allow Hasidim to utilize the development and the playground, which closes at dusk, without ever being stopped.

“They walk through here like they own the place and sit on the benches after nine. I’ve seen two male Hasidim there (in the park) all night and when my children or guys walk through that park, they get tickets,” said Colon. “I find that to be discriminatory that Hasidim can be there all night.”

Colon also alleged that Hasidic men sit in the development near 472 Marcy waiting for vagrant women, who sometimes practice the world’s oldest profession.

“Some (of these women) find easy clients,” said Colon, taking nothing away from the ultra-religious nature of the Satmar sect. “They (Hasidim) are men at the end of the day.”

Democratic District Leader and City Council Candidate Robert Cornegy said he has been made aware of the growing anger in the northern part of the Bed-Stuy council district where the two groups share the territory.

Among the African-American complaints are Hasidic predatory behavior in approaching homeowners at all hours to sell their property, along with Hasidic men approaching women of color with offers of money for sexual services, and some reports of Hasidic men approaching underage women of color, he said.

Cornegy said on the other side some of the Hasidim have complained of young men of color congregating and posturing in an intimidating nature.

“It’s very contentious behavior on both sides,” said Cornegy. “Brokering a peaceful co-existence between the two groups could make a model for communities throughout the country, but it takes a lot of gentle messaging to bring about peaceful co-existence.”

The politics of the situation has been further complicated by the city’s recent re-districting of the area, putting a portion of Bed-Stuy with a growing Hasidim population – between Nostrand and Classon avenues, and Flushing and DeKalb avenues – into City Councilman Steve Levin’s district, which includes Williamsburg, DUMBO and Brooklyn Heights.

However, there remains a growing Hasidim population along the Myrtle corridor east of Nostrand Avenue and south of DeKalb Avenue – all of which is in term-limited City Councilman Al Vann’s district.

Rabbi David Niederman, the executive director and president of the United Jewish

Organization of Williamsburg, which provides many social services for Satmars, said he is not aware of any problems surrounding the Marcy playground or along the Myrtle Avenue corridor, but disagreements among neighbors is not unusual.

“When neighbors have issues it’s not black and white, Jew and gentiles. It is neighbors that disagree and should not be a political issue. I’m sure it (the situation along the Myrtle corridor) will be solved appropriately,” said Niederman.

Niederman said the movement of Satmars from south Williamsburg into Bed-Stuy is an extension of natural population growth from that community,

and that any African-American fears of an overwhelming number of Hasidim moving into Bed-Stuy is misguided.

“We believe we share the same needs and should be able to work closely together, as we do in south Williamsburg

 with the rest of the community,” said Niederman. “From time to time we will have some disagreements, but doesn’t take doesn’t take away from the issue that by working together and sharing the same environment all of our needs will be much better addressed.”

Niederman said some of these needs include more affordable housing built for everyone, and he envisions a low-income housing development with a mix of Hasidim and African-American residents.

Niederman said he met with several of the candidates running to succeed Vann, which besides Cornegy, includes Reverends Conrad Tillard, Robert Waterman and Kirsten John Foy. However, he said it is doubtful that the Hasidim, who are known to vote in a block, will support any one candidate in the September primary.

“I feel and hope that the Bed-Stuy community will elect somebody good and fair, and ready to work with all the residents and constituency within the district and unite them,” said Niederman.

A Matter of Life Support As powers push to close Interfaith, the Bedford Stuyvesant

Yesterday, hearses, pickets and mourners queued up in front of Interfaith Hospital on Atlantic Avenue around 2pm; proceeded through Bedford-Stuyvesant streets northwest to Cadman Plaza and at about 4pm marched over the Brooklyn Bridge to Foley Square in Lower Manhattan. There, hundreds of protesters raised their voices in opposition to the proposed closures of Interfaith and Downtown Brooklyn’s Long Island College Hospital. The march was symbolic of the lives that could be lost if the powers that be abruptly pull the lifeline on these two medical institutions. It also was designed to bring attention nationwide to this critical situation. Interfaith Hospital serves low-income and underserved populations, and hospital officials and community residents are working hard to deliver critical life support for the facility. According to NBC News, the local affiliate’s Chopper 4 video “showed police officers handcuffing several protesters.” And there was an irony: with City Hall as its destination, the cortege was actually within several feet of the site of the largest known cemetery for former enslaved Africans in the United States. It closed in 1795 after In Colonial times, there were no physicians, per se, for the 20,000 or so interred who happened, it is documented, to have built early New York. They had no medicines other than what they could make and no hospitals, only the shacks. And now their descendants are facing the insult again: no hospital in Bedford-Stuyesant, Kings County, home to one of the largest populations of African-Americans. Sharonnie Perry, chair, Board of Trustees of Interfaith Hospital, a community leader and activist for most of her life, like so many others takes threats to her neighborhood personally. Now this. For her, the reported intent to close Interfaith is not just another community problem to overcome: it is an affront to justice; an attack on the village.  After all, what is a village without its hospital? Especially this particular hospital. Some protesters feel the answer is deeper; the real issue, they say, is gentrification and land grab: “they (want to) build condos where the hospital (is).” Ms. Perry, political leaders like Assemblywoman Annette Robinson, clergy and political activists by the score have been drafting plans, strategizing, rallying to save Interfaith.  A plan drafted by her team to restructure the hospital was rejected by the Department of Hospitals, last week.  This week, they were given an extension to come up with a “modified plan” to the state Department of Health by today. Yesterday, Crain’s reported that Interfaith Medical Center, now in Chapter 11 bankruptcy court, “may have run out of time.”  But Ms. Perry and other leaders are not giving up, nor wasting time.  They’re not looking for angels, either.  She says they just want the various levels of government to step in, work with them and do the right thing.  “Do you know that (Interfaith’s) in bankruptcy because they’re still paying off the debt from the old Brooklyn Jewish Hospital that the state never took care of?” said one Interfaith medical director. We caught up with Ms. Perry last Sunday, the morning following her emergency trip to Interfaith as a result of a severe allergic reaction. The interview with Ms. Perry begins next week, and we will continue to track the happenings around Interfaith, from Brooklyn to Albany (Or Washington, D.C.) and back, from the solid viewpoint of people who would be affected most by the closing.   (Bernice Elizabeth Green)

