Wednesday, April 08, 2009

Dr. John Hope Franklin Was Pro-Black Reparations...

Did John Hope Franklin Want $100 Trillion for Blacks?


Dr. John Hope Franklin, the wildly accomplished historian who documented Blacks' place in the great American story, firmly believed in reparations -- the idea that the descendants of slaves in the United States should be compensated for the centuries of free labor that enriched slaveowners and their descendants and the American empire. It is a fact overlooked by the recent flurry of mainstream media coverage commemorating his life work. (He died at the age of 94 late last month.) But it is no small detail.

Consider his response in 2007 to state legislators in North Carolina and Virginia who balked at apologies for slavery introduced by their peers. For him a mere verbal apology wasn't enough.

"People are running around apologizing for slavery," he said. "What about that awful period since slavery -- Reconstruction, Jim Crow and all the rest? And what about the enormous wealth that was built up by black labor? I think that's little to pay for the gazillions that black people built up -- the wealth of this country -- with their labor, and now you're going to say I'm sorry I beat the hell out of you for all these years? That's not enough."

When Dr. Franklin spoke of history, he did so with the definitive authority of an expert who spent over half a century culling through the details. His accomplishments are legendary: distinguished Duke University professor who taught at the University of Chicago and Harvard University (where he earned his doctorate in 1941); author of 20 books; first African American to chair a history dept at a predominately white university; over 3.5 million copies of his book From Slavery to Freedom have been printed since it's 1947 publication.

It is very easy now in our age of political correctness to courteously applaud the accomplishments of a barrier breaking African American in the field of U.S. History, which he said he wrote without "the embellishment of emotional display." But an entirely different pill to swallow is the conclusion he gleaned from his analysis: reparations are essential to acknowledging the country's wrongs.

"There are all kinds of ways you could do it," Franklin said in a video interview at Duke University, in which he insisted he wasn't asking for reparations personally -- even though he was entitled. "What about scholarships? What about descent places for people to live? Out of the fortunes that were made, you could build a mansion for the descendant of every former slave."

Others have argued that reparations should be paid directly by the U.S. government, which Harpers magazine (November 2000) estimated at $100 trillion dollars for 222,505,049 hours of forced labor between 1619 and 1865 with compounded interest of 6 percent. Still others have argued that payments should come from corporations who benefited as well as former colonial governments.

The idea of reparations for Blacks has for years been met in the American mainstream with at best contempt and at worst ridicule. But for John Hope Franklin the essential truth of American history was found not just in the large sweeping narrative, but also in the subtleties of the racial divide lived everyday.

His careers as a historian and as an activist (he was a researcher for Thurgood Marshall for the Supreme Court Brown vs. Board of Education case and marched with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in Selma) are well documented. Less known are his day-to-day confrontations with the legacy of white supremacy, subtleties he often related in personal anecdotes:

As a 6 year-old boy, his father's business in Tulsa was destroyed (luckily his father survived) during the infamous 1921 race riot. As one of the first Black boy scouts in 1927, he was severely reprimanded midway through helping a blind white woman cross the street upon her discovery he was black. In 1995, while in DC to receive the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest award for a civilian, he hosted a party for friends at the Cosmos Club where he was a member and was asked by a white woman to get her coat, even though uniform attendants were present.

Personal insults like these only scratch the surface of the economic and psychological setbacks he suffered, like countless other African Americans, at the hands of white supremacy ingrained in American culture. Insults like these were a reminder of the big picture reasons why descendant of enslaved Africans lagged behind in the present. For Dr. Franklin, this was a direct result of American slavery.

"They ought to develop some kind of modus operandi that they can do something else -- something to absolve themselves of three centuries of guilt from which they are the direct beneficiaries," he said in a 2007 interview. "How large is the black population now living in abject poverty in this country? How large is the population of blacks who have poor health? Sometimes they inherited the poor health right from their forebears who were beaten and treated like they were animals all over this country."

It is true, as opponents of reparations argue, that America's troublesome history of racial inequity was born in the past. But it is equally apparent, as John Hope Franklin insisted, that our future is defined by the ways we address its legacy in the present.

If we really seek to commemorate him, it seems to me that the best we can do is to not just pay lip service to the man. Instead we should honor him by paying homage in the form of meaningful national policy that considers the conclusion of his life work.

