Saturday, July 22, 2017

Remembering John Coltrane!

Incredibly, the anniversary of his passing was downright forgotten as we observed the 50th anniversary of the Newark Rebellion...
John Coltrane, the was Jazz musician whose art marked that incredible time, passed away on the morning of July 17th, 1967, on what is considered the last day of the Rebellion, or in more exact language, the last day of military occupation...Below is a piece i penned for him to capture the madness of how the horror of the Rebellion and the insensitivity of it all actually obscured his passing...even back then...One of my few 'Open Letter' poems...



An open letter birthday mantra for John Coltrane!
“We marched on ahead
marched on ahead…
“breaking new ground,
making new sound…
“knocked some of us down,
we marched on ahead…”1

dear sir,

            my city was just beginning to smolder from our flamed rage when that heavy, hesitant july 17th, ’672 sun rose, echoing our fury…
            as the nat’l guard began rolling out in their tanks, treading all over the flattened torso of our landscape reduced to ashes and anger, we were still too wet with hot blood to recognize the added weight on that morning sun’s red eyes of u quietly being called to take those giant steps of ascension back to the ancestors…
            we thought we were making everyone respect us…
            we thought we were setting the stage for real change…
            one thing, we at least knew that down south, we were definitely gonna bury that backward kracker stacker of white supremecy called ol’ jim crow for sure…
            and upsouth, we were no longer going to be willing target practice for wild roaming pigs, or singing cadavers for bloodsucking landlords, or human lab rodents for racist natural and social scientists who wanted to see how many rats, roaches, chewed chipped-lead and garbage we cd take, and still make music…
            we thought were restraining the arms of the warmakers, and stopping their genocidal droppings of Vietnam…
            we even thought that if we raized enuf hell, and made enuf noise, that they just might leave us the fuck alone…
            we were wrong…
            we came up just a bit too short on the amount of hell we needed to raize to make that happen…
            cuz just as we thought we were gonna get somewhere, the warmakers brought their pyromaniac dropping needs ‘home’ and aimed them dead at us…
            COINTELPRO, Operation Newkill, Operation Shamrock, Operation KAOS, Operation Chesrob, and other covert actions aimed at ‘newtering’ our dare to change the world ways…
            they killed our foremost field slaves, like Malcolm, even Martin, who hated violence more than anyone, and then Fred, and even George. Him being already inside wasn’t enuf for them…
            all the while they were bombing us with a nerve-numbing white fire called heroin…
            and then they jailed a bunch of our boldest,… Geronimo, Dhoruba, Sundiata, Assata, to name a few…in grand spectacle fashion, and then locked them down as far away from us as possible…
            and then in genuine ‘sisyphus’-fashion, just like Amiri warned us, they rolled that gigantic, acid-laced rock of reaction back down dead on our heads!...and scorched, in steamroller fashion, the face and torso of the southern hemisphere with assassinations, coups, proxy wars and impaling neocolonial arrangements, just as it was seeking to rise from the ball and chain of colonialism…leaving more people maimed, more people missing, more people hungry, more people sick, more toxic pressure on the land…
            and they said it all had to be done in the name of democracy…
            just as we were seeking to rise…
           
            “…knocked some of us down,
            we marched on ahead…”

            and now, in this strangling new world order arrangement, where facism wears its stalking, smiling, most false neo-liberal face, where they now have a ‘contract with america’ on us, they want us to think that it is all over, that they are in complete control, that there is nothing we can do to change this or to resist…
            but we do resist…
            we will resist…
            we must resist…
            the tide of consciousness, of resistance, of human dignity, is making a loooong, wide, slow, turn to the left…
            under each new sun, after each rain, out of the shadows of each of the heaviest storms, on the sharp heels of each hard wind, the tide of human consciousness is turning…
            most people on this earth want whats good…
            most people on this earth want whats fair…
            most people on this earth still want to see what ‘real’ democracy is like…
            and no one wants to be sick, or hungry, or homeless, or afraid, anywhere…
            the arch of the universe is long, martin said, but it bends towards justice…
            and it is bending, sir…
            it is bending…
            and we hear yr voice echoing in the air as it bends…spraying rainbows born in battered blood and the defiance of love…as it bends around the mountains of time and cosmic distance and light, we hear yr voice helping it bend, with yr god-certified leaping lisp,…apart of the bend, traneing in…traneing in…traneing in…towards that destiny of love and peace u gave yr life trying lyricize so we could all see…
            so  I say here, sir, apologetic about what we couldn’t say on that blood wet red hot day when u left, as we stood down tanks pointing at our throats and bayonets at our eyes, we say very simply and very plainly, we love u, sir…we love u…
            and thank u for giving us all of u…
            thank u…
            thank u, sir, for giving us
            everything u had…
            everything…


