PUB: Atlanta Review Poetry Contest

POETRY 2010

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  • Poems must be your original creative work, not published in a national print publication.
    (Online or strictly local publication is permitted, as long as you hold the copyright.)
     
  • Deadline: May 7, 2010. Winners are announced in August. The Contest Issue appears in October.
     
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    Previous Grand Prize winners and associates, friends or students of the judge are not eligible.

 

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PUB: Autumn House Press Poetry and Fiction Contests

The 2010 Autumn House Poetry and Fiction Contests

Guidelines for the 2010 Autumn House Poetry Contest

Since 2003, the annual Autumn House Poetry Contest has awarded publication of a full-length manuscript and $2,500 to the winner. The 2010 judge is Claudia Emerson. The postmark deadline for entries is June 30, 2010.

  • The winners will receive book publication, $1,000 advance against royalties, and a $1,500 travel grant to participate in the 2011 Autumn House Master Authors Series in Pittsburgh.
  • The deadline is June 30, 2010.
  • We ask that all submissions from authors new to Autumn House come through one of our annual contests.
  • All finalists will be considered for publication.
  • The final judge for the Poetry Prize is Claudia Emerson.
  • All full-length collections of poetry 50-80 pages in length are eligible.
  • If you wish to be informed of the results of the competition, please include a stamped, self-addressed envelope.
  • Autumn House Press assumes no responsibility for lost or damaged manuscripts.
  • All entries must be clearly marked “Poetry Prize” on the outside envelope.
  • Twenty five dollar handling fee (check or money order) must be enclosed.
  • MANUSCRIPTS WILL NOT BE RETURNED.
  • Send manuscript and $25.00 fee to:

    Autumn House Press
    PO Box 60100
    Pittsburgh, PA 15211


Winners of the Autumn House Poetry Prize:

Year Author Title Judge
2009 Jacqueline Berger The Gift that Arrives Broken Alicia Ostriker
2008 Mary Crockett Hill A Theory of Everything Naomi Shihab Nye
2007 Miriam Levine The Dark Opens Mark Doty
2006 Nancy Pagh No Sweeter Fat Tim Seibles
2005 Ada Limon lucky wreck Jean Valentine
2004 Ruth L. Schwartz Dear Good Naked Morning Alicia Ostriker
2003 Deborah Slicer The White Calf Kicks
Naomi Shihab Nye

Guidelines for the 2010 Autumn House Fiction Contest

We are pleased to announce the third annual Autumn House Fiction Contest. Selected by our fiction editor Sharon Dilworth, the winner will be awarded publication of a full-length manuscript and $2,500. The postmark deadline for entries is June 30, 2010.

  • The winners will receive book publication, $1,000 advance against royalties, and a $1,500 travel grant to participate in the 2011 Autumn House Master Authors Series in Pittsburgh.
  • The deadline is June 30, 2010.
  • We ask that all submissions from authors new to Autumn House come through one of our annual contests.
  • All finalists will be considered for publication.
  • The final judge for the Fiction Prize is Sharon Dilworth.
  • Fiction submissions should be approximately 200-300 pages. All fiction sub-forms (short stories, short-shorts, novellas, or novels) or any combination of sub-forms are eligible.
  • If you wish to be informed of the results of the competition, please include a stamped, self-addressed envelope.
  • Autumn House Press assumes no responsibility for lost or damaged manuscripts.
  • All entries must be clearly marked “Fiction Prize” on the outside envelope.
  • Twenty five dollar handling fee (check or money order) must be enclosed.
  • MANUSCRIPTS WILL NOT BE RETURNED.
  • Send manuscript and $25.00 fee to:

    Autumn House Press
    PO Box 60100
    Pittsburgh, PA 15211

VIDEO: from Shadow And Act » Watch “Besouro” Now!

Watch “Besouro” Now!

besouro_film01

Here’s a film that we’ve been looking forward to seeing since first discovering it last summer – Besouro. Read my original post on the film HERE.

It screened in its country of origin – Brazil – last October, and made its non-Brazilian debut at the Berlin International Film Festival earlier this month. Although I heard/read little about the screening, in terms of critic reviews and such.

As far as I know, it hasn’t reached American shores, and is without an American (or any non-Brazilian) distributor.

Well, while not the most ideal way to see it, I was just alerted (thanks André!) to the fact that it’s been uploaded onto the web, in actually pretty decent quality, even when expanded to full screen, which is how I’m watching it of course. Like I said, not the most ideal way to premiere it, but, for those anxious enough to see it, this may be your only chance, because it may never reach you, wherever you are, or it may be a long while before it does – even on DVD.

I started to watch it, but remembered that I should at least post it here for the rest of you folks, in case it disappears shortly :D

If you need a reminder… the story goes… The son of João Grosso and Maria Haifa, Manuel Henriques, learned capoeira from Tio Alípio (an ex African slave), around the Rua do Trapiche de Baixo, located at Santo Amaro da Purificação (Bahia). Tio Alípio gave Manuel Henriques the nickname of “Besouro Mangangá” due to his ability to quickly disappear whenever he was around a belligerent group or facing danger. As he was a famous and strong capoeirista, word spread and soon was born the legend that Besouro Mangangá had supernatural powers. He could not only disappear when facing danger, but he could also turn into a big black beetle (Besouro translates to beetle in English).

In 1924, at the age of 27, Besouro Mangangá was caught in an ambush, stabbed and killed with a “ticum” knife (type of knife made from a bull’s bone). Notable names in the capoeira world like Mestre Cobrinha verde (his cousin) and Siri de Mangue were his students.

Watch the film now in the player below. NOTE: You will need the free “DivX (Plus) Web Player” – which streams HD content for both Windows and Mac OS. If you don’t already have the app, CLICK HERE to download it. No it’s not SPAM or Spyware, if you’re not aware of what the DivX player is.

And if you can’t watch it below, CLICK HERE. Suggest you watch it full screen:

PLEASE NOTE: Had trouble when attempting to view via Safari browser. Worked fine with Firefox.

HAITI: Haiti Sovereignty, Disaster relief, Rebuilding with Dignity - Ezili Danto - from Open Salon

Haiti Sovereignty, Disaster relief, Rebuilding with Dignity

Ezili Danto

Ezili Danto
Bio
Ezili Dantò is an award winning playwright, a performance poet, author and human rights attorney. She was born in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, and raised in the USA. She holds a BA from Boston College, a JD from the University of Connecticut School of law. She is a human rights lawyer, cultural and political activist and the founder and president of the Ezili’s Haitian Lawyers Leadership Network (HLLN). She runs the Haitian Perspectives on-line journal and the Ezili Dantò Newsletter. Ezili’s HLLN is the recognized leading and most trustworthy international voice in Haiti advocacy, human rights work, Haiti news and Haiti news analysis. HLLN’s work is central to those concerned with the welfare of the people of Haiti, Haiti capacity building, sovereignty, institutionalization of the rule of law, and justice and peace without occupation or militarization. Ezili Dantò is also an educator who specializes in teaching about the light and beauty of Haitian culture; the Symbolic and Archetypal Nature of Haitian Vodun; the illegality and immorality of forcing neoliberal policies on Haiti and the developing world... For more go to the Ezili Danto/HLLM website at http://www.ezilidanto.com/
Click "Submit Abuse" if you feel this post is inappropriate. Explain why below if you wish.

 

Ezili HLLN's 14-Points for the Voiceless in Haiti: For a Return of Haiti's Sovereignty and for Disaster relief, Rebuilding with Human Rights, Healing and Dignity

1. Haiti needs emergency humanitarian aid – rescue, recovery, relief and rebuilding, not military occupation.

2. End indirect aid to Haiti. Foreign Aid should go to Haiti not the churches and NGOs. The Obama administration must support an international response that respect Haitian sovereignty, not boost NGO profits and power in Haiti

3. Support the institutionalization of the rule of law

a. Return former president Aristide to Haiti so he may assist Haiti’s majority at this agonizing time and help in the relief and rebuilding of the nation.
b. Support community organizing, community policing, transparency and participatory democracy.
4. Value life - Value life over political and economic interests. Value the lives of the survivors not the “security” interests of the US and the international community.

5. Respect Haitian human rights and dignity.  Stop criminalizing the poor in Haiti.

The UN has enacted Guiding Principles for Internally Displaced People. Make them required reading for every official and non-governmental person and organization. Non-governmental organizations like charities and international aid groups are extremely powerful in Haiti - they too must respect the human dignity and human rights of all people.

6. Value Family - Help reunite displaced families
The Obama administration must support an international response to the tragic Haiti earthquake that values family and is sensitive to the human agony of family lost and separated in Haiti.

Extend the Temporary Protective Status cutoff date from January 12, 2010 to December 31, 2010, allowing patients and those who are accompanying their USC children post January 12 to enjoy said benefit. Provide humanitarian parole and equal application of TPS.

7. Rebuilt Haiti
The Obama administration must support an international response that use its power to uphold Haitian-led, Haiti-capacity building relief and rebuilding efforts that sustains human rights, healing and dignity.

Support the launching by Haiti of national public works projects to rebuild infrastructure, sanitation systems, communication, public schools, literacy programs, public health hospitals and clinics, reinforce outback village units with affordable housing, firehouses, health clinics, legal offices, clerks offices, art & job training, communication, sanitation systems, access to safe drinking water units. Expand Haiti’s national handicraft industry, folkloric music training and education on Vodun, Haitian history of struggle and resistance, Kreyòl, traditional dance movements and significance, basic sacred drumming, vèvè writing and psychology/philosophy, basic herbal healing.

