PUB: Poetry International C. P. Cavafy Poetry Prize > Poets & Writers

Poetry International

C. P. Cavafy Poetry Prize

Deadline:
November 16, 2012

Entry Fee: 
$15

A prize of $1,000 and publication in Poetry International is given annually for a poem. All finalists are considered for publication. The editors will judge. Submit up to three poems with a $15 entry fee ($3 for each additional poem) by November 16. Visit the website for complete guidelines.

Poetry International, C. P. Cavafy Poetry Prize, Department of English and Comparative Literature, Mail Code 6020, 5500 Campanile Drive, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA 92182-8140. (619) 594-1522. Ilya Kaminsky, Editor.

via pw.org

 

PUB: The UNT Rilke Prize - Department of English

The prize is named after the German poet Rainer Maria Rilke (1875-1926), a writer whose work embodies the qualities of ambition, intellectual and imaginative scope, and technical mastery we seek to recognize.

Description

An annual award of a $10,000 award recognizing a book that demonstrates exceptional artistry and vision written by a mid-career poet and published in the preceding year.

Guidelines

  • Entrants must have published at least two previous books of poetry and be U.S. citizens or legal resident aliens of the United States.

  • Work must be original poetry written in English.

  • Books may be submitted by presses or by writers themselves in the month of November and must be postmarked by November 30, 2012.

  • Eligible books must have been published between November 1, 2011 and October 31, 2012 of the preceding year.

  • Each submission must include a copy of the book and a completed entry form.

  • Email a copy of the entry form to lisa.vining@unt.edu .

  • Self-published books will not be considered.

  • Finalists may be asked to submit further copies.

  • Books will not be returned.

The winner will travel to Texas to give readings at UNT and at The Dallas Institute of Humanities and Culture on April 9th and 10th, 2013. UNT will pay for travel expenses. The author must also allow portions of the winning work to be reproduced for promoting the award. Poets who enter the prize must agree to these terms in order to accept the prize.

Results will be announced in January.

Judging

The prize will be judged by UNT’s poetry faculty.

Submission Requirements

Authors or publishers will email entry form and include a copy with the book submission. Entry form (found here) and submission should be sent to:

The UNT Rilke Prize
Department of English
University of North Texas
1155 Union Circle #311307
Denton, TX 76203-5017

Lisa.Vining@unt.edu 

Previous Winners

Laura Kasischke, 2012 for Space, in Chains               

Click here for more information about our inaugural winner!

Click here for a podcast interview with Laura Kasischke.

 

If you have any questions please contact Lisa Vining at lisa.vining@unt.edu  or 940-369-5981.

 

PUB: A. Poulin Jr. Poetry Prize - A. Poulin Jr. Poetry Prize > BOA Editions

A. Poulin Jr. Poetry Prize

The A. Poulin, Jr. Poetry Prize is awarded to honor a poet's first book, while also honoring the late founder of BOA Editions, Ltd., a not-for-profit publishing house of poetry and poetry in translation. [Get the entry form]

FINAL JUDGE: Dorianne Laux [Bio]

WINNER RECEIVES:

A $1,500 Honorarium and book publication by BOA Editions, Ltd. in spring 2014, in the A. Poulin, Jr. New Poets of America Series.

ELIGIBILITY:

  • Entrants must be a citizen or legal resident of the United States.

  • Poets, who are at least 18 years of age, who have yet to publish a full-length-book collection of poetry.

  • Translations are not eligible.

  • Individual poems from the manuscript may have been published previously in magazines, journals, anthologies, chapbooks of 32 pages or less, or self-published books of 46 pages or less, but must be submitted in manuscript form. Published books in other genres do not disqualify contestants from entering this contest.

  • Employees, volunteers and board members of BOA Editions, Ltd., or their partners or spouses, or their immediate families, or immediate family of the judge are not eligible.

  • As per the Publishing Contest Ethics, as advanced by the Council of Literary Magazines and Presses (CLMP), any person who has studied poetry in a formal program with the Final Judge -- through a college, university, community program, residency, or private tutorial, within the last two years -- is not eligible to submit a manuscript to this contest.