                1.Lyrics, or the ‘mantra,’ are based on the chorus of Blue Train, a classic John Coltrane composition and album…
                2.John Coltrane died on July 17th, 1967 on what is also considered the last day of the epic Newark Rebellion, an uprising which inspired some 75 additional urban rebellions throughout the country!…

                ©1996 all rights reserved



Friday, July 21, 2017

NAVC SHUT IT DOWN FOR PEACE IN THE STREETS, By 'bro. zayid'



NAVC SHUT IT DOWN !
FOR PEACE IN THE STREETS!
by 'bro.zayid'

          Wednesday, July 19th, saw the mighty Newark AntiViolence Coalition (NAVC) shut down Broad and Market for “Peace in the Streets” like only the Newark AntiViolence Coalition does!
          Not stopped or hindered by sweltering July heat or the cynicism of critics,  the NAVC shut the major intersection down at 6pm ‘Malcolm time’ drawing participants from all quarters of the city.
          Team members from two local boxing programs, Believe In Yourself and Hope Love And Kindness, led by the ‘Street Doctor’ Earl Best, ran and joined the circle chanting “Believe in yourself” in what could warmly be called a public service workout!
          Tyrone Muhammad and Morticians Who Care returned with their casket taking centerstage and gave one of his bonechilling graphic commentaries on the gruesome dimensions of violent death deglamorizing the addictive, destructive plague.
          Young artist John Thompson of Young Successful Men (YSM) brought three of his fresh paintings of stand up Black men, a painting capturing the slogan of Black men during many Civil Rights protests ‘I Am A Man’ and portraits of Barack Obama and Nelson Mandela who would have been 99 the day before.
          Black Lives Matter spokesperson Jennifer Lewinsky gave painful testimony of surviving domestic violence and then surviving being prosecuted by the state when she dared to defend herself from that violence and brought all matters of the violence facing the community together.
          “Violence is what it means to be Black in America,” she charged pointedly.
          NAVC treasurer Dawn Haynes also echoed the special pains Black women face on the issue, but was able to turn eyes and ears to hope for improvement challenging everyone to appreciate the work being done making a difference in the city in spite of its harrowing persistence.
          “We got to stop ignoring all the good that’s being done in this city,” she implored.
          The rally was an effort at a unifying mass response to an ugly spate of gun violence that tore through the heart of New Jersey’s largest city over the 4th July Holiday Weekend unnerving residents from all stripes. Among the casualties was a six year old child who miraculously survived.
          Bringing evening rush hour traffic to a heart heavy halt, the rally was well received by many…

(c) 2017


Monday, July 17, 2017

Ode To My Mother, by Assata Shakur

The following was penned by Assata upon the tragic passing of her incredible unconquerable mother Ms. Doris Johnson on Sep 7, 1998...Incredibly it was also on the same night that Tupac Shakur was shot!...
It was shared at last night's moving 70th birthday tribute to our most beloved exiled freedom fighter, capturing her soulbaring attempt to defy the pain of exile in the face of a most personal crisis and loss...Stories coming soon...



Ode To My Mother,by Assata Shakur
For her mother, Doris Johnson,who passed away on Sept. 7, 1996