8. Relief, rebuilding and redevelopment should be designed by Haitians and their collaborators, not USAID, the UN or the “international community.”

Stop the stranglehold of USAID, its other international counterparts and the over 10,000 NGOs over Haiti. Their grip must be loosened if a new paradigm is to be installed for the people of Haiti that promotes Haitian self-reliance not Haitian dependency

USAID has a history of mistreating the Haitian majority, feeding dependency, starving democracy and should not be the US agency overseeing the US relief effort. And if they are, oversight and accountability are needed.

a. Oversight and accountability.
b. Support Haitians and to rebuild Haiti

c. Promote Haitian self-reliance, self-respect, self-determination, not dependency, injustice and indignities


9. Prioritize jobs and skills transfer to Haitian nationals

10.  Debt Cancellation

a. Immediately cancel all debts owed by Haiti to the multilateral financial institutions (IMF, WB and IDB);
b. Suspends all debt service payments to these institutions until the debts are completely canceled; and,

c.
Provides that all additional funds to Haiti for the rescue, relief, rebuilding and redevelopment are to be given in the form of grants, not loan debts.

11. All international adoptions or evacuations of "disaster orphans" must stop.

12. Encourage maximum leveraging of Diaspora remittances

aRelease all Haitians in US jails who are not accused of any crimes so that they may apply for Temporary Protected Status (TPS.)
b. Support with tax-incentives direct capital investment/Haitian remittances in Haiti; and,

c. 
Ending the militarization of aid and the US/UN occupation shall protected and not diminish the value and use of Diaspora remittances because their shall be less violence, less demonstrations against the occupation and more normalcy so the people may invest the remittances in school fees, education, small business enterprises, and not funerals and lawyers to incarcerated relatives..

13. End free trade, began fair trade.
Support domestic food production, indigenous Haiti manufacturing and job creation. Stop IFIs policies that limit social spending, require that Haiti remove tariffs on food and other imports, privatize public enterprises, exempt foreign investors from taxes on their profits. Support grassroots, indigenous Haiti capacity building organizations.

Protect workers rights and provide a living wage, especially in the export assembly industry.

Haiti needs food sovereignty, domestic manufacturing, local entrepreneurship, fair wage jobs, affordable and clean energy.

Support Haiti in subsidizing domestic food production, domestic manufacturing, organic food market from Haiti, local job creation, valid reforestation, fair wages not free trade wages, public works projects, sustainable development and a good working culture that values workers’ rights and health. Support Haiti entrepreneurship, Konbit culture and equitable distribution and profit sharing from the assets of the country. Support Haiti’s fuel sovereignty, clean alternative fuel and valid reforestation alternatives suited to Haiti’s reality. After the emergency relief stage of the earthquake emergency, calibrate food aid so to assist and not further destroy Haiti's food production.


14. Raise funds to support the work of Ezili Dantò/HLLN Nou La!- We are Here - earthquake relief efforts

********

Ezili HLLN's 14-Points with  talking points

(for more info, check our website)

1. Haiti needs emergency humanitarian aid – rescue, recovery, relief and rebuilding, not military occupation.


The occupation of the Toussaint Louverture international airport and other Haitian national spaces by foreign militaries, especially by the US/UN, Canada and France, must end and these areas be returned to the control of the people of Haiti. End the UN/US, France and Canadian occupation of Haiti.


President Obama sent in a bipartisan military invasion. Soldiers are trained to intimidate and kill if ever the need arises. A gun does not heal or cure. Stop militarizing emergency relief. Haiti needs more doctors, nurses, medicines, medical and psychological treatment, food, water, shelter and conscious relief with dignity and human rights, not occupation. This time of horrific loss of life and damage ought not to be used to push through unpopular policy interests of the corporatocracy and global oligarchy to further fleece Haiti of its resources or put Haiti in more debt. (Haiti Disaster Capitalism Alert: Stop Them Before They Shock Again.)

Neither the US Marines nor the 82d Airborne are humanitarian aid
organizations. If the US had wanted to at least make a show of disaster relief, it could have sent in the Navy Seabees and the Army Corps of Engineers, notwithstanding that latter organization’s failures after Katrina in New Orleans. Also, if the US wanted to help empower earthquake-ravaged Haiti, it would not have UNILATERALLY rerouted all commercial flights to the Dominican Republic, thus boosting up the DR's economy while further crippling Haiti's economy and making it poorer.

Haiti did not need the militarization of aid relief. 45,000 Americans were living safely in Haiti before the earthquake and "Violent Haiti" is a myth . There's MORE violence in Jamaica, Dominican Republic, Brazil, Mexico, Columbia, even in the United States, than there is in Haiti .

But even if security had been a concern requiring 20,000 US soldiers, how is it that the most powerful army on earth, with supposedly the most advanced engineers and technological expertise on earth could not have erected, in a relatively short time, a transitional airport with multiple landing airstrips that the Seabees would have constructed solely for the use of the US military and for evacuating of US citizens and other foreign nationals as the US did with the Haitian airport in the initial weeks of the earthquake, blocking critical first responders from entering Haiti? Moreover, reportedly the US has the satellite imaging technology to have conducted a search and rescue using satellite to detect and pinpoint body mass or body heat under the rubble and concrete. This technology has been used in Kosovo and Bosnia and such similar technology used during blizzard and avalanche disaster rescues. Perhaps, in this way, within the first 48 to 72 hours, many more Haitians under concrete and rubble could have been located and rescued if security had not been the US priority, but search and rescue.

Was this some sort of opportunistic depopulation or ethnic cleansing of the poor in the capital of Haiti – collateral damage in the stealth war for Haitian resources such as Haiti's uranium, gold, iridium, limestone, oil and natural gas deposits? Or an easy, if not cruel way for the US/Euros, through this UN facade and US militarization of aid to further secure, not only Haitian riches and strategic position between Cuba and Venezuela, but the strait between Guantanamo Bay and Port au Prince that is the main channels for shipping from the Atlantic to the Caribbean basin. Perhaps securing all that canal bound traffic, at a time when Cuba has found a huge cache of oil its negotiating with Russia and China to help it exploit, as well as circling these seas to prevent Haitian earthquake victims from seeking refuge elsewhere via these sea routes, instead of using the coastal waterways abutting the destroyed villages of Haiti to deliver food, water, tents and medicine, are the only US priorities? (See 100 links to the The Militarization of Aid to Haiti.)

The Obama administration must support an international response to the tragic Haiti earthquake that ends the US/UN-led military occupation of Haiti and its current entrenchment with 20,000 US troops charged with the management and execution of humanitarian assistance. Haiti needs tractors, backhoes, cranes, not war tanks and soldiers. The wounded people need community policing and psychological counseling, not military guns in their weary faces.

The Associated Press reports that less than a penny of each dollar the U.S. is spending on earthquake relief in Haiti is going in the form of cash to the Haitian government:

Each American dollar roughly breaks down like this: 42 cents for disaster assistance, 33 cents for U.S. military aid, nine cents for food, nine cents to transport the food, five cents for paying Haitian survivors for recovery efforts, just under one cent to the Haitian government, and about half a cent to the Dominican Republic. (AP: Haiti govt gets 1 penny of US quake aid dollar)

 

Instead of spending all this resource to militarizes Haiti, these funds could instead be better redirected to help with reconstruction, viable reforestation, engineering projects, community-based policing and development, educational initiatives, building of flood barriers, dikes, flood resistant roads, bridges, dredging harbors, building sewers and drainage networks, viable farms, schools, hospitals and health centers. To assist Haiti in irrigation, fertilizer and necessary farming equipment to increase domestic food production in the Artibonite valley and Plaine du Sud farming areas. For planting fruit trees to assist the small rural farmers towards self-sufficiency. For creating indigenous Haiti manufacturing and eco-friendly green jobs with an emphasis in helping meet the needs of women and children in Haiti. (Proper Jatropha production is an excellent option.) To support Haitian-led grassroots capacity building organizations. For child health care, medicines, permanent clean water facilities. For educational initiatives that don't deny Haiti's unique indigenous culture.

2. End indirect aid to Haiti. Foreign aid should go to Haiti directly to strengthen the Haitian government not the churches and NGOs.

a. US foreign policy undermined Haiti’s capacity to respond in emergency situations because it forced Haiti to privatize state assets, funneled all foreign aid to NGOs and not the Haitian government.

A recent article reported the Haitian government has not seen one cent of that money that has been raised for Haiti. I presume that that means the money is going to NGOs," he said, referring to non-governmental aid groups. He said a Puerto Rican group had presented him with a shipping receipt showing it donated $3.5 million of food aid to feed Haitians. Preval said he asked, "Where is the food?" and was told it had already been given to aid groups. (Coordination needed for Haiti aid: Aid flows to charities, but Preval hasn't seen a cent.)

It is the Clinton and Bush neo-liberal policies or US support for coup d’etat that has severely weakened the Haitian government, Haiti's already limited infrastructure, public health and economy that is needed to provide services in times of disasters like this. Neo-liberal policies posits that governments should not provide social services to the people – community policing, electricity, food, clean water, health care, schools, roads, irrigation canals, literacy programs, agricultural assistance. That these things should be privatized and let the marketplace provide. This is the policy that has been imposed on Haiti by both the Bushes and Clinton. And Obama has enlisted these two to further “help” Haiti.

b. The Obama administration must support an international response that respect Haitian sovereignty, not boost NGO/World Relief Organization, security company profits and corporatocracy power in Haiti.