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES REQUIREMENTS:

Send one copy of the manuscript, our entry form, and the $25 entry fee, to BOA Editions, Ltd. between August 1 and November 30, 2012 at the address listed below. Make check or money orders payable to BOA Editions. Do not pay by credit card.

MANUSCRIPT FORMAT:

  • Minimum of 48 pages, maximum of 100 pages of poetry.

  • Manuscript should be 1 1/2 or double spaced.

  • At least 11pt. font.

  • Name address and telephone number must appear on the title or cover page of the manuscript.

  • Do not send artwork or photographs.

  • Typed or word-processed on standard white paper, on one side of the page only.

  • Paginated consecutively with a table of contents.

  • Bound with a spring clip (no paperclips, please).

  • Attach publications acknowledgments if any.

  • Include a stamped, self-addressed postcard for notification of receipt of manuscript.

  • Do not send by FedEx or UPS.

  • Electronic and fax submissions will not be accepted.

  • Neither late nor early manuscripts will be accepted.

  • Contestants may submit the manuscript elsewhere simultaneously, but must notify BOA Editions immediately, by mail in an envelope, (not a postcard or email), if a manuscript is accepted by another publisher.

  • Once submitted, manuscripts cannot be altered. Winner will be given the opportunity to revise before publication.

  • Contestants may submit more than one manuscript, but a separate entry fee and entry form must accompany each manuscript.

  • Manuscripts mailed from foreign countries risk not being received before final selections have been made.

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES SUGGESTED:

  • Send manuscript in a plain or padded envelope. Please no boxes.

  • For notification of competition results, include a business-size SASE.

  • Keep a copy of your manuscript, as manuscripts will not be returned.

  • We advise that you send your manuscript by first class or priority mail.

ANSWERS TO FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS:

  • The winner will be announced in March 2013.

  • Winning manuscript will be published in spring 2014, in an original paperback edition in the [A. Poulin, Jr. New Poets of America Series].

  • The winner will retain full copyright of his or her work.

  • The paper from all manuscripts will be recycled after the winner is announced.

  • BOA Editions assumes no responsibility for loss of manuscripts.

Send manuscripts, postmarked between August 1 and November 30, 2012, to:

BOA Editions, Ltd.
PO Box 30971
Rochester, NY 14604

 

VIDEO: 10 films to watch out for, N°9 > Africa is a Country

10 films to watch out for, N°9

In no particular order, here are another 10 films — still in production, recently completed or already making the rounds — we hope to see one day. All of them documentary films this week. First up, Electrical Rites in Guinea-Conakry, Julien Raout and Florian Draussin’s music documentary on the omnipresence, the appropriation and the different roles of the electric guitar in Guinea’s musical landscape. Trailer above. Next, Le Chanteur de l’Ombre (“Singer from the shadow”) is Yann Lucas’s portrait of maloya singer Simon ‘Dada’ Lagarrigue, “pillar of the culture of Réunion” (film pitch), and the role Dada played in the political and union fights in the French département d’outre-mer during the seventies and eighties:

In Revolution under 5′ Rhida Tlili tails a group of Tunisian street artists (Ahl el Kahf) in the wake of the ousting of Ben Ali:

Cinéma Inch’Allah! is a film about four Belgian-Moroccan friends who grew up making movies; the documentary follows the production process of their latest film. Promising trailer in French:

The Last Hijack is a film about two Somali cousins — “both a feature-length documentary and an online transmedia experience, which offer the viewer a unique and original way to explore the story of Somali piracy from different perspectives,” according to the production’s very serious notes:

La vie n’est pas immobile (“Life isn’t immobile”) is Senegalese director Alassane Diago’s portrait of Houleye Ba, leader of a group of “indignées” women who stand up against their men’s decision over what will happen to their land. No English subtitles yet:

Arian Astrid Atodji put to film the villagers of Koundi’s (East Province, Cameroon) decision to organise a union and to create a cocoa plantation to be able to depend on themselves, very much aware of the riches they sit on. Koundi, Le Jeudi National (“Koundi, National Thursday” — a reference to the monthly day on which the villagers all work on the development of the plantation) is a film from 2011 but only recently surfaced at international film festivals. As yet, no English subtitles either:

In Letters from Angola Dulce Fernandez delves into the lives of six Cubans (men and women) and their relation with, and participation in, the Angolan War for Independence:

Documented over eight years, Afrikaner Girl is Annalet Steenkamp’s first feature length documentary. It’s a portrait of a South African family (her family) — four generations of Afrikaners in rural South Africa:

And finally, also set in rural South Africa (Eastern Cape), is Tim Wege’s King Naki and the Thundering Hooves. Here’s the official trailer, but watch this 12 minute fragment:

Next week: more fiction.