Bakari Kitwana is visiting scholar at Columbia College's Center for the Study of Women and Gender in the Arts and Media and co-author of the forthcoming Hip-Hop Activism in the Obama Era (Third World Press, 2009). He also writes for NewsOne.com.

More On W.E. A.L.L. B.E. News & Radio:

Keep Hope Alive!!! Tha Artivist Reports...
http://weallbe.blogspot.com/2006/11/keep-hope-alive.html

W.E. A.L.L. B.E. News & Radio Special: Dr. John Hope Franklin Interview...
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/weallbe/2007/05/31/legendary-scholar-dr-john-hope

Dr. John Hope Franklin Says We Got Step Our Game Up
http://weallbe.blogspot.com/2007/06/dr-john-hope-franklin-says-we-got-step.html

Tuesday, April 07, 2009

4/8/2009~W.E. A.L.L. B.E. Radio~Staying Creative & Upbeat While Living Life Laid Off...



Celebrating 2 Full Years In The Biz: Ain't No Stopping Us Now!!!


April 2009 Theme: Justice Delayed Is Justice Denied...
Air Date: Weds. April 8, 2009
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Topic: Staying Creative & Upbeat While Living Life Laid Off...

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W.E. A.L.L. B.E. News & Radio Special: Yes He Did...So Now What??? Defining The Obama Presidency...
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/weallbe/2008/11/16/Tha-Artivist-PresentsWE-ALL-BE-News-Radio

W.E. A.L.L. B.E. News & Radio Special:O Yes We Did!!! The Barack Obama Tribute...
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W.E. A.L.L. B.E. News & Radio Special: Barack Obama & The Hip Hop Effect On American Politics:
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Malcolm X: The Missing Chapters...

The Following Is From The International Socialist Review
http://www.isreview.org/issues/63/feat-malcolmx.shtml

The Missing Malcolm


An Interview With Manning Marable
MANNING MARABLE is a professor of Public Affairs, Political Science, History and African-American Studies at Columbia University in New York City, and the founder of the Center for Contemporary Black History (CCBH) at Columbia University. He is the author of numerous works, including How Capitalism Underdeveloped Black America (Boston: South End Press, 1983), Race, Reform and Rebellion: The Second Reconstruction in Black America, 1945–1990 (Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1991), and Living Black History: How Reimagining the African-American Past Can Remake America’s Racial Future (New York: Basic Civitas Books, 2006). His current works in progress include a new comprehensive biography of Malcolm X, Malcolm X: A Life of Reinvention (New York: Viking, 2009).

Simon J. Black, a freelance writer and PhD student at York University in Toronto, interviewed Dr. Marable in New York City. You can find his writing at www.simonjblack.com.

DR. MARABLE, when we speak of W.E.B. Du Bois, A. Phillip Randolph, Bayard Rustin, and Martin Luther King, we are not only speaking of great intellectuals and civil rights leaders, but of democratic socialists. Malcolm also moved to the left in his later life. Much of this has been suppressed or written out of mainstream civil rights history. What effect has that had on how African-Americans relate to the left and how the left, Black and white, relates to the African-American community?

AFRICAN-AMERICANS who identify themselves with socialism or left projects have been drawn to that body of politics based on their realization that racialized injustice is not simply a dynamic of color, but, rather, has something very directly to do with accumulated disadvantage driven by market economics and by the hegemony of capital over labor. Black people in the United States and the Americas who came here were brought here involuntarily due to the demand for labor and the unquenchable thirsts on the part of those who own capital and invested in means of production to find the cheapest way to develop a labor pool to exploit and to extract surplus value that is accrued to them through excess profits.

The engine that drove the trans-Atlantic slave trade was capital, as Eric Williams in Capitalism and Slavery pointed out fifty and sixty years ago. Malcolm, on Jan. 15, 1965, a month before he dies, does an interview in Canada, I believe in Toronto, where he says, “All my life, I believed that the fundamental struggle was Black versus white. Now I realize that it is the haves against the have-nots.” Malcolm came to the realization, King came to the realization, that the nature of the struggle was between those who have and those who are dispossessed. [Frantz] Fanon came to this same conclusion in Wretched of the Earth. So this led to what some scholars have written about as Black Marxism, the tradition of Black radicalism that comes organically from the critical reality of the super exploitation of Black labor worldwide and a response to that politically. That is, that we didn’t gravitate toward Marx simply because we liked his beard or we were seduced by his manipulation of prose, even though I loved the 18th Brumaire. Rather, we were attracted to Marx because it helped to illuminate and make clear the objective material circumstances of poverty, unemployment, and exploitation in Black people’s lives. Which is why we became socialists or Marxists, because we understood that there could not be a path toward Black liberation that was not simultaneously one that challenged the hegemony of capital over labor.