This US foreign policy effectively forms a shadow government enchaining Haiti that undermines Haiti’s sovereignty, emboldens and empowers NGOs with no public responsibility or accountability to Haitians or Haiti’s long term well-being. The idea that Haiti is too corrupt to absorb aid or get it to the most needy applied during US-supported Haiti dictatorships not, in general, when Haiti has a duly elected government. Besides this fear does not support self-reliance but dependency. There should be accountability measures to assure the aid reaches its intended constituency.

Haiti can no longer countenance World Relief NGOs in the country whose method of doing business is inappropriate to Haiti’s reality, doesn’t respect Haiti’s Vodouist/Konbit/Lakou culture and puts in place programs to exclude the majority of Haiti's people from decisions affecting their every day life.
3. Support the institutionalization of the rule of law
a. Return former president Aristide to Haiti so he may assist Haiti’s majority at this agonizing time and help in the relief and rebuilding of the nation. No one can be made stateless. It’s a violation of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

b. Support community organizing, community policing, transparency and participatory democracy.


4. Value life - Value life over political and economic interests. Value the lives of the survivors not the interests of the US and the international community.

Haitians, both in Haiti and in the Diaspora, who are historical immune to adversities along with mobilized Black America and our collaborators from all the nations and races, are ready to help, with our bare hands, walking anywhere, doing anything, to get the distribution done. Still are. The military takeover and their alliance with World Relief Organizations who prioritize not saving lives and providing disaster relief with dignity and human rights but their bank accounts, is blocking this.

Eyewitnesses in Haiti report that aid trucks are filed to the brim with supplies blocked at the border and sitting idle at the ports. Once the US got to Haiti on Thursday, Jan. 14, 2010 they privatized the airport and blocked humanitarian aid in favor of: 1) landing military planes and 1) evacuating foreign nationals. Food, water, medicine and doctors could not enter through the airport, were diverted to the Dominican Republic and trucked or drove in. One US retired general said USAID and the State Department are not a rapid response entity and ought not to head this mission. Even two weeks after the earthquake, there still has not been widespread distribution of food, medicine and water.

"The next morning after the earthquake, as a military man of 37 years service, I assumed … there would be airplanes delivering aid, not troops, but aid," said retired Lt. Gen. Russel Honore ,..I was a little frustrated to hear that USAID was the lead agency," he said. "I respect them, but they're not a rapid deployment unit… In the first two days after Tuesday evening's quake, "we saw national media in, but we didn't see Air Force airplanes taking in food and water," Honore said. Nor were military doctors on the ground treating the injured, he said. (Retired general: US aid effort too slow.)

The Obama Administration must do better. It must prioritize relief, rebuilding and development initiatives for everyone in Haiti harmed by the earthquake, especially the poor Black majority, not just the wealthy, the foreign citizen, charity workers and their hotels or other properties. Infrastructure rebuilding should be conducted simultaneously in the poor as well as wealthier areas of the capital and southern areas damaged by the earthquake. Rich and poor, foreign or Haitian national ought to be similarly treated.

The Obama administration must support an international response to the tragic Haiti earthquake that prioritize humanitarian assistance, not security and that makes every effort to allow relief assistance from Haitians abroad and from other nations and providers to enter Haiti. In addition to stopping the blockage of assistance coming from Haitians abroad, Black Americans and from other nations and providers in favor of the major corporate charity organizations, it must also prioritize the distribution and promote and allow Haitians to set up an international coordination of international assistance so that relief supplies, medical treatment and the necessary emergency help actually gets to the most excluded majority in Haiti – reaching the maximum number of earthquake victims immediately. The Haitian people, in Haiti and abroad, with families victimized by the earthquake are the best ones to know where the most urgent needs are still to be met and allowed to direct medical and psychological assistance and other relief to those areas.

5. Respect Haitian human rights and dignity. Stop criminalizing the poor in Haiti. Stop the aid bureaucracy and security restrictions that harms and insults the earthquake victims.

Stop USAID/State Department and the world relief corporate charities from criminalizing the people of Haiti with their dividing of Port au Prince into color-coated security zones (red, orange and yellow – depicting criminal zones to less criminally-prone zones) and inevitably parading around Haiti in vehicles with tinted or rolled-up windows accompanied by an entourage of armed security that distances them from the poor they are supposed to be helping, sending a menacing message of dominance and greater authority over the suffering Haitians in their own country. World Relief NGOs or aid providers working in this crisis should always hire a local Haitian interpreter at an equal wage to the NGO worker's salaries who will act as translator to better communicate with the victims and beyond the immediate need for food, water, shelter, medical and psychological assistance, assess, not guess or make racists presumptions about the people’s needs.

If USAID and the major charities cannot let go of their fear of Blacks, and are letting Haitians die while they wait for their required UN or US military escorts, than let the Nation of Islam, Haitians and their non-hysterical partners, from all the races and nations, take care of the aid delivery to peoples in their “ red and orange zones.”

6. Value Family - Help reunite displaced families

The Obama administration must support an international response to the tragic Haiti earthquake that values family and is sensitive to the human agony of family lost and separated in Haiti.

Stop separating Haitian families, or exacerbating family separations with insensitive US emergency relief policies and procedures at a time family members most need to be together. For instance, lift up the ban that prohibits Haitians with permanent residency, who live in the US with their husbands, wives or children, but who are not US citizen from returning to their families in America. Similarly, allow the entry and return of Haitians living abroad, including those who are not US citizens but legal US residents, into Haiti so they may give aid, monies and moral and bereavement support to their families. Respect the earthquake dead – identify the unclaimed corpses, even if through taking a picture before putting them in mass graves, so their love ones may, at some point see that they are gone and have more closure. The mass displacement of the population in the capital and in the South also means the injured and dying are harder to locate and families have been separated from their loved ones. Stop dropping food and water from the air or from the back of trucks. Haitians are not livestock.

6a. Extend the Temporary Protective Status cutoff date from January 12, 2010 to December 31, 2010, allowing patients and those who are accompanying their USC children post January 12 to enjoy said benefit.

7. Rebuilt Haiti
The Obama administration must support an international response that use its power to uphold Haitian-led, Haiti-capacity building relief and rebuilding efforts that sustains human rights, healing and dignity. And that helps save and protect the lives, lands, property and human rights of the Haitian survivors displaced by the 2010 earthquake. Show respect for the people of Port au Prince and in the destroyed Southern areas, who, on the first three days after the earthquake were mostly alone, and who spontaneously organized themselves to save each other with the help of those foreigners who got there to help and set up over a thousand refugee camps to house over two million people throughout Haiti, sharing with each other whatever they had. Show respect. They should be a central and integral part of the redesigning and rebuilding of Haiti.

Rebuilding efforts should hire companies that are committed to integrating all levels of corporate responsibility - economic, social and environmental - in their entire range of operations.

Rebuilding and redevelopment efforts should prioritize agricultural production, building flood barriers and better drainage systems. Infrastructure, sanitation, sewers, electricity, earthquake and hurricane resistant homes, hospitals, schools, supermarkets, etc. Better transportation such as inter-connecting roads from the outback to the cities, a railroad, effective public transportation, watershed protection, communication networks, projects to combat illiteracy, building a universal education system that respect Kreyòl and indigenous Haitian culture and a universal health care system that services the public, an integrated urban land, public spaces and housing reform in the unique character of Haitian art and culture, et al...


8. Relief, rebuilding and redevelopment should be designed by Haitians and their collaborators, not USAID/State Department or the “international community.”

USAID has a history of mistreating the Haitian majority, feeding dependency, starving democracy and should not be the US agency overseeing the US relief effort. And if they are, oversight and accountability are needed. (See, Ezili’s US Congress must provide more oversight guidelines for USAID.)

a. Oversight and accountability
Demand more oversight of USAID earmarked funds for Haiti, greater fiscal accountability, transparency and quantifiable evidence of self-sustainable development achievements and, in particular these new Haiti foreign assistance guidelines should ensure, that food and other aid actually reach their intended beneficiaries and not end up for sale in the open market or stay in Washington or used in Haiti mostly on administrative salary, fees and expenses for USAID's political benefactors, shipping companies and nonprofits.

b. Support Haitians to rebuild Haiti
The Obama administration should support an international response to the tragic Haiti earthquake that supports relief, rebuilding and development efforts designed by Haitians and that allows Haitians with their collaborators in Black America and other chosen partners first preference to assist the Haitian government with plans to rebuild Haiti, and given contract preference and employment preference to rebuild Haiti. Moreover, Haitian natives in Haiti ought not to have to compete with anyone living abroad, including Haitians in the Diaspora for relief, rebuilding and redevelopment jobs generated in the rebuilding of Haiti.

c. Promote Haitian self-reliance, self-respect, self-determination, not dependency, injustice and indignities

Stop the stranglehold of USAID, its other international counterparts and the over 10,000 NGOs over Haiti. Their grip must be loosened if a new paradigm is to be installed for the people of Haiti that promotes Haitian self-reliance not Haitian dependency.