 

CULTURE: "Celebrity Author & Egyptian-Sudanese Womanist Kola Boof Writes an Open Letter to Nina Simone Director Cynthia Mort About the Erasure of Nina's Image | Beauty > Yahoo! Shine

"Celebrity Author &

Egyptian-Sudanese Womanist

Kola Boof Writes

an Open Letter

to Nina Simone Director

Cynthia Mort

About the Erasure

of Nina's Image

 

Controversy stirs amongst black women as Fair Skinned tiny Dominican/Puerto-Rican Zoe Saldana plays the part in the new Nina Simone Film.

 

Kola Boof

According to "Celebrity Author & Egyptian-Sudanese Womanist Kola Boof:

A new film directed by a White woman who claims to be Nina Simone's number one fan aims to achieve what America couldn't achieve while Nina was alive-the total erasure of the Empress of Activist-Cool from her own Black image-an image so subversive and counter culture in its dark Negroid-ness that the challenge of living it imbued Nina with a justifiably rebellious and outspoken symphony of under-dog passions; all of it expressed through grandly operatic musical masterpieces, scornfully bold and unrepentant public truth-telling, beautifully Afro-sculptural body posturing, and most of all, Nina's defiant love for herself and for her people's political well-being. Nina Simone was no ordinary jazz stylist, woman or public figure. Everything about her was intelligence married to fire. She was charismatic, eccentric and Queenly. And above all else-she was the moving embodiment of raw cultured Blackness.

This is why it's truly a milestone in revisionist history and Hollywood Colorism that the unauthorized film so disingenuously titled "NINA" casts the typical BET-caliber privileged but talented light skinned actress-in this case not Halle Berry or Thandie Newton, but up and coming go-to-Princess Zoe Saldana, a valiant self-proclaimed Latina of African descent via the Dominican Republic as Nina Simone.

I've always liked Zoe Saldana. You could even say that I was a big fan. But since the "Nina" controversy I've lost respect for her.

The film's White woman director (bursting with good intentions as white women always are) unwittingly demonstrates why White women and Black women have not been able to forge a true sisterhood-the white sister can't see the Black sister's reality even when staring straight at her. And because of that inability to see us, the image chosen to represent Nina becomes a mocking dehumanization, an erasure of Nina's swarthy and robust Black victory. Everything Nina stood for while surviving in that Black body becomes whitened and desensitized by the cloying signature of dishonesty. But of course, White people are making this film for White people anyway. None of these films from "Django Unchained" to "Nina" give a care about the Black people they're depicting. They'd cast Adele (the overrated twang crooner) as Nina if they thought they could get away with it. As an African-born woman, not a true Westerner, I feel completely comfortable stating what's obvious-that it matters that the woman who plays Nina Simone be dark enough. And that it matters that she have ties to the American Southern States (Dixie they call it). It matters that she be grounded in the lacerating reality of America's unrelenting anti-Black woman imaging and socialization.

How someone claiming to love Nina and wanting to honor Nina could fail to see the importance in that is beyond my comprehension. I detest Cynthia Mort. I suspect Capitalism and typical Miss Anne entitlement and delusion are her real conduits.

Of course many people disagree with me. The argument goes that we're denying Zoe Saldana her own Black identity and a chance to win an Oscar. But then photos are released showing Saldana on the set "as Nina" and wonder of wonders-she's done up in Black face like a minstrel imitating a Black person! She's got dentures, a prosthetic nose, Afro wig-begging the question-why didn't they just cast a sensible choice like Kimberly Elise, Yolanda Ross (Stranger Inside), India Arie or Nina's personal pick Whoopi Goldberg in the first place?