            My mother was Doris Johnson…
            She was a descendant of slaves. She was an Afrikan woman, far away from Afrika.
My mother was born in the 1920s. She was a child of the Depression. She knew what it meant to stand in line for bread and government cheese. Although my mother grew up in Queens, New York, her parents were from Wilmington, North Carolina. She experienced rampant discrimination in the North and the humiliation of racial segregation in the South. and suffered all her life under the racist institutions and the racist policies of the united states government…
            My mother was Doris Johnson…
            She was a short woman, just a little over five feet, but there was nothing about her that was petite or fragile. Her skin was like clover honey, her face liquid, always moving, always changing. One cut of her eyes could stop you dead in your tracks, just as one of her observations could make you double up in laughter. As a young woman, my mother was stunningly beautiful. Her beauty was never truly recognized. She was sensitive and intelligent. Her astuteness was never really appreciated. She lived in a racist country that denied her humanity, assumed her inferiority, minimized her abilities and demanded her passive acquiescence.
            My mother was Doris Jackson…
            She was tenacious, always thinking, always planning. She was cautious yet fearless. Her body moved in quick impatient gestures. She had her own special way of talking-she spoke in vivid, incomplete sentences that always got the point across. She was an observant woman, searching, exploring, intense. When provoked, she could be explosive. She was a tooth and nail person. She could never stand anything that was halfdone, that was halfhearted. She believed in putting your whole heart into things, in doing your absolute best. She believed in sweat and elbow grease. One of the quickest ways to annoy her was to mutter the words ‘I can’t.’ She was a fighter and she believed in fighting to the last minute, to the last breath, to the last drop of blood.
            My mother was Doris Johnson…
            She understood the value of education. She worked and she studied. She worked hard and she studied hard. In order to finish college, she worked doing days work. She worked in offices, she worked in factories. She graduated from Hunter College in New York. She then became a teacher in the New York City school system. It was there that learned of the damage that the schools do to Afrikan children. Working as a teacher, she witnessed the racist indifference of those who control school systems. She saw how children of color were tracked into inferior, dead end curriculums. She worked in ‘600’ schools and saw how Black and poor children were labeled as ‘criminals’ and ‘troublemakers’ way before they reached adulthood.
To pay the bills, my mother worked two or three jobs at the same time. She took after school jobs, summer jobs, whatever she could get. My memories of my mother are often tied to work. I see her eternally marking papers, writing in plan books, cutting up crepe papers for school plays. With two young daughters, my mother went back to school to get her masters degree. I can remember her then, her head stuck in a book, always running, always tired, coming home from work, cleaning and cooking and then running off to school.
            My mother was Doris Johnson…
            She was oppressed as an Afrikan and as a woman. From early childhood, her life was one of discrimination. She told us many stories. About the teacher who opened the door with a handkerchief so she wouldn’t have to touch the same doorknobs as Black children. About winning a scholarship to a predominantly white school where the white students turned over garbage cans and sat on them, rather than sit next to my mother. She told us about being fired more than once for telling off the racist bosses. Although she spoke clearly, she was forced to take the oral exam because she had an unacceptable ‘accent’.
            As an Afrikan woman, my mother went thru hell. She grew up in a period where Black women were considered ‘ugly’ and ‘inferior,’ and when almost every aspect of the reinforced that racist concept. She lived in a time when women were expected to be submissive, to suffer silently. She lived in a time when men were taught to see women as little more than sex objects. There were men who resented my mother’s intelligence, and saw her achievement as some kind of a threat to them. It was impossible for my mother to escape the constraints of her era. My mother lived through turbulent destructive relationships and for a long time, she was a battered woman. In the latter years, like so many Black women, she was alone. Like so many of her sisters, she chose a life of solitude and dignity, rather than to face or tolerate betrayal, disrespect or abuse.
            My mother was Doris Jackson…
            Her life was not an easy one. She faced a hostile world, and had to raise two children with very little support. There were too many pressures and too many responsibilities. There were many problems, health problems. There were times when she found those problems overwhelming and she tried to escape. She tried to run away. She tried desperately to dull the pain. But my mother was a courageous woman. She found the courage to confront her difficulties and to overcome her weaknesses. She found the courage to stand on her own two feet, to confront the pain and difficulties and to go on with her life, but it was hard.
             My mother is Doris Johnson…
            She wanted to protect her children. She wanted them to lead good lives. At first, she found it hard to understand my choices.I was her eldest daughter with a big bushy Afro and a big rebellious mouth.  My mother saw me as I was, part women, part child, idealistic, wild and serious. She was afraid for me. But soon she came to understand the intensity and the totality of my commitment. She knew me better than anyone, and knew that it was impossible to live some dream-like, middle class existence in the midst of so much racist oppression.  Gradually, she not only accepted my choices, but she supported them. Gradually, my mother also became my comrade.
            The choices I made weighed heavy on her. She would see me sporadically. They were often quick, erratic visits. Sometimes I would come home exhausted, tense, preoccupied, and she would scold me for being poorly fed or poorly dressed.