Haitians are in need of justice, restitution, reparation, human rights not charity. Fair trade not free trade. Haiti needs to have its indigenous culture and domestic economic development respected. It does not need the failed unholy Western enslavement trinities of political, socio-economic and educational/religious institutions keeping Haiti’s Black majority in physical and mental chains. Nor does Haiti require further colonial paternalism, false benevolence and to be burden with dependency through World Bank/IMF/IFI's debts and such other modern tools of domination, economic enslavement and financial colonialism. In particular, respect means humanitarian assistance, rebuilding and redevelopment aid should go directly to the Haitian government and not through USAID and its major corporate subcontractors – Catholic Relief Services, World Vision, Care International, International Red Cross, DYNCORPS, and other such Blackwater-like sorts of private contractors because USAID projects undermines Haitian sovereignty, does not promote sustainable development and the funds allocated to USAID for Haiti generally do not reach the people most in need.

USAID was at the frontlines of the irregular warfare creating Coup D'etat, chaos, anarchy and destabilization in Haiti culminating in the 2004 ouster of President Aristide and UN/US occupation.

"The objective of irregular warfare is control over the civilian population and the neutralization of the state, and its principal tactic is counterinsurgency, which is the use of indirect and asymmetric techniques like subversion, infiltration, psychological operations, cultural penetration and military deception." (Cuba: USAID making ever-higher investments in subversion.)

 

9. Prioritize jobs and skills transfer to Haitian nationals

It should be the aim of the rebuilding to train qualified Haitians and Haitians without jobs living in Haiti as their only abode to take over the work that Haitians from the Diaspora or other consultants may hold in the short term during the formulation, design, maintenance of a rebuilt Haiti. For the initial phases of medical relief, there are more Haitian doctors abroad then in Haiti and said doctors and health care providers and collaborators must be immediately integrated in the conceptualization, coordination and distribution of the medical relief efforts. Haitian doctors leaving in Haiti should simultaneously be trained to take over running the hospitals, clinics and health care systems built during the reconstruction phase. This model should apply, as possible, in all the other fields also.

10. Debt Cancellation
The Obama administration should support an international response that supports debt cancellation for Haiti and supports humanitarian relief, rebuilding and development efforts with grants, not loans. Haiti cannot afford to invest in humanitarian relief, rebuilding and development projects while continuing to make payments on bilateral debts and debts owed to multilateral financial institutions like the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank (WB) and the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB). Debt service payments to these international financial institutions were an onerous burden to Haiti even prior to the earthquake and severely hindered the Haitian governments’ ability to meet its people’s need. The Obama administration should support three specific debt cancellation initiatives and urge an international response that also acts to:

a. Immediately cancel all debts owed by Haiti to the multilateral financial institutions (IMF, WB and IDB);

b. Suspends all debt service payments to these institutions until the debts are completely canceled; and,

c. Provides that all additional funds to Haiti for the rescue, relief, rebuilding and redevelopment are to be given in the form of grants, not loan debts.

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11. All international adoptions or evacuations of "disaster orphans" must stop.

Let us step back and take a moment to consider the best long term interests of these earthquake orphans as well as getting them the immediate protection from predators and short term life-saving relief - food, water, medical treatment, shelter and love, children need. Both must be done.

The opportunistic use of either man-made or natural disasters in Haiti, to permanently exile Haitians, without consent, from the reach of their relatives, homeland, its resources, ancestral legacy and culture is unacceptable. The myth that Haitians do not CARE for their children is just that, a myth. As HLLN has proven over and over again in our work to expose the foreign predators hiding behind white privilege, NGO legitimacy and the victorious US/UN occupation of Haiti since 2004. (See, Statement on Haiti adoptions from the international community of adoptees of color.)

Human trafficking is on the rise after the earthquake. The displaced Haitian children are not up for sale for either the organ traders, laboratory experiments, sexual predators or to wealthier Northerners in need of a child to raise willing to ignore the trauma experienced by these earthquake children, forcing them to assimilate to meet the expectations of others at such a confusing time. (No wholesale evacuation and adoption; Claims of a million earthquake orphans are clearly false and those making them are being irresponsible.)

These displaced children or eathquake orphans need immediate shelter, food, medical treatment, security, sanitation. Their parents may have been separated from them and if not, now is not the time to also abruptly deny them cultural sovereignty and the right to mourn and heal with the support of their community. Family in Haiti is more than the nucleus mom/dad/children in the Euro/American way. It's extended further. (See, Statement on Haiti adoptions from the international community of adoptees of color.) There could be some intermediate measure taken besides flying them off with strangers, no matter how well meaning. Those truly interested in the best interests of the child may help make sure that immediate emergency relief reach these children. Don't just take the child away leaving the community to spend a lifetime wondering whatever happened to each child.

Ezili's HLLN supports, reiterates and agrees wholeheartedly with the Adoptees of Color Statement on Haiti, written from the perspective of a group of adoptees of color opposed to international adoption of Haitian children that maintains: "All adoptions from Haiti must be stopped and all efforts to help children be refocused on giving aid to organizations working toward family reunification and caring for children in their own communities. We urge you to join us in supporting Haitian children's rights to life, survival, and development within their own families and communities."


12. Encourage maximum leveraging of Diaspora remittances

a. Release all Haitians in US jails who are not accused of any crimes so that they may apply for Temporary Protected Status (TPS.) Thirty thousand people are facing deportations without committing a crime against society. Expedite the processing of immigration status and granting of work permits for the over 30 thousand Haitians in America eligible for deportation to allow them to work in order to send remittances back to their families.

b. Support with tax-incentives direct capital investment/Haitian remittances in Haiti
Contrary to the media, State Department, NGO and USAID/US Embassy spins, it's the Haitian Diaspora’s $2 billion dollars per year in remittances, not foreign aid that upholds Haiti. No other national group in the world sends more money to their homeland than Haitians living in the Diaspora.

Congress recently 1) passed a bipartisan measures allowing donations made for Haiti relief to be tax deductible for 2009 and 2) put together a $1 million dollar Health and Human Services Repatriation Assistance Fund providing reimbursable help with cash, travel expenses, medical care, lodging and food to return to the US the about 45,000 U.S. citizens living in Haiti at the time of the earthquake. It would also be helpful, for instance, if Congress made Haitian remittances sent via transfer houses (Western Union/CAM) and banks to Haitian families in Haiti tax deductible and to be able to deduct the transfer fees from their taxes.

c. Ending the militarization of aid and the US/UN occupation shall protected and not diminish the value and use of Diaspora remittances because their shall be less violence, less demonstrations against the occupation and more normalcy so the people may invest the remittances in school fees, education, small business enterprises, and not funerals and lawyers to incarcerated relatives.


13. End free trade, began fair trade. Support domestic food production, indigenous Haiti manufacturing and job creation. Support grassroots, indigenous Haiti capacity building organizations.

Haiti needs food sovereignty, domestic manufacturing, local entrepreneurship, fair wage jobs, affordable and clean energy.

Support Haitian domestic food production, domestic manufacturing, organic food market from Haiti, local job creation, valid reforestation, fair wages not free trade wages, public works projects, sustainable development and a good working culture that values workers’ rights and health. Support Haiti entrepreneurship, Konbit culture and equitable distribution and profit-sharing from the assets of the country. Support Haiti’s fuel sovereignty, clean alternative fuel and valid reforestation. After the emergency relief stage of the earthquake emergency, calibrate food aid so to assist and not further destroy Haiti's food production.

Support Haiti Food Sovereignty:

According to a report by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, (FAO), the rice bowl areas in Haiti alone, are capable of producing food to feed 10 million people. Haiti has a population of 8.5 people and thus, Haiti has the capacity to feed itself.

Promote donation of seed, fertilizer and farming equipment and deploy a team of agronomist in collaboration with Haitian agronomists to engage immediate cultivation of basic staple food to lessen the level of dependency on food aid. U.S. agricultural aid to Haiti should support local people-centered, self-sustaining projects to rebuild the 2008 flood-devastated breadbasket areas of Haiti in the Artibonite valley and Plaine du Sud.

Organic foods from Haiti: Support creating a uniquely Haitian organic food-for-trade market from Haiti's own traditional fruits and crop staples (Pitimi, ble, pwa Kongo, nwa, yellow rice, avocado, mangoes, white Haitian yam, plantains, St. Marc rice, St. Marc corn, millet, pigeon peas, Vetiver oil, cashew, potatoes, tomatoes, leafy greens, bananas, cassava, peas, corn, cereals, papayas, bread fruit (lam veritab), et al...).

Support Haiti entrepreneurship, konbit culture and equitable distribution and profit-sharing from the assets of the country: U.S. corporations should be encouraged to patronize the informal sector of local service providers and generally not export all profits and capital but commit to paying equitable custom duties and investing a reasonable percentage of their Haiti profits back into Haiti.

Calibrate Haiti's unique reality and riches: Haiti is a country filled with "non-workers" by US standards. But this informal working sector (small local producers, distributors, retailers and market women) is the economic backbone of Ti Pèp La - the masses in Haiti. Haiti is a place with iridium, oil, gold, copper, lignite, coal and uranium mines, gas reserves, precious minerals, limestone, construction aggregate, marble, chalk, and stone quarries, gem stones, underwater sea treasures and where the poorest of the poor own property. US neo-liberal economic policies that doesn't calibrate these factors and the Haitian peoples' right to equitable distribution of their country's own assets, will always fail.