Some say it's because Saldana is a proven box-office star after playing in several Hollywood action films. But I say recent two-time Oscar nominee Viola Davis is just as hot and that Viola's film "The Help" grossed twice as much as Saldana's last two films, "Columbiana" and "The Words"-combined. So who's the hot property? And just think about it. If Viola Davis starred as "NINA," she'd put her foot in the pot and come up with yet another Oscar nomination if not an outright win. The publicity from that would drive up the box-office and DVD sales. They'd have a hit and a prestige picture in one. Or imagine if cultural genius Lauryn Hill had a notion to use this as a showy comeback vehicle-or if the ravishingly beautiful and hungry-for-a-chance newcomer Adepero Oduye (Pariah) got to dazzle us with her too often unemployed brilliance. But with Saldana, all the filmmakers have is unforgiving rage from the one group of people that can make this film flop simply by refusing to show up-Black women. And I can promise you right now, that's exactly what's going to happen.

Black American women are tired of the colorist Hollywood caste system. They love Nina Simone religiously. They know that Nina's daughter Simone was not asked to be a consultant or even contacted to give her blessing. They know the leading man that Nina falls in love with in the film was a strict homosexual in real life and that his reality, too, is being erased for the purpose of making a quick buck instead of art with integrity. They aren't dumb enough to pay their hard earned money to be so degraded and erased from their own historical imprint. Cynthia Mort's film will flop, because enough of us have vowed to make it flop. But what a wasted opportunity! Imagine if they'd done this thing right and put the real "NINA" in the moan. Imagine if they hadn't rendered Nina invisible in her own story. With Viola Davis, Lauryn Hill or Yolanda Ross as Nina, it would have become a classic.

_____________________

Kola Boof is an award winning author. Her latest novel is "The Sexy Part of the Bible," published by Akashic Books.

There is absolutley nothing more I would add to this article, Kola said it all!

 

POV: Black Women, Black Criticism, and the Unremovable Veil of Jezebel > The Feminist Wire

Black Women, Black Criticism,

and the Unremovable Veil

of Jezebel

November 2, 2012


 

In her groundbreaking text, Hine Sight: Black Women and the Reconstruction of American History, black feminist scholar Darlene Clark Hine makes a distinction between black women and girl’s experiences “under slavery” and “after slavery.”  She opines that under slavery black women and girls placed priority on protecting their sexual being, however during freedom, while both violence and the threat of violence, sexual and otherwise, remained in tact, emphasis on safeguarding their sexual image increased.  Of course, the preservation of both sexual being and image were always and continue to be significant sources of simultaneous anxiety.  To be sure, the distinction that Clark Hine makes seems to operate on a continuum, not monochrome.  That is, angsts over our sexual beings and/or images are constantly influx and intermingled.  However, the rage and course of the river shifts often, depending on context.

When I entered academe ten years ago, I fancied it as safe space—a world away from the violence and the continuous threat of such “out there”—a world most definitely unaccompanied by ubiquitous black female stereotypes.  I was wrong.  For black women choosing not to “stay in their lane,” academia can be a microcosm of the life world “out there.”  I learned this lesson approximately 1 year, 7 months, and 11 days ago—the last time I wrote anything for the public sphere.

Growing up, I was always a firecracker, one to speak my truth as I viewed it, regardless.  My parents encouraged it.  However, it was my intellectual mentors who fortified it.  Like an M.C. they pushed me to “go hard” no matter what and no matter who.  I spent years in the cut learning the critical grammar of bell hooks, Michele Wallace, Hortense Spillers, and others like Stuart Hall, Judith Butler, Jacques Derrida, Ferdinand de Saussure, etc. etc. While in graduate school my mentors seemed to take extra care to ensure that I was equally sufficient in multiple fields and ready to parlay with the best of minds regardless of context.  They trained me as a multi-disciplinary critic and I loved it!!  That is, until the day I decided to actually use those skills in the public domain—post graduate school.

I was punished.  I wrote a critical book review essay that spoke my truth as I saw it, regardless.  I knew it would cause tension.  However, I never imagined fire.  To my mind, I was jumping into a game of intellectual hopscotch, just as I’d seen my male colleagues do many times before.  Naively, I thought it was my turn.  However, I learned quickly that the game of intellectual criticism is not only gendered, but also has psychological, emotional and reputational (and thus, representational) risks—if you are a black woman.