IN YOUR new biography of Malcolm, Malcolm X: A Life of the Invention, you discuss three missing chapters from Alex Haley’s collaboration with Malcolm, The Autobiography of Malcolm X. What’s happened to them? And what’s their importance to understanding Malcolm’s life?

THEY’RE IN the safe of an attorney named Gregory Reed. He’s in Detroit, Michigan. They’re in his safe. And, he has them and doesn’t show them to people. Now why does he have them? How did that happen? Well, in late 1992, I believe October, there was an auction of the Alex Haley estate and for $100,000, he bought these chapters that were discarded from the autobiography.

Alex Haley was the ghostwriter and co-author of the book. You have to remember that Haley went on to great fame as the author of Roots, one of the largest-selling books in American history and a docudrama on television that had a profound impact on race relations in the late 1970s. Haley was deeply hostile to Malcolm X’s politics. He was a Republican, he was opposed to Black nationalism, and he was an integrationist. He had been in the Coast Guard for twenty years. But, he also knew a good thing when he saw it.

A charismatic, handsome, articulate Black leader who had a controversial past as a hustler, a pimp, a drug addict, a numbers runner, “Detroit Red,” “Little Gangster,” “Little Bugsy Siegel,” who supposedly terrorized the Harlem community in the 1940s and went to jail and was given ten years in prison. He goes through a metamorphosis, he becomes a Black Muslim, he comes out, he explodes onto the scene. He creates seventy to eighty new mosques in less than ten years, turns a small sect of 400 people into fifty- to one hundred thousand by 1960–62. Then, he turns more overtly to politics, he breaks from the Nation of Islam (NOI), he builds two new organizations, the Muslim Mosque Incorporated in March 1964 and the Organization of Afro-American Unity in May 1964. He goes to Africa and the Mideast. He is treated as the head of state. He is welcomed at the Fateh by the Saudi royal household. He sits down with Gamal, eats breakfast with Anwar Sadat in Egypt. He caucuses and meets and gets to know Che Guevara while he’s in Africa, as he alludes to in a talk in 1964 at the Audubon Ballroom. So Malcolm is this extraordinary figure, dies at the age of thirty-nine. It’s a hell of a story. Haley understood that. And so, it was on those terms he agreed to work with Malcolm to write the book. But, what Malcolm didn’t know was that Haley already was compromised and had basically been a purveyor of information—a kind of, not informant, but a client of the FBI in this disinformation campaign against the NOI. Haley had collaborated with the FBI. Malcolm never knew that. In the summer of sixty-four when Malcolm was in Egypt, Haley was taking the book manuscript and giving it to an attorney, William O’Dwyer, rewriting passages of the book trying to get it passed as Malcolm’s survey. Malcolm’s on the run, people are trying to kill him, they’re trying to poison him in Egypt. He’s not going to have time to look at the book carefully. Then, he dies.

Haley adds a seventy-nine-page appendix to the book where he has his own integrationist and liberal Republican interpretation. And then, they have M.S. Handler of the New York Times writing in the front of the book. I mean, you know Malcolm respected Handler. But this is not who you want to lead in to a Black revolutionary’s text. So Haley did a variety of things to reframe the book. And, toward the end of the book, there’s a lot of language in it that simply doesn’t sound like Malcolm. It doesn’t sound like him. There’s a lot of information that is just wrong in the book. They misspelled “As-Salamu Alaykum” several times. They give the story of Johnson Hinton. They have Hinton Johnson. They put the date of this very tragic beating of this brother who’s in the Nation, Brother Johnson, in 1959, rather than the year it actually occurred, which was April 1957. So there are simple mistakes in dates, of names, events that clearly show Malcolm did not have access to the final manuscript. He didn’t see it. And it was published nine months after Malcolm’s death. Betty Shabazz was in no shape to check and recheck facts. So all that says to me is you have to read the autobiography very, very carefully, very suspiciously. It’s a wonderful book. It is a great work of literature. But it is a work of literature. It is not an autobiography. It’s a memoir. And it’s gone through the prism of Haley who was a Republican, integrationist, and a defender of U.S. power. You should read the anticommunist articles he wrote for the Reader’s Guide in the mid-fifties on Hungary. This is the man you’re dealing with. So we must be very careful. I learned I had to deconstruct the autobiography to write the biography. If you go to www.malcolmxproject.net, you will see my biography, the architecture of that, and how I had to deconstruct the autobiography. That’s why we put up the Web site.