Support Haiti’s fuel sovereignty, clean alternative fuel and valid reforestation. Rebuilding should prioritize Haiti’s fuel/energy sovereignty, cheap alternative energy and reforestation such as planting of fruit trees for food, capital building and trade and use of indigenous Haiti plant, such as Jatropha which can be processed into biodiesel fuel and glycerin and the pulp used for: organic fertilizer, animal feed, and/or 3. the presscake may be used to make char, and then form the char into briquettes and burning it as fuel to produce stream to turn a steam turbine to produce electricity. It would be truly helpful to Haiti's fuel sovereignty, reforestation needs, and economic independence and manufacturing needs for and long-term sustainable development if emphasis could be put on a biodiesel program combined with a micro finance program for purchasing modified kerosene stoves fueled by biodiesel, providing Jatropha press to community groups, seeds and training in processing of soap and cosmetics from the pulp. This would assist with economic independence, replace charcoal for cooking, lower fuel costs and employ farmers in a profitable trade while reducing pressure on Haiti’s remaining forests.

Jatropha grows in marginal soils and is drought-resistant so will mostly not compete with lands needed for food crops and restores topsoil to the eroded land. Help Haitian agricultural production emphasizing assistance to local indigenous community groups by not only distributing needed seeds but with support for indigenous management of comprehensive systems of drainage canals to protect cropland from flooding; with fertilizers, with building or repair of rural roads for local Haitian to get their excess produce to market.

Fund or encourage funding for wind, water, solar (solar cookers, solar panels, wind turbines for electricity, modified kerosene stoves fueled by Jatropha biodiesel and such other simple) and good renewable energy alternatives, instead of constantly funding IRI/USAID/NED/NGO "training programs," conferences or more "poverty studies" and “assessments” in Haiti.)


14. Raise funds to support the work of HLLN Nou La!- We are Here - earthquake relief efforts, not the same old people who are part of the problem and have no authentic connection to the majority in Haiti.

*

Please feel free to adopt these measures and help us mobilize an international tsunami force to sweep aware Haiti's containment-in-poverty, dependency, debt and domination.

********

 


- "If you have come here to help me then you are wasting your time, but if you have come because your liberation is bound up with mine then let us work together." -- Lila Watson

******

 

"Transformation is only valid if it is carried out with the people, not for them. Liberation is like a childbirth, and a painful one. The person who emerges is a new person: no longer either oppressor or oppressed, but a person in the process of achieving freedom. It is only the oppressed who, by freeing themselves, can free their oppressors."-- Paulo Freire, from Pedagogy of the Oppressed

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Please feel free to adopt these measures and help us mobilize an international tsunami force to sweep aware Haiti's containment-in-poverty, dependency, debt and domination.

 

 

INTERVIEW: Five Questions for... Heidi Durrow - from She Writes


This week, She Writes members novelist Heidi Durrow and poet Tara Betts sit down to discuss Durrow's first novel The Girl Who Fell From The Sky, published this month by Algonquin:

1) How did you start writing and developing a community of writers to support you and your work? Who influenced you and helped guide you as a writer?
I don’t have an MFA or a degree in creative writing—my background is as a journalist and lawyer. So, I found fellowship with other writers at writers' conferences (Tin House and Bread Loaf), as well as artist colonies. One of the earliest champions of my writing was my friend, Honoree Jeffers—who encouraged me to write and believed in me without having ever seen my work! Over the years, I met other writers who have all been incredibly generous: Joan Silber, Hettie Jones, Susan Straight, Jay Parini, and George Hutchinson to name just a few. And, of course, Michael Pettit, who became my mentor when he took an interest in my work after I won a contest he judged. I also found great friendships with other writers who were struggling to publish. That was important too—we could commiserate or plan together what to do next after a rejection. It’s amazing how wonderfully generous other writers are—I think it’s because we are all in the struggle together. And it doesn’t hurt to be sure to say thank you!

2) In an interview with author Lori Tharps, you said that your mother wrote as well. I know my mother was an avid reader throughout my childhood, and it really sparked my love for words. How do you think mothers' lives impact daughters' desires to tell stories?
I think as daughters we are programmed to tell the stories of our mothers—especially if those stories have been silenced. My mother wrote for a publication for a time, but then life intervened and she didn’t have the time to write anymore, though she keeps a journal still. This story is for my mom—whom I adore—so that she knows how much I treasured her dream to write—so much so that I made it my own.

3) When I think of the stories, fiction and nonfiction, told by so many interracial writers, they all have details that make their stories different—the ethnic/cultural identities, where and how the family lives, the time period, the number and variety of family members. What are some of the things that your novel has in common with other books by mixed-race writers and what makes your story distinctly different from the others?

That’s a tough question, because though the book is clearly in the tradition of interracial literature, it’s also a break from it. My hope for the book was to explode the idea of the tragic mulatta. I wanted to say that yes, there is grief involved in growing up mixed-race in this society now, but it’s because of society’s ideas of race and culture—not an inherent flaw in the mixed-race person. And then also, I wanted to jettison the tragic part of the tragic mulatto’s description—the book does begin with tragedy, but it ends on a hopeful, maybe even triumphant note.

4) How did you arrive at breaking the book up into the point of view of Rachel and three other characters (the mother Nella, Jamie/Brick, and Nella's employer Laronne)?

I started the book with the voice of Rachel. I tried to write the whole book from her viewpoint—but it wasn’t working. She is often unreliable, and I felt like the reader needed to see the story from another angle. A tragedy needs a witness, I realized. That’s when I came up with the character Jamie/Brick. The Laronne character came about because I knew that I needed to have someone who could tell us about Nella—and of course, it felt only fair to let Nella speak for herself. She has much to explain about what happened that fateful day on the rooftop.

5) If you could give any advice to Rachel, the main character in The Girl Who Fell From the Sky, what would it be?

Remember that she is loveable, despite her flaws and despite her hurt. You can still have the hurt in you and come out whole. And then remember to love—it’s still worth it. No matter the hardship and pain.

Photos: Heidi Durrow, Age 5; Cover of The Girl Who Fell From the Sky

PUB: Call for papers—Sapphire: PUSHing Boundaries, PUSHing Art

CALL FOR PAPERS

Sapphire: PUSHing Boundaries, PUSHing Art is a new collection focused on the work of author and performance artist Sapphire. Critics, teachers, performance artists, and social justice activists are intrigued by Sapphire's craft, inspired by the relevance of the issues she dares to confront, and moved by her sympathetic characterizations and overall vision. This proposed volume emerges from the success of a one-day symposium on Sapphire's work hosted at Arizona State University in February 2007, at which scholars, teachers, and activists from diverse backgrounds and critical, theoretical, and pragmatic perspectives looked at the richness of this author's literary contributions. Until now, Sapphire's work has not been the subject of sustained scholarly analysis, although articles, dissertations, and conference presentations to date demonstrate the range of continued interest by scholars in her writing, voice, and vision. Recognizing the complexities and impact of Sapphire's writing, this volume offers an opportunity for dialogue among multiple intellectual and social communities—domestic and international—and across academe and the wider public. 

The editors seek provocative new essays on Sapphire's poetry and fiction, as well as on the recent film adaptation of Sapphire's influential novel PUSH (released as Precious). Essays focused on environmental concerns in the text and/or film, pedagogical implications of the text and/or film, and engagement with black feminist/womanist theory/criticism that engages the complexity and diversity of black women's and girls' lives through analysis of this text and film would be of particular interest.

Please send your complete 20- to 30-page manuscript with a one-page abstract and three-line author's biography to Elizabeth McNeil, Arizona State University, at mcneil@asu.edu, by the deadline of April 30, 2010. 

INFO: The SeeingBlack.com 411 - March 1, 2010

The Holla from www.SeeingBlack.com, March 1, 2010

Ex-police Lt. admits to cover-up in post-Katrina killings. Following string of racist incidents, UC San Diego students occupy chancellor's office. Van Jones to head think tank's "Green Opportunity Initiative." Obama signs extension of PATRIOT Act. Documents reveal Pentagon spied on Planned Parenthood. Hundreds of thousands lose unemployment benefits due to GOP filibuster. Dodd abandons efforts to create Consumer Financial Protection Agency. Admin to seek improved wages, benefits at federal contractors. VA to review disability claims of Gulf War vets. FBI, US Attorney investigating Penn. school district's computer spying on young students. US firms probed for role in Greek financial crisis. UN approves Goldstone Report resolution on Gaza war crimes. Check the REAL news!

New Blogs!
Welcome our new blog!
Pediatrician Chu Chu Onwuachi-Saunders offers practical advice and strategies for girls experiencing puberty (especially menarche, or getting their first period.) Her first post is:
Dr. Chu Chu writes:
...Most of us would argue that we know how to balance a child physically and mentally- we encourage them (sometimes force them) to eat healthy foods and exercise frequently. We educate them and insist they read more. Some of these goals are easier said than done...

Jackie Jones writes:
...I have no idea whether Tiger Woods' statement is sincere and, quite frankly, it doesn't matter to me. He has to travel his own path and I've got my own life to keep on track physically, professionally and spiritually. Taking on someone else's issues is not on my agenda. I recently met the infamous Jayson Blair - the brother who was publicly busted for plagiarism and fabrication while a reporter for The New York Times. At a dinner with journalists, Blair admitted he was responsible for his actions, realized he hurt a lot of people, destroyed his career as a journalist and that he was still in the process of recovery and healing from drug addiction and mental illness...

jrswriter writes:
...In his first State of The Union address Barack Obama mentioned among other things, he wanted to appoint a "bi-partisan commission" to examine ways to reduce the escalating federal deficit. As soon as he said it I thought to myself, "Uh oh, Obama is going to gut New Deal programs under the guise of fiscal responsibility and austerity."