And then came the absences. The times when I had to go underground. They were difficult times for me and they were terrible times for her. So many nights when she scanned the radio news stations, waiting to hear some dreaded news. She had to sift thru the lies. Ignore the slander and the total denigration. I will never forget when I was captured. I did not know how my mother would react. I remember how she told me in no uncertain terms, that she was proud of me and that supported me all the way.   
            My mother was Doris Johnson…
            For almost 30 years, her telephone was tapped, her home was bugged and there was an electric eye next to her apartment door. My mother was constantly followed, constantly harassed. There were mysterious break ins of her house where nothing of value was taken. My mother endured all kinds of searches, stripsearches to come and see me in prison. She would travel for hours, and there were many times when they refused to let her see me. The police tried to terrorize my mother in her home and on her job, and when I was able to escape, they harassed my mother to the point that she had a heart attack.
When I was pregnant with my daughter Kakuya, my mother underwent a metamorphosis. She dedicated her entire being, her complete energy to Kakuya’s survival and to her education. My was intent on making sure that Kakuya grew up to be strong, that she grew up Afrikan, that she grew up knowing who she was, and where she came from. From the moment she was born, my mother surrounded her with African images, African culture, and an abundance of love. When she was just a little baby, my mother read her poems by Paul Laurence Dunbar, Langston Hughes, Margaret Walker and a multitude of Afrikan and Afrikan American poets and writers. She taught Kakuya about Harriet Tubman, about Nat Turner and about the long struggle of Afrikan people.
            My mother was Doris Johnson…
            She came through snowstorms and through thunderstorms to bring Kakuya to see me. She fought the school system. She fought the prison system. She fought whatever system there was that was holding down her children, holding her people down. My mother was shy, but she loved our people. She was a great listener. She was compassionate. As one of our elders, she tried to be objective, to understand what people were saying, what people wanted, what people needed, and to give good advice.
My mother had a beautiful smile and she gave it freely. She gave it generously.  She made people feel comfortable, feel like they had known her for years. When my mother really liked somebody, her favorite complement was to say that they were ‘down to earth.’
            My mother was an activist.  She was always present. She was always supportive of our struggle. On cold winter days, on hut summer nights, you could find my mother at rallies, on picket lines, at meetings to free political prisoners.
            My mother was Doris Johnson…
            She loved life. She loved colors. She loved brightness. She loved art, especially Afrikan art. She loved music. Her favorite was what she called Progressive Jazz. She loved Errol Garner, Miles Davis, John Coltrane and so many others. It was thru my mother that I learned to appreciate the Blues, to appreciate Calypso, to love Gospel. It was from my mother that I learned to appreciate the culture of the Diaspora, to love rice and peas and curried chicken. It was from my mother that I learned the limbo dance, about Paul Robeson and Katherine Dunham and Miriam Makeba. My mother came to visit me often in Cuba. She felt at ease here, said it was one of the few places she could really relax. When she returned to the states from one of those trips here, she was asked if she was a terrorist because she visited Cuba so often.
            My mother was a bridge player. She played duplicate bridge and she loved to play in tournaments. To her, the mind was a muscle, and she believed that if you don’t lose it, you would lose it. My mother loved to laugh, and loved to party. She loved to travel, to experience new things. In short, she loved to learn. My mother loved to read, and her books bear her special emblem. She would write notes on the border of pages, on tops of pages, and it is much joy that I open the books that she gave me and encounter her scrawling notes.
            My mother was a family person. There was no sacrifice too great to make for her family. She loved her children, Beverly and I, and she loved her grandchildren, Donny, Brad and Kakuya. She and my Aunt Evelyn were sisters in struggle. They fought together. They plotted together, resisted together, kept our family together. My mother was a family person. She gave most of her money, every bit of strength she had to help take care of my grandparents. My mother instilled in us the importance of family and the importance of love. She taught us the importance of unity. She taught us to take care of each other, to look out for each other. My memories of my mother are intrinsically tied to struggle. I will never forget her speaking Spanish and pretending to be some kind of diplomat just so my sister and I could enter an amusement park in the segregated South. My mother did not live by America’s rules. She taught us that when you live by the rules of your oppressor, you will always be ‘it’ and you will always ‘strike out.’ I will always remember her hiding Kakuya’s baby bottle in her bosom, because baby’s milk was contraband in jail. So many little memories of her individual acts of resistance come to me now. If I try to write them down, I will cry again.
            My mother was Doris Johnson…
            She had the courage to reach out. She had the courage to grow. She had the courage to heal. She was committed to our family, our extended family. She was committed to our struggle. She was committed to our people. She was a freedom lover. My mother was a spiritual person.  She was not too fond of organized religion, but she paid great homage to our ancestors. She never forgot the history of our people, or the history of our struggle. My mother loved this earth, and she paid homage to its beauty. My mother prayed for a better world as she fought for one. My mother was a decent human being. If there is paradise,  I know she is there. If there is an upper room, I know she is up yonder with her god. My mother died on the day of Yemaya, who is the mother of all life, the Yoruba goddess of motherhood and the sea. I am sure she is there with the ancestors. I am sure she is looking over us, looking out for us, lending her strength and her energy. My mother has made our ancestors proud. I can only hope to follow in her footsteps, to follow her example.
            I thank my ancestors, and I thank my god that my  mother was Doris Johnson. Mommy, I love you so much. Mommy, I will always love you. Mommy, I promise to carry on…