Events

Mandela: A Celebration

On view at the Schomburg through Saturday, July 20, 2013

 The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in Harlem (515 MX Blvd. at 135th Street) is marking Nelson Mandela’s 95th birthday, today, July 18 — Nelson Mandela International Day, with a special exhibit, Mandela: A Celebration. 

Mandela’s life-long dedication to human rights and social justice in South Africa and worldwide can be seen now through Saturday, July 20 in photographs, posters, buttons, videos, and unique documents highlighting his journey from political activist to President of South Africa–all from the Schomburg Center’s extensive collection.

Join the global community in paying homage to a man who inspired many to make the world a better place. For more information, please visit: www.mandeladay.com

Summer Learnings …Notes from the Schomburg’s Black History 360° Summer Education Institute

July’s rising temperatures signal summer’s here and school, for the most part, is closed.  But blistering news of recent days keeps us all on notice that the quest for truth is a powerful act for all seasons; knowledge is quintessential to survival and we can never let up on learning it, sharing it and applying it.

This is the core of Nelson Mandela’s global mandate as we celebrate his 95th birthday, today, Mandela Day.

It is the message of next week’s memorial tribute to Dr. John Henrik Clarke at Boys & Girls H.S. in Bedford-Stuyvesant (Sunday, July 28).

And it is the lesson that we personally received Monday afternoon during a segment of the “Race and Education” session of this week’s Black History 360° Summer Education Institute at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture.

Over the course of the week (July 15 through July 19), K-12 teachers, college faculty, community educators, college students and lifelong learners gathered at the Schomburg to gain insights from premiere historians and scholars into techniques for increasing historical literacy, accumulating valuable content knowledge and learning inquiry-based approaches to teaching about the history and cultures of African-Americans and African peoples throughout the Diaspora.

Now in its 4th year under the direction of Deirdre Lynn Hollman, the Schomburg Center’s Director of Education, the Institute initiative is part of an “ambitious strategy” to improve historical literacy among youth.

A highlight of the Monday, July 15th day-long session was the Conversation on “Historical Literacy and Critical Literacy” with Dr. Khalil Gibran Muhammad, Director of the Schomburg Center, and Dr. Ernest Morrell, director of the Institute for Urban and Minority Education (IUME) at Columbia University’s Teachers College.

What follows are publishers’ notes from comments made by the scholars.

Dr. Muhammad:

Speaking to the importance of historical literacy, we must not take for granted that what I would know as a 41-year-old adult a fifteen-year-old should know. It is easy to ridicule and shame young people because of their lack of cultural competency, but we should not take for granted that they should know these things, or they should have learned these things. That disposition does a lot of harm to the self-esteem of young people; history is not easy to understand. It is more than about research and scholarship, it includes pausing and reflecting.  We (educators) should be engaged in framing our stories in order to reach young people.

Moments, such as the Zimmerman verdict, where there are no easy solutions and no easy answers, can impact lives.  And it’s a lot easier for young people to know about the personalities that shape those moments.   They may ask themselves: what are we going to do, what should we do, I need to do something.  As much as I appreciate the physical doing of something: joining a rally, writing a Congressman, we never want to substitute the doing for the thinking that must happen. Social revolutions happen because of ideas and moments and those moments are far fewer than we think they are, so the ideas cannot be sacrificed for the rush to do something.  If our young people know Civil Rights movements better, they would know that at any given moment, there were a dozens of choices that could have been made as to the direction of the Movement.

The Great Depression was revealing of certain things and studying what happened helped A. Philip Randolph and Bayard Rustin long before we get to 1955.  They discovered what had worked, the costs, the benefits. We owe it to them that they were the navigators of that particular Moment.