WHAT DO you suspect is contained in these missing three chapters?

WELL, I’VE seen them for about fifteen minutes. I met with Gregory. I’ve written about this in my book, Living Black History, which came out last year. Living Black History has a whole chapter on this. I couldn’t use it in the autobiography, but I had to tell the story to somebody. I talked with Gregory on the phone. He’s an attorney. He bought it for $100,000. He wanted to make money off of the material. So I phone him up, we talk. He says, “Fly out to Detroit. Meet with me. Come to my law office. There, I’ll show you the chapters.” As honesty suggests, I get to Detroit. He said, “Don’t come to my office. Are you downtown?” I said, “Yes.” He said, “Meet me at this restaurant in an hour.” I go there. He’s about a half hour late. He eventually shows up. And he’s carrying a briefcase. And then he said, “I’ll let you see these for fifteen minutes.” I’ve flown from New York and I have fifteen minutes to read the text. “I’ll let you sit here and read them and I’ll leave and I’ll come back.”

I’m sitting here frantically reading these pages. But it only takes me a few minutes to recognize what they are. They were obviously written sometime between August 1963 to December 1963. There’s a presumption in the text that Malcolm is still in the Nation of Islam. So he hasn’t broken with the Nation yet. What they call for is the construction of an unprecedented Black united front, uniting all Black organizations, led by, get this, the Nation of Islam. So Malcolm is envisioning the Nation actively participating in antiracist struggles and building various types of capacities: economic strategies, housing strategies, health-care strategies with the NAACP, with the Urban League, with the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), the Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). So he wanted to push this religious kind of semi-Islamic organization into Black civil society in an aggressive way. He wanted to open up the Nation. And, I strongly suspect that Malcolm’s drive and push to reach out to the civil rights community and SNCC and CORE is what got him into trouble inside of the NOI, because the bulk of the NOI had been thoroughly against Malcolm’s proselytization efforts that brought in tens of thousands of new members. The old guard felt threatened by that. Then on top of that, since April 1962, the turning point in Malcolm’s career was the murder of Ronald Stokes in the Nation of Islam’s mosque in Los Angeles. Malcolm flies out to LA and spends over a week there and he calls for a grand coalition, very much like the coalition he talked about in the deleted chapters, with CORE, the NAACP, with SNCC that would be anti-police violence against Black people. And, he was talking about the Nation of Islam participating in that coalition. Elijah Muhammad said “time out,” called Malcolm down and said “you better chill that out and get the hell out of Los Angeles.” Malcolm was deeply embarrassed and humiliated that they had to end the mobilization after they had a member murdered by the LAPD. Other men in the Nation in the mosque were dragged outside, strip-searched naked to humiliate them. And Malcolm had mobilized people and he had to back down.

Malcolm came back to New York and by July 1962 is speaking at a Local 1199 union protest. I have a photo of him speaking at a protest rally in July for the labor union, King’s favorite union, 1199, the largest union today in New York City. In Christmas time in 1962, two members of the Nation, who were selling Muhammad Speaks in Times Square, get arrested by the police. How does Malcolm respond? He puts 140 to 150 Fruit of Islam members—the paramilitary organization, the men in the NOI—demonstrating in Times Square on New Year’s Day. Elijah Muhammad called for no demonstrations, no overt political activity. That’s not what Malcolm’s doing. That’s exactly what he’s doing. And he starts doing that a year and a half before the silencing, before the break.