Charlene Muhammad writes:
...The fourth chakra of body is the heart. The heart is the middle chakra, the center of balance between the upper and lower energy systems. The heart is the seat of unconditional love, compassion and loving kindness. Its shadow side reflects anger, grief, bitterness and hatred due to an inability to let go of the past and allow the acceptance of compassion and love into one's life. One of my favorite scriptures of the Bible is written by Paul who shares Jesus' teachings on the purification of the heart. Paul writes that Jesus was willing to teach both Gentile and Jew because it was not the physical circumcision that makes a man holy, but it is the circumcision of the heart- the purification of the heart that makes one holy. Everybody has the ability to purify his/her heart. Regardless of gender, race or status in life...

Registration is open for the Split This Rock Poetry Festival 2010! From March 10 through March 13, 2010, the festival in Washington, D.C. will feature readings, workshops, panel discussions, youth programming, film, activism, opportunities to speak out for social justice, imagine a way forward, and celebrate the many ways that poetry can act as an agent for social change.

 

 

What is the purpose of Hillary Clinton's recent speech about Iran? The most obvious conclusion is that it is to promote conflict, and to convince Americans that Iran is an actual threat to their security.By Mark Weisbrot

US reaches $1.25B settlement with Black farmers. Portland officer cleared in fatal shooting of unarmed Black man. No civil rights charges in police killing of Sean Bell. La. jury acquits White Officers in killing of 73-year-old Black man. Regulators: Toyota flaws linked to deaths of 34. The case for busting the filibuster. Report: largest corporations responsible for $2.2T in environmental damage. Obama to back health bill through budget reconciliation. Study: highest Medicaid enrollment in decades. Welfare recipients forced to sell food stamps to buy basic necessities. And MUCH more...Check the REAL news!

A memorial poem by Ruth-Miriam Garnett and six of Lucille Clifton's poems: blessing the boats, sorrow song, jasper texas 1998, wishes for sons, my dream about being white and mulberry fields.

"We are humbled by the tribulations of the people of Haiti. At this time of destruction, suffering, death, and survival, we offer our condolences, our prayers, and our aid. At the same time, as scholars of the African and African-American experience, we are dismayed by the inhumanity of those who have used this tragedy as an opportunity to espouse groundless explanations for Haiti's troubles..."--the Department of African & African American Studies at Duke University

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INFO: AALBC.com eNewsletter - March 1, 2010

 The #1 Site for African American Literature

African American Literature Book Club'seNewsletter - March 1st 2010

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AALBC.com BEST SELLING BOOKS
 

The top 25 selling fiction and nonfiction books from All of 2009 (2,186 different titles sold!)
http://www.aalbc.com/books/2009_by_month.htm

 

Zane Novel - Total Eclipse of the Heart by Zane1 - Total Eclipse of the Heart by Zane
2 - Purple Panties: An Eroticanoir.com Anthology by Zane (Editor)
3 - Missionary No More: Purple Panties 2 by Zane (Editor)
4 - Head Bangers: An APF Sexcapade by Zane
5 - Push: A Novel by Sapphire

 
Confessions of a Video Vixen by Karrine Steffans1 - Confessions of a Video Vixen by Karrine Steffans
2 - The Isis Papers: The Keys to the Colors by Frances Cress Welsing
3 - Cool, Confident and Strong: 52 Power Moves for Girls by Cassandra Mack
4 - Dear G-Spot: Straight Talk About Sex and Love by Zane
5 - Christopher Columbus and the Afrikan Holocaust: Slavery and the Rise of European Capitalism by Dr. John Henrik Clarke

AUTHORS YOU SHOULD KNOW
 
lucille CliftonLucille Clifton
http://aalbc.com/authors/lucille_clifton.html

In 2007, Lucille Clifton (June 27, 1936 February 13, 2010) became the first African American woman to win the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize, one of the most prestigious American poetry awards and one of the largest literary honors for work in the English language. Clifton has also won the National Book Award in poetry for Blessing the Boats, and is the only author ever to have two collections, Good Woman: Poems and a Memoir and Next: New Poems, named finalists for the Pulitzer Prize in one year.
 
carol taylorCarol Taylor
http://aalbc.com/authors/carol_taylor.html

Taylor, a former Random House book editor, has been in book publishing for over 16 years and has worked with many of today's top black writers. Carol has been featured in Essence, Ebony, Black Enterprise, Honey, BET, Heart and Soul, The Boston Globe, The Daily News, The Chicago Sun-Times and Publisher's Weekly among many other publications. She has also appeared on BET Tonight with Ed Gordon and ABC Eyewitness News.  She is also the editor of the bestselling Brown Sugar series.
 
Leonce GaiterLeonce Gaiter
http://aalbc.com/authors/leonce_gaiter.html

Raised in New Orleans, Washington D.C., Germany, Missouri, Maryland and elsewhere, Leonce Gaiter is the quintessential army bratrootless, restive, and disagreeable. He began writing in grade school and continued the habit through his graduation from Harvard. He moved to Los Angeles and put his disagreeability to work in the creative and business ends of the film and music industries. His nonfiction writing has appeared in The New York Times, The New York Times Magazine, The Los Angeles Times, The Washington Times, LA Weekly, NY Newsday, The Washington Post, Salon, and in national syndication. His short fiction has appeared in the literary magazine Archipelago. His thriller "Bourbon Street" was published by Carroll & Graf in 2005. He currently lives in Northern California.
 
james e. cherryJames E. Cherry
http://aalbc.com/authors/james_cherry.html

Cherry is the founder/president of The Griot Collective of West Tennessee, a 501(c)(3) literary arts organization where he conducts a monthly poetry workshop. He serves as Artist in Residence for the Tennessee Arts Commission with a primary focus of dealing with troubled teens through both the written and spoken word. He resides in Tennessee with his wife, Tammy.

AALBC.com BOOK REVIEWS (Fiction)
 
cougar talesCougar Tales by Evelyn Palfrey, Sandra Kitt, and Laura Castoro
http://aalbc.com/reviews/cougar_tales.html

Cougar Tales is a delightful set of stories about older women who are reluctant to accept the attentions of a younger man. I enjoyed them very much. What I didnt enjoy were the repeated and I mean REPEATED typos in the book. I am not talking about an uncorrected proof, or a review copy. I purchased this book at an on-line bookstore. The first story had so many errors that it was hard to keep the flow of the storyline. This was repeated throughout the book. All of the stories had too many errors. It pissed me off that the publisher did not care enough about the reader to give us a quality product. None of the authors in this anthology have released poorly edited books, so I am sure the errors can not be attributed to the authors, but to the publisher.
 
secrets and liesSecrets and Lies by Rhonda McKnight 
http://aalbc.com/reviews/secrets_and_lies.html

Rhonda McKnight's debut novel, Secrets and Lies is about a married couple who despite their comfortable financial situation are a family in crisis. Jonah Morgan's successful practice in Pediatric Cardiology allows his wife Faith to be a stay-at-home mother to their two children in a beautiful house in an affluent Atlanta neighborhood with good schools and wonderful friends and neighbors. They drive the best cars, wear expensive clothes and their children are exposed to everything good that life has to offer. 

The author makes good use of this crisis situation in Faith and Jonah's lives. You won't be disappointed with this story. It makes for a night of good reading as they both find healing in a way that mends their family's torn lives.
 
not guily of loveNot Guilty of Love by Pat Simmons
http://aalbc.com/reviews/not_guilty_of_love.html

Romance readers will enjoy this novel because it's not your usual Christian fiction. It's a real love story. Many times, Christian fiction is too preachy and full of literary fluff with a happily-ever-after storyline that only Christian folk can relate to. This is not the case with Not Guilty of Love. Simmons takes the time, the creativity and the imagination to give readers a story that almost everyone can relate to. I'm looking forward her next book. I hear this is a trilogy.
 
god ain't blindGod Ain't Blind by Mary Monroe 
http://aalbc.com/reviews/god_aint_blind.html

Now I have to admit that I am a long-time Mary Monroe fan. Her stories rate up there at the top of fiction reader's most loved novels. Her characters have always been some of the most interesting people that I have never met; so I am sorry to report that her latest in the series, God Ain't Blind; did not do it for me this time. Mary Monroe has been hailed as a masterful storyteller and is a New York Times bestselling author. Mary, Mary, Mary! Why didn't you re-think this one?
 
the exchroniclesThe Ex Chronicles: A Novel by Carol Taylor
http://www.aalbc.com/reviews/exchronicles.html

If any of you have been following me for any length of time, you are well aware of how I feel about the 3, 4 sista-girlfriends novels that had become the staple of African-American literature.  Novels that feature women characters who have no family other their small circle of friends, and the focus is always on how they lose love, or been with the wrong man, but after a tragic event, they solidify the romance to the man they did not expect to be hooking up with.  I grew tired of these books years ago.  I was not in the market to revisit those days.  Imagine my surprise when I got a copy of The Ex-Chronicles by Carol Taylor.  When the novel crossed my desk, I tossed it to the side and thought; somebody obviously did not know me.  I was drawn to the novel anyway.  When I became aware that Taylor was the editor of the Brown Sugar collection, I was intrigued.  I read and loved Brown Sugar.  On the back of Brown Sugars reputation, I put The Ex-Chronicles in my to read pile.  Im glad I did.  There was more substance in The Ex-Chronicles than I suspected.  Easy to read, fast paced, and enthralling, The Ex-Chronicles is a damn good book.  I enjoyed it!
 
buying timeBuying Time by Pamela Samuels Young
http://www.aalbc.com/reviews/buying_time.html

Murder mysteries are fast becoming one of my favorite genres and author Pamela Samuels Young comes highly recommended. Her books have a pretty large following of readers who trust her to give them a great storyline with a very well paced plot and plenty of action.