In this Moment (of The Verdict), the Millennial Generation won’t be the same.  Not all of them will join a local chapter of a civil rights organization or drop what they are doing to go to grad school, or organize around prisoner rights. Some will, most won’t.

Our kids won’t learn enough by us waiting for the next set of news stories to change their lives; some will be okay and go on and get degrees, but our kids need more from us.  We’ve been asking them to look into the mirror to see what their faults are, how much they are responsible, what they may have done to bring on the greatest prison system.  We have been giving them lessons on personal responsibility that have passed as truth-telling. They need historical context. Trayvon Martin’s death teaches them, no matter what you do you are a suspect until proven otherwise.

There is so much work to be done; we adults must know our history better before we can teach it.  And in teaching it we become revolutionaries.

(Dr. Muhammad is the author of The Condemnation of Blackness: Race, Crime, and the Making of Modern Urban America)

Dr. Morrell:

Education/critical literacy in the 21st century has to be contextualized. Teaching and learning is not just about taking and passing a test, it’s about changing lives. It’s amazing how much more children really want to know; and knowing makes you stronger to advocate for the community.   We need to start this work of teaching by getting young people fired up.  Teachers need to feel that they should understand the people they care about.

It’s easy to write children off as illogical.

My responsibility as an educator is to get kids excited about learning, and you can add history after learning.  If you raise engagement, you raise achievement.

We do not have an achievement crisis as much as we have an identity crisis.

Kids are filled with self-loathing, self-doubt.  We tell them: You should study, do well in school.

Of course, young people know education is valuable.  What they don’t know is: they are valued.

We have to help kids by not just saying education is important, but saying they are important. “We need your mind, we need your thoughts.”   (She changes and her excitement about learning changes.)

One reason our kids don’t see themselves as valuable is, everything about them is kept out of the curriculum, it renders them value-less. So they do things that tell us they are crying.

We must also address what kind of education they will need, socially, culturally and technologically in the 22nd century.  Two-year-olds will be getting out of school around 2030. They will retire around 2075.  We have to give them an education that is technologically relevant and socially relevant.  And learning also has to bring kids closer to the cultures that have loved and nurtured them.

We need educators, lawyers, doctors.  The teacher has to teach them what they need to know, framed within a context that helps them  cultivate their voices.

Being empowered is feeling you have a voice.

You’ve got to be smart to say it. You’ve got to know who you will say it to.  You’ve got to have the skills to share it.

  They must be helped to say what they want to say more powerfully, while developing the interests and skills that sustains learning in schools.

Kids like to be powerful, and they want to be cool.  Being able to speak back to something is a form of power and a way of being cool; it’s doing something you care about, something that matters to you.

Educators must be able to connect skills to something other than a test score. Being smart enables a young person to be politically courageous, and that, too, is a form of coolness.   It’s not because I told you so, it’s because you want to be prepared.

There are amazing sources in popular culture that will help teach the consciousness you want. In one successful program, young people are writing their own plays.  The topic chosen a lot is violence. It matters to young people to feel unsafe.

In this program, kids are making sense of what’s happening in their neighborhood, so they are getting that historical literacy and manifesting it as playwriting.

In another program, a conversation about U.S. Trade allows them to talk about Colonialism, Slavery, and Commodities.  They are engaged in debates, and so they take the subject all the way back to The Triangle Slave Trade.  They are learning multiple historical contexts.

Connecting historical literacy with critical literacy is a powerful teaching technique.  Having them do their own research and share that research is not something that you have to wait until you’re ready for a Ph.D. Students can start conducting their own research, develop skills, ask questions, collect information, become scholars and activists while they are very, very young stemming from one simple question: if you could change the world/the community, what would you change?

For more information, visit:  www.ernestmorrell.com).

 Black History 360 – Friday, July 19

Summer Institute Themes:

Afro-Latin@Studies,Harlem Studies, Hip-Hop Studies. Film: Legacy of Arturo Alfonso Schomburg. Conversation: Dr. Miriam Roman and Dr. Tanya Hernandez. Workshop & Walking Tour: El Barrio-East Harlem; Workshop & Walking Tour: Hip-Hop History. (Fee:.$125.

For information,visit schomburgcenter.org/blackhistory360 or call 212-491-2207.)

 

 

Saturday, July 20-Special Event:

 

           Harlem Book Fair

 

The 15th Annual Harlem Book Fair takes place this Saturday, July 20, 12n-6pm at the Schomburg Center and along West 135th Street (between Fifth Avenue and Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. Boulevard) in Manhattan.

Over 250 booths will be set up along West 135th Street, offering books, story-telling, readings, and opportunities to meet and greet authors on four stages that will feature spoken word poets, celebrities, and music throughout the day.

Community Educator Comments

Brooklyn’s Kazembe Batts, an administrator in student development at LaGuardia Community College, found the Summer Institute invaluable.  “Teachers cannot teach what they don’t know.  I respect the genius of the Schomburg, Dr. Muhammad and Institute organizer Sister Deirdre Hollman for having this annual Summer Institute.

“Hundreds of educators and others in the field are now better able to equip children with the information they need to be better pre

pared for the world.”