So you know what happens? The Nation of Islam’s newspaper Muhammad Speaks in late 1962 stops covering Malcolm X. If you go through methodically the last year from December 1962 through December 1963, guess what? You see Malcolm once in his own newspaper. And he’s the national spokesman. You see him more often in the New York Times. And this is like a year before the break. So you can already see where he’s going. It doesn’t take a mind reader to see that Elijah Muhammad only used the “chickens coming home to roost” statement [by Malcolm X, in response to John F. Kennedy’s November 1963 assassination] as an excuse to do what they wanted to do, which was to eliminate Malcolm’s influence, curb his politics. I think that they believed he would submit. Most of Malcolm’s closest followers within the Nation thought he would also submit. They weren’t prepared for a break. Malcolm contemplated a break. I think maybe he wasn’t prepared either. But he did anticipate a possibility of it.

He began, in early 1964, talking with a number of people outside of the Nation of Islam to develop the OAAU, the Organization of Afro-American Unity. When he left the Nation, very few members of the NOI went with him, perhaps maybe 100. The mosque in Harlem had as many as 7,000 members. Only 100–150 left. They became the Muslim Mosque Incorporated (MMI), and Sunni Muslims. But the OAAU was the secular organization with largely working-class and middle-class Blacks and many professionals, writers like Huey and Mayfield, historians like John Henrik Clark. The key organizer was Lynn Shifflet of NBC News, a producer, a young Black woman in her late twenties. There were real tensions between the OAAU and the MMI over ideology and their relationship to Malcolm, because Malcolm increasingly was moving toward the politics of the OAAU, away from the MMI, even though these were people who had put their lives on the line to leave the NOI out of personal loyalty to him. So there were tremendous tensions between these two groups, which I will document in the biography.

Saturday, April 04, 2009

Exclusive Life Photos: The Day MLK Died...







Just Published Photos Show MLK Killing Aftermath
By WALTER PUTNAM, Associated Press

ATLANTA – Almost 41 years to the day after the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated, newly published photographs of the aftermath of his shooting at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tenn., are on a magazine's Web site.

About a dozen black-and-white pictures published on http://www.life.com Thursday include scenes of King's associates meeting solemnly in the civil rights leader's motel room, standing on the balcony where he stood for the last time, and workers cleaning the last of the blood.

They were taken April 4, 1968, by Life magazine photographer Henry Groskinsky, who was on assignment in Alabama with writer Mike Silva when they learned that King had been shot in Memphis and rushed to the scene.

To their surprise, they had access not just to the motel but to King's room.

"I was very discreet. I shot just enough to document what was going on. I didn't want to make a nuisance of myself," the 75-year-old Groskinsky said in the caption to a photo showing a group of King's associates, including Andrew Young and the Rev. Ralph Abernathy, assembled inside the room.

"It's very somber, and there I am with a flash camera. So I took a couple of pictures and just kind of backed off," Groskinsky said.

There was no explanation on the Web site of why the photographs have not been published before now. A phone number for Groskinsky could not be obtained to reach him for comment Thursday night. Attempts to reach representatives from Time & Life and Getty Images were unsuccessful.

King was in Memphis to support black sanitary workers who had been on strike. The day before he was killed, King delivered his "I've Been to the Mountaintop" address in which he said, "I have seen the promised land. I may not get there with you. But I want you to know tonight, that we, as a people, will get to the promised land. And I'm happy, tonight. I'm not worried about anything. I'm not fearing any man. Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord."

He was standing on the balcony at about 6 p.m. the next day, when James Earl Ray fatally shot him with a high-powered rifle. Some of the more famous photos of that day show people on the balcony pointing toward where they heard the shots fired from across the street and one of King after being felled by the bullet.

The newly published photos include one showing King's open briefcase, a can of shaving cream on top of neatly folded pajamas and the book "Strength to Love" appearing from the top of the pocket. Other images are of the building where the fatal shot was fired and of the balcony from the building itself.

"The atmosphere of those dark, creepy buildings ... It was a little scary crawling into the building, because who knows who is going to be there? Who doesn't want you to be there?" the photographer said.

Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

More MLK ON W.E. A.L.L. B.E.:


KING SIZE COURAGE Made Up For Dr. King's Shortcomings...
http://weallbe.blogspot.com/2007/01/king-size-courage-made-up-for-dr-kings.html



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W.E. A.L.L. B.E. Radio: Black Liberation Theology 102: Putting Rev. Wright In The Right Context...

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Eye-Witness To The Crucifixion: The Last Days Of MLK...