Young's latest release; Buying Time lived up to her stellar reputation. I literally could not put this book down. The characters were varied. Waverly Sloan is a recently disbarred lawyer whose high-maintenance, spoiled wife Deidra spends his money faster than he can earn it. Waverly, a nice guy whose average looks normally puts a woman like Deidra out of his league, is so happy to have her that he has always allowed her mega spending. Deidra, on the other hand feels entitled. She married him expecting the good life.
 
AALBC.com BOOK REVIEWS (Non-Fiction)
 
monk bookThelonious Monk: The Life and Times of an American Original by Robin D. G. Kelley
http://aalbc.com/reviews/thelonious_monk.html

Highly detailed, stunning, and comprehensive, Robin Kelleys excellent biography of innovative jazz pianist Thelonious Sphere Monk dismisses the previously publicized myth of the allegedly eccentric, bizarre oddball, who was named the High Priest of Bebop. Many of the popular articles and documentaries about Monk perpetuated various  rumors and falsehoods surrounding the man, musician, father, and husband, including the much acclaimed Clint Eastwood-produced film which showed the slow slide of the genius into emotional and physical disarray. With Kelleys incisive analysis of Monk, new light is shed on the man, without the negative psychological labeling or the tabloid warts-and-all viewpoint.
 
entrepreneur guideThe Entrepreneur Guide 2010 Edition by  Owen O. Daniels
http://aalbc.com/reviews/entrepreneur_guide_2010_edition.html

The book is the brainchild of Owen O. Daniels, who recently returned to the States after serving his second tour of duty over in Iraq. Besides rising to the rank of Lieutenant Colonel in the Army, the author has also earned a Bachelors degree in Public Administration from John Jay College in New York, and a Masters in Computer Science with a minor in Business Administration from Webster College in St. Louis.

This unique combination of skills obviously came in very handy in enabling Daniels to craft a sensible step-by-step resource designed to address any question which might arise in the mind of a budding entrepreneur en route to making that first million. Succinctly written in laymans terms the average educated person can understand, the user-friendly text virtually takes you by the hand and walks you through the typical start-up process in sequential fashion.
 
brainwashedBrainwashed: Challenging the Myth of Black Inferiority by Tom Burrell
http://www.aalbc.com/reviews/brainwashed.html

Ever since the dawn of the nation when the Founding Fathers deliberately rationalized slavery by spreading the big lie that black people were inferior, African-Americans have suffered from serious self-esteem issues. But why has this phenomenon continued to persist so long past emancipation and the elimination of the Jim Crow system of segregation?

This is the nagging thought which inspired Tom Burrell to write Brainwashed: Challenging the Myth of Black Inferiority. After all, as an advertising executive with 45 years in the business, he is well aware of the power of propaganda. So he knows that American society has done such a good job on the minds of blacks that they have not only internalized but have willingly participated in the perpetuation and further dissemination of nearly every negative stereotype propagated about them by the media.
 
who black people. . .Why Do Black People Love Fried Chicken? And Other Questions Youve Wondered but Didnt Dare Ask by Nashieqa Washington
http://aalbc.com/reviews/why_do_black_people.html

Basically, her book is designed to address 66 of the most common questions that curious white people have repeatedly asked her about African-Americans, ranging from What is CPT? (The true black ETA at an affair) to Why dont black people get wrinkles? (Because black dont crack) to Do blacks deserve reparations? (Yes, past due wages, plus interest) to Can black people be racist? (No.).
Nashieqa doesnt presume to speak for all black people, instead stipulating that her conclusions were arrived at based upon anecdotal evidence and her own personal observations, not anything scientific. Thus, her responses are intended to entertain as much as they elucidate. Sometimes, she even admits to being stumped, like by the query, Why do black people talk to the movie screen?
 
The Denzel PrincipalThe Denzel Principle: Why Black Women Cant Find Good Black Men by Jimi Izrael
http://aalbc.com/reviews/the_denzel_principle.html

At first, I thought this book was just Jimis way of getting even, and settling a score in a very public fashion with ex-wives Frances and Leslie. But no, he sees their discontent and behavior as par for the course, since in his eyes black females in general set their standards too high and exchange vows with unrealistic expectations of brothers. So, it is no surprise that he would also blame the fact that two-thirds of all African-American marriages end in divorce less on black men and more on black women and their inability to make good choices. 

I doubt that this is the definitive primer on how to find a good black man, unless youre inclined to take advice from a guy who, for instance, would discourage you from falling for an ex-con by simply saying Thats [bleep]-ing stupid! Holy [bleep]! However, as the colorful, comical and relentlessly-raw reflections of a miserable two-time loser with some serious unresolved anger issues, this memoir rates an A+. But when it comes to dating dos and donts, you might want to get a second opinion.
 
the black clergy's guideThe Black Clergy's Misguided Worship Leadership by Christopher C. Bell, Jr. Ed.
http://www.aalbc.com/reviews/the_black_clergys_misguided_worship_leadership.htm

With this defiant publication, The Black Clergy's Misguided Worship Leadership, Dr. Christopher C. Bell, Jr. states his position that white idols have inflicted Blacks with "debilitating white superiority syndrome," adding an element of insidious "emotional emasculation" of Black men in an unfeeling American society. For Dr. Bell, he sees the detrimental effect upon our young males, who act out in negative ways of delinquencies, violence, and crime leading to prison.

Framed as petition with supporting research, Dr. Bell implores the Black Church in this book to stop the worship of a white Jesus Christ, a blue-eyed and blonde deity resembling the actor Jeffrey Hunter or Max Von Sydow. The worship of a white idol stresses the traditional superiority of whites and promotes the notion that God is a white male, according to the author. He sees the open-minded innocence of Black children soaking up into their little minds, absorbing all the tenets of white racism, white privilege, and white supremacy.
 
AALBC.com INTERVIEWS
 
zetta brownZetta Brown - Scotland's Zane Hits Big in Publishing World 
http://aalbc.com/authors/zetta_brown.html

The international publishing world is taking notice off Zetta Browns red hot L-L Publications with its line of unorthodox commercial books. Based in Scotland, L-L Publications and its sister imprint, Logical-Lust, have made profitable inroads across the European continent, and now it has America in its sights. Several of its books have garnered acclaim and critical praise. The following interview with Robert Fleming and Zetta Brown covered many subjects such as censorship, self-publishing, the profit-loss obsession of mainstream publishing, erotica, sex, the craft of writing, and the difference between European vs. American sensibilities.
 
joumanaJoumana Kidd - The Lets Talk about Pep Interview
http://www.aalbc.com/reviews/joumana_kidd.html

In the wake of the tabloid attention devoted to both her very rocky marriage and her messy divorce, Joumana devoted herself to raising her three children: son TJ, and twin girls Miah and Jazelle.  Here, she talks about the delicate balance of her home and love lives, now that shes decided to date again and to let the cameras chronicle her every intimate moment on the new VH1 reality show Lets Talk about Pep.

 
tracy morganTracy Morgan - The Cop Out Interview
http://aalbc.com/reviews/tracy_morgan_the_cop_out.html

Brooklyn-born Tracy Morgan started out in showbiz in his teens, doing standup until he was invited to join Saturday Night Lives ensemble cast in 1996. During his seven seasons on SNL, the colorful comedian played such memorable characters as Brian Fellows, Astronaut Jones and Woodrow while also doing impersonations of everyone from Al Sharpton to Star Jones to Aretha. Currently, Tracy is co-starring opposite Tina Fey and Alec Baldwin on the Emmy-winning NBC series 30 Rock.

Meanwhile, on the big screen, hes made such movies as G-Force, Head of State, How High, The Longest Yard, Little Man, Are We There Yet, First Sunday and Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back. Last fall, he published his autobiography, I Am the New Black. Here, he talks about that memoir and about collaborating again with director Kevin Smith to make Cop-Out, a buddy comedy co-starring Bruce Willis.
 
zaneZane - The Sex Chronicles Interview
http://bit.ly/zane_interview

Zane (not her real name) is the best-selling author of a plethora of African-American-oriented erotica, including Dear G Spot, Afterburn, Gettin' Buck Wild, The Heat Seekers, Addicted and The Sex Chronicles, to name a few. This iconoclastic phenom has also edited and/or contributed to such other titles as Love is Never Painless, Caramel Flava, Chocolate Flava, Best Black Women's Erotica, Brown Sugar 2, Twilight Moods, Dark Dreams, and Becoming Myself. Besides writing, Zane is the publisher of Strebor Books International for which she is responsible for acquiring dozens of titles per year and currently has nearly 50 authors signed to her imprint.