Show:
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http://www.blogtalkradio.com/weallbe/2008/11/09/Tha-Artivist-PresentsWE-ALL-BE-News-Radio

W.E. A.L.L. B.E. News & Radio Special: Barack Obama & The Hip Hop Effect On American Politics:
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Rev. Wright Speaks In Memphis On Eve Of MLK's 41st Assasination Observance...

Jeremiah Wright Remains Firm In Support Of Obama

Mark Weber/The Commercial Appeal
Speaking at the University of Memphis on Friday night, Rev. Jeremiah A. Wright Jr. said of his relationship with President Barack Obama, "I was supporting him when y'all couldn't even pronounce his name."

By Zack McMillin
The Memphis Commercial Appeal

Saturday, April 4, 2009

The group of four women at the very front of the line to get seats for Rev. Jeremiah Wright's speech at the University of Memphis on Friday all agreed on one matter -- they just wanted to hear what President Barack Obama's former pastor had to say.

For one, Mary Dodson of Millington, there was a more particular motivation: "I am hoping he can make amends," Dodson said, for what she believed he had done to "sabotage" Obama's presidential candidacy in the spring of 2008.

What Wright gave Dodson and about 800 others at the school's Rose Theatre on Friday night was more complicated and nuanced -- and steeped in a history centuries older than last year's campaign.

There were no stated apologies or regrets, but in his 90-minute appearance, part of this weekend's "The Obama Phenomenon" conference by the school's Hooks Institute, Wright did seek to provide understanding and his own interpretation of the role his relationship with Obama played in the campaign.

He said even Ray Charles and Stevie Wonder could see that what he called the mainstream media had pulled snippets of his sermons out of context to stir racial animosity and fear.

A third-generation pastor and military veteran who earned two degrees in English and two in divinity, Wright delivered a scholarly speech laced occasionally with very personal observations.

"What I do has nothing to do with Obama," said Wright, 67, for nearly four decades the pastor of Chicago's Trinity United Church of Christ before retiring last year. "I was preaching like I preach before Obama was born. I was ordained as pastor when Obama was 5. I preached the same way out of the same context ... and then Fox News discovered me."

The question-and-answer period that followed the speech was heavy with questions about Obama, who attended Trinity for nearly two decades, was married by Wright and had both of his daughters baptized by him.

Someone asked if he still supported Obama, who publicly broke with Wright after a question-and-answer session the pastor gave last April that many media outlets characterized as controversial.

"I was supporting him when y'all couldn't even pronounce his name," Wright said, drawing howls of laughter from what was a very supportive and engaged audience. "He had me traveling ... all across the state of South Carolina getting people to understand who he was as a person, who he was as a Christian, who he was as a husband and a father. I have always supported him."

He did say, "I don't disown my children when they make a mistake, and I didn't disown him when he made a mistake."

Wright expounded upon how he was asked by his congregation in 1972 to lead them according to their motto, "unashamedly black and unapologetically Christian." But he castigated Northern black churches that rejected Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and his social gospel.

He also insisted the audience remember the many white preachers who "lost their pulpits" for supporting the civil rights movement, and invoked King's legacy several times on the eve of the 41st anniversary of King's assassination in Memphis.

"It's not just black," Wright said. "Black Christians, white Christians, Hispanic Christians, Asian Christians, all Christians must do something to wake up, in terms of, these problems are not all going to go away just because you got Barack in the White House."

And for those like Dodson who came primarily because of their loyalty to Obama, Wright closed with this: "All right, you cheered and had a great time and partied after his victory; now those people who worked hard to get him elected are going to have to work hard to help him bring about the change."

-- Zack McMillin: 901-529-2564

***

Rev. Jeremiah Wright To Be Paid With Private Funds, U Of M Says
School Isn't Providing $4,000 Speech Fee


By Zack McMillin

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

The University of Memphis, responding to criticism of the Rev. Jeremiah Wright's speaking appearance for an academic conference examining "The Obama Phenomenon," stressed Monday that the $4,000 honorarium going to Wright comes exclusively from private funds.

U of M spokesman Curt Guenther said the school had received numerous phone calls from people concerned about Wright, based on controversial comments he made as Obama's pastor at Trinity United Church in Chicago, but that most of them seemed focused on the issue of how his expenses were being paid.

Those funds come from the private donations given to the Benjamin L. Hooks Institute for Social Change, which is sponsoring the event.

"All expenses associated with his appearance are being covered by the Hooks Institute through private funds," the university said in a statement. "No tuition fees, taxpayer funds, or alumni donations are involved."

The role Wright played in the presidential campaign last year will be just one of many topics the conference will cover. Wright is speaking at 6 p.m. Friday at the university's Rose Theatre.

The conference runs all day Friday and Saturday and features speakers and scholars from across the country.

"As an institution of higher learning, the U of M is dedicated to examining, and proposing solutions to, every aspect of our society," said Hooks Institute director Daphene McFerren in an e-mail. "This event is consistent with the mission of great universities, which includes presenting diverse perspectives on many issues, including that of race."

The events, including Wright's speech, are free and open to the public. Seats will be available on a first-come, first-served basis.

For more information, go to benhooks.memphis.edu/obamaconference.html.

-- Zack McMillin: 901-529-2564

***

Controversial Public Figure Rev. Jeremiah Wright Will Speak On Campus Today At The Obama Phenomenon Conference.

Rev. Wright to speak
By: Sara Patterson
The Daily Helmsman (The University Of Memphis)
Posted: 4/3/09


AP PhotoThe Rev. Jeremiah Wright Jr., the former pastor of Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill. speaks Sunday at the Detroit NAACP's 53rd annual Fight for Freedom Fund Dinner.

President Barack Obama's controversial former pastor Jeremiah Wright will deliver the keynote address of the Obama Phenomenon conference in the Michael D. Rose Theatre at 6 p.m.

Sponsored by the Benjamin L. Hooks Institute for Social Change, the conference begins at 9:30 a.m. with the presentation "Obama in the Media," a look at the president's role in the world of hip-hop. The conference will end at 5:15 p.m. tomorrow with Ronald Sullivan's speech titled, "Soul Brother No. 1: Is Obama Black Enough?"

Twelve speakers from several states and one from Canada will address various topics related to Obama's campaign.

Sullivan, chair of Obama's criminal justice policy group, helped plot strategy for Obama's campaign and was instrumental to his win, said Hooks Institute Director Daphene McFerren. His speech begins at 4 p.m. tomorrow.

Wright, pastor of Chicago's Trinity United Church of Christ, Obama's church for more than 20 years, will likely be attended by many. Free and open to the public, seats will be available on a first-come, first-serve basis.

The media latched onto Wright early last year, quoting video clips of Wright's sermons. Wright said the U.S. was the cause of AIDS in the world, defended Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan and said the U.S. believes more in white superiority and black inferiority than it believed in God. Montages of these clips are available on Youtube.com.

Despite his fame, McFerren said she wasn't surprised Wright accepted her invitation letter in May of last year. He agreed to a $4,000 speaker fee, a price well under what McFerrin said a speaker of his status would normally receive.

"For someone of his caliber, it's a small sum," she said.

When Cornel West, famed author, philosopher, pastor and professor who campaigned for Obama, spoke on campus last semester, The Daily Helmsman reported he was paid $30,000 from the Student Events Allocation, a branch of the Student Activities Council.

Wright was paid from private funds generated by the endowment of the Hooks Institute, said McFerren. Student fees were not used to pay Wright, she clarified after University officials received several calls and e-mails from concerned parents and students.

"People who don't agree with Wright's philosophy don't want their money bringing him here," said Curt Guenther, director of Communications Services.

Senior paralegal studies major Christian Johnson said he thought about picketing the event.

"He (Wright) is a known racist, and during a week that we are supposed to be taking efforts to heal wounds of the past...The University decided to bring somebody that spits racism not only in public but from the pulpit," he said. "It's a poor decision of The University to invite him."

In response to the public outcry, McFerren prepared an e-mail statement, defending her selection.

"While you have concluded that Rev. Wright is a racist, there are many different perspectives on Rev. Wright by persons of many races," she wrote.

Obama's best-selling book, The Audacity of Hope, was named after one of Wright's sermons, and Wright is mentioned briefly in his autobiography.

"I can no more disown (Wright) than I can my white grandmother," Obama said in his speech about race on March 18, 2008, in Philadelphia.

However, Obama, in a speech April 29, 2008, publicly distanced himself. He said Wright was "not the man I met 20 years ago."