She serves as the moderator of PlanetZane.net, where thousands of her fans who call themselves "Zaniacs" converge on a daily basis to discuss her work, as well as love and relationships. Zane has more than 35,000 MySpace friends and nearly 400,000 friends at BlackPlanet.com. Here, she talks about "Zane's Sex Chronicles" the daring Cinemax television series loosely based on her own real life sexploits, which premiered on Cinemax in October of 2008 and whose first season was recently released on DVD.
 
AALBC.com FILM REVIEWS
 
preachers kidPreacher's Kid - Prodigal Daughter Learns Valuable Life Lessons in Moralizing Melodrama
http://aalbc.com/reviews/preachers_kid.html

As the only child of an overprotective, widowed father, Angie King (Letoya Luckett) almost couldnt help but feel smothered. But when you factor in her dads being both a preacher and a pillar of the community in their tight-knit community in Augusta, Georgia, youve got a serious recipe for rebellion. Thus far, the 23 year-old virgin has devoted herself to the needs of her asthmatic father, between singing in the choir, ministering around the hood and attending services several times a week.

However, everything changes the day Angie decides to run away not to join the circus but a Tyler Perry-esque travelling troupe passing through town, a supposedly spiritually-oriented outfit putting on a faith-based fable featuring Aunt Bebe, a trash-talking character played by a big dude (Carlos Davis) in a dress. For she has developed an instant crush on the shows suave star, Devlin (Durrell Tank Babbs), a Romeo well versed in the art of seduction.
 
the end of povertyThe End of Poverty?- Globalization Documentary Discusses Paradox of Poverty in Era of Unparalleled Wealth
http://aalbc.com/reviews/end_of_poverty.html

Why have so many Third World countries remained impoverished and underdeveloped even after gaining their independence from the European nations which had conquered and colonized them? This is the basic question addressed by The End of Poverty, an incendiary expose directed by Philippe Diaz. In essence, this damning documentary is a history lesson about the ugly underbelly of Western Civilization from 1492 up to the present. 

For not long after Columbus discovered America, European countries began descending on the so-called New World, using both the bullet and the Bible to bend assorted indigenous peoples to their will. The Dutch focused primarily on Asia while the English assured themselves that the sun would never set on the ever-expanding British Empire. Even the Pope got into the act, awarding Africa to Portugal and South America to Spain by papal decree.
 

toe to toeToe to Toe - Coeds Lock Horns and Lacrosse Sticks in Cross-Cultural Drama

http://bit.ly/toetotoereview

For my money, the British flick Fish Tank was easily the best movie released in the first month of 2010. And if I were handing out another accolade for February, that would have to go to this compelling, super-realistic indie, a character-driven affair written and directed by Emily Abt. Ms. Abt, an award-winning filmmaker previously known for such documentaries as Take It from Me and All of Us, makes her first foray into dramatic fare here.

This film made a big splash at Sundance a year ago, when it was nominated for the Grand Jury Prize. Set in the Washington, DC area, it revolves around an unlikely love triangle which comes to test the already tenuous bond of friendship forged between a couple of high school classmates, one black, one white, who play on the lacrosse team.
 

good hairGood Hair - Chris Rocks Lighthearted Look at Sisters Dos Arrives on DVD

http://aalbc.com/reviews/good_hair.html

. . .black hair care has blossomed over the years into a multibillion-dollar industry promising sisters silky tresses via a variety of avenues ranging from hot combs and relaxers to wigs and weaves. Regardless of the combination picked, straight hair comes at a considerable cost, given the toll this high-maintenance habit tends to exact not merely financially, but also in terms of ones time and mental and physical health.

It was this litany of concerns which caused Chris Rock to react when his 5 year-old daughter, Lola, asked, Daddy, why dont I have good hair? Dismayed to think that she might already be struggling with a sensitive self-esteem issue at such a tender age, he decided to do some serious research in order to figure out exactly how to answer her sensibly.
 
black dynamiteBlack Dynamite - Campy Spoof of Blaxploitation Era Comes to Blu-Ray http://aalbc.com/reviews/black_dynamite.html

Set in 1972, the film stars Michael Jai White in the title role as a gun-toting, /span> two-fisted superhero bent on avenging the murder of his brother by the Mafia. Quite conveniently, the mobsters responsible have been flooding the ghetto with heroin and a penis-shrinking brand of malt liquor which afflicts black men with erectile dysfunction. Consequently, Dynamite rationalizes bloody retribution as he makes the most of beaucoup opportunities to even the score as he traces a trail back to the brains of the operation leading all the way to the White House.

Essentially, the movie is a nostalgic throwback celebrating all of the trademarks of the blaxploit genre, from jive pimps in garish outfits with scantily-clad whores to evil politicians with corrupt cops in their pockets to a funky R&B soundtrack to foul-mouthed dialogue laced with both expletives and ethnic slurs. Still, the flicks salient feature is high-body count action, with Dynamite being responsible for the bulk of the butt-kicking.
 
copoutCop Out - Tracy Morgan and Bruce Willis Co-Star in Mismatched Cops Comedy
http://aalbc.com/reviews/cop_out.html

Some of the funniest cop comedies ever made have revolved around a pair of mismatched partners. Such memorable, madcap adventures as Rush Hour and Bad Boys immediately coming to mind in this regard. But the genre has suffered its share of misfirings, too, and unfortunately the readily-forgettable Cop Out falls in that category.

Directed by Kevin Smith, the film stars Bruce Willis and Tracy Morgan as NYPD detectives, with the former playing a wily veteran in contrast to the latters more mercurial, trash-talking village idiot. We learn that despite seemingly incompatible personas, Jimmy Monroe (Willis) and Paul Hodges (Morgan) have somehow been sharing the same police cruiser for nine years.
 
lord save usLord, Save Us from Your Followers
http://aalbc.com/reviews/lord_save_us_from_your_followers.html

How is it that Christianity has come to be so closely associated with the Religious Right and conservative political causes? This is the fundamental question being asked by director Dan Merchant in Lord, Save Us from Your Followers an alternately humorous and sobering look at how far the practice of Christianity has deviated from the teachings of Jesus.

You can tell youve created God in your own image, suggests one of his interviewees, author/activist Anne Lamott, when it turns out God hates all the same people you do. Her tongue in cheek assessment of the state of religion in the U.S. reflects the perspective shared by Mr. Merchant, who proves himself something of a Michael Moore here, as he perambulates the country, microphone in hand, deliberately provoking outrage amidst an array of self-righteous Bible Thumpers.
 
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oscarOscar Predictions 2010 - The Envelope Please: Who Will Win, Who Deserves to Win, Who Was Snubbed
http://bit.ly/oscar_pred

Although Avatar and The Hurt Locker landed 9 Academy Award nominations each, I foresee the former and director James Cameron enjoying a clean sweep. Breaking all box-office records, Avatar is a juggernaut that nobody will be able to stop on Oscar night. This means that The Hurt Locker, which was directed by Camerons ex-wife, Kathryn Bigelow, might very well be shut out entirely, unless the Academy decides to split their votes between the two in the Best Director and Best Picture categories. 

The most hotly-contested of the major categories is Best Actress, where the least deserving, Sandra Bullock, is the sentimental favorite. However, I anticipate that perennial-nominee Meryl Streep (16) will prevail in the most difficult contest to handicap. Thats not the case for the other three acting categories where nominees Jeff Bridges, Christoph waltz and MoNique may as well be making room on the their mantels for a new trophy.
 

naacp award2010 NAACP Image Awards - Precious Dominates Image Awards via Virtual Sweep of Film Categories

http://aalbc.com/reviews/2010_naacp_image_awards.html


A year ago, newly-elected President Barack Obama dominated the NAACP Image Awards. But this go-round, the movie Precious enjoyed that honor, walking away with a half-dozen trophies in the movie categories, including Best Picture, Director (Lee Daniels), Independent Film, Actress (Gabby Sidibe), Supporting Actress (MoNique) and Screenplay (Geoffrey Fletcher).As for television, Tyler Perrys House of Payne proved the voters favorite, netting four awards. 

Among the evenings highlights were an array of gracious acceptance speeches, especially those by MoNique and her teary-eyed co-star Gabby Sidibe, and by their director/producer Lee Daniels who brought down the curtain by continue to speak until the closing credits began to roll. Tyler Perry dedicated his accolade to his late mother who just passed away last December.
 

barack obamaObamas State of the Union Speech: An Oscar-Worthy Performance by Kam Williams

http://www.aalbc.com/reviews/obamas_state_of_the_union_2010.html 

Nonetheless, Obamas yea vote rewarding failure and subsidizing mistakes exposed him as a useful idiot, a corporate tool more concerned about the plight of Wall St. than Main Street, his stern talk about passing stricter banking regulations notwithstanding. (Where are they?) Since his supposedly heartfelt determination to come to the rescue of working-class people was never accompanied by his taking steps to implement any tangible relief measures, then his true intention ostensibly was never to do so. After all, he had no problem handing the banking, automotive and insurance industries additional taxpayer funds as his first order of business as Chief Executive.

Thus, the actual Obama economic philosophy can best be described as the privatizing of profit and the socializing of risk. Yet, with his approval rating sinking to a new low, the black community remains his most staunchly loyal constituency. Can anyone explain to me why, when this is the demographic he takes most for granted?