"I am outraged by the comments that were made. His comments were not only divisive and destructive, but I believe that they end up giving comfort to those who prey on hate, and I believe that they do not portray accurately the perspective of the black church," said Obama. "They certainly don't portray accurately my values and beliefs."

Political science department chair Robert Blanton said history will view Wright's role during the presidential campaign was "relatively minor," though he helped move the issue of race to the forefront of the campaign.

"Personally, I think that his statements were taken somewhat out of context, and it's hard to believe that out of decades of sermons, and all the work that he did in his community, that two minutes worth of Youtube videos fully define his worldview," Blanton wrote in an e-mail. "Moreover, he's hardly the first person to say unorthodox things behind the pulpit."

Senior communications major Georgette Kearney said she wasn't planning on attending the speech but questioned The University's judgment in inviting Wright during "Why Do You Hate Me" Week.

"It's hypocritical of The University to promote diversity but invite someone like that," she said.

Communications Chair Michael Leff said inviting Wright enforced the principals of free speech.

"I don't agree with a lot of what he said, but it's controversial, and it's of interest," he said.

McFerren said everyone attending the speech will be handed an index card to write questions on. The uncensored questions will be sorted and handed to Wright at the end of speech for him to answer.

"People say 'Memphis is weak' and ask 'Why raise these issues?'," McFerren said. "My response is: Memphis should be the leader on handling issues of race and education, because of the history of Memphis - the complete history - some negative, some positive. Why not be the leader and show we can take on tough issues in a civil way, in a responsible way, and show we're not fearful of hearing what people have to say?"

© Copyright 2009 Daily Helmsman



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'It Knocked Me Back,' Says Hooks About Photo After King's Murder...







Though Chilled By The Images, Locals Glad They Have Surfaced


By Michael Lollar
The Memphis Commercial Appeal

Saturday, April 4, 2009

The photographs became obscure parts of a magazine archive in 1968, unpublished until Friday when they reminded the country of the man and the murder that transformed the civil rights movement in America.

A dozen photographs by LIFE magazine photographer Henry Groskinsky were discovered in the magazine's archives and posted on the LIFE Web site, reminding the world of the sniper attack that killed Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

A series of more famous photographs had been used the morning after King's death, especially those of the men who surrounded King on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel. In that famous photo, most of King's entourage stood pointing to the boarding house across Mulberry Street where the sniper had hidden.

Groskinsky had been in Alabama when he learned of King's death and rushed with a reporter to Memphis. He arrived that night, and his after-the-fact photos captured the brother of the motel owner in the most graphic of the photos. They remind the world that King, a national hero with a national holiday, was a mortal with a mortal wound. Theatrice Bailey is photographed sweeping King's blood from the balcony and, later, scraping drying blood from the concrete.

"It knocked me back. It upset me," said Benjamin L. Hooks, the retired national chairman of the NAACP, who said he looked through the photographs online Friday. His family had owned Hooks Brothers Photographers, and he had worked with his father from age 12 until he was drafted into the Army at 18.

Hooks said Groskinsky's photographs were among many that went unpublished when a photo editor selected only four or five of hundreds of photographs shot.

"I'm glad they were not destroyed," said Hooks, who said the photographs now are part of a history that includes Hooks himself in King's motel room after the shooting. Hooks had been at a bar association meeting at the old Claridge Hotel when he learned King had been shot. When he rushed to the Lorraine Motel, he joined King's entourage.

"In the photograph we were sitting around discussing what had happened." As they recalled King's life, they were sometimes able to laugh, but, "We also cried."

King had often said he was fearful, but not afraid of being killed.

"Those of us who had worked closely with Dr. King for so many years looked for him to be killed. I had been with him so many times when he had been threatened," said Hooks.

Months before the shooting, he had persuaded the Southern Christian Leadership Conference to appoint Rev. Ralph Abernathy as first vice president with automatic succession rights.

"He was preparing for his death," Hooks said.

National Civil Rights Museum president Beverly Robertson said the photographs "were moving, but also chilling." Robertson said the museum is looking into acquiring the photos or using them on loan as part of its story of civil and human rights.

In Boca Raton, Fla., Groskinsky told The Associated Press that he was glad his photographs, none of which had been used, finally are "seeing the light of day." He said he no longer owns the photos, but is glad they are "a part of history. Unfortunately, it was a sad part of history."

-- Michael Lollar: 901-529-2793

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