I was a newly minted black feminist scholar of religion…who critiqued the work of a tenured black male scholar.  Among all other sorts of criticisms re: staying in my lane, people asked, “Are they fucking?”  Really?!??  I pledged Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. at Sigma Chapter at Clark Atlanta University in 1995.  I know full well how to let things that people say about or to me, “roll off my back,” and have been known to withstand the harshest of criticisms without even flinching.  However, the idea that my work as a black feminist scholar of religion and black cultural critic was somehow underpinned by some sort of fantastic and unscrupulous sexual liaison between the author and I sent me into a year long, deep depression and almost two years of silence.

I had spent years researching linguistic and representational deployments of the Jezebel trope in scholarship, religion, and popular culture.  I never imagined that I too would be reconfigured and cast with the veil of Jezebel.  How the hell did that happen?!?  I’m a scholar—an academic M.C. (so I thought).  I was intellectually honest—true to my call as a researcher and writer, and true to my reading of the text.  Moreover, I was true to the community in which I feel led to serve through my works: black women and girls.  Still, truth seeking and speaking comes with a fee.  I paid it.  Then I disappeared.  I tightened my circle and stopped communicating with male colleagues.  Clearly, it wasn’t safe.  My sexual image was at stake.  I was being read, but not on my terms.  I was devastated.

For me, “wellness” has always been intricately connected to speaking and seeking truth(s).  However, doing so as a black female academic in academia made me sick.  Literally.  Over time, I realized that it wasn’t the practice of truth speaking and seeking that made me ill, it was the behind the scenes and/or thinly veiled raging waters of the gate-keepers of hetero-sexist patriarchal respectability politics that threatened my well being, and the alienation and censure that sexism produced in some sectors of academe that made me sick.  “Perhaps Fanon was right,” I thought.  There really is no ontological resistance in terms of perception.  I was their Jezebel.  I had to be.  Why else would a black woman be courageous (read: “crazy”) enough to publicly critique a black man?  I must be a woman scorned—a loud talking, Jezebelian, angry black woman, all rolled into one.  Not.

In an essay entitled, “Changing the Letter: The Yokes, the Jokes of Discourse, or, Mrs. Stowe, Mr. Reed,” a comparative reading of Uncle Tom’s Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe and Flight to Canada by Ishmael Reed, inspired by Ralph Ellison’s essay, “Change the Joke and Slip the Yoke,” Hortense Spillers argues that if you have the luxury of writing about a phenomenon and are thus situated toward it in a particular manner, words (“letters”) can be manipulated (“changed”) in a variety of ways to tell a story that may be either liberative or oppressive (“yoke”).  Therefore meanings, even once reduced to the ideas of others, cannot be fixed.  Instead, they are constantly being realigned and reconfigured, although sometimes appearing stabilized by routinization and mass-production.  Truth speaking and seeking, regardless, enables black women academics to not only remain healthy, but to change the letter and loosen the yoke.  When talking about “Changing the Letter” and the seemingly permanence of black female stereotypes several years ago, Spillers declared to me, “we are not to ourselves who we are to the world!”  I concur.  Resistance lies within.

Still, if wellness (for me at least) resides in intellectual honesty, and intellectual honesty allows one to “change the letter and loosen the yoke” of structural sexism outside of and within academe, at least for moments at a time, how does one remain well within that context when its metalanguage secretes and infuses capitalistic notions of competition between male and female scholars, black and otherwise, which effectively mock the superstructures, sexism and otherwise, we’re supposed to be critiquing?  I don’t have the answer to this.  However, what I do know is this: in addition to individual resistance, community is essential to survival and success in the academy, particularly for women, and especially for black women.  Still, community isn’t always what or where we think or hope it is.  My community arose mainly among people, some of whom I’ve never even laid eyes on in person, who connected with the greater historical narrative of sexism within the black diaspora, too often re-appropriated and maintained in black academia.  It is this community that loved me into speaking and writing again, and whose names I call as I write publically for the first time since March of 2011, and…whose ongoing, fearless examination of “community” pushes me forth to speak truth about the existing system of power relations within blackademia, regardless.

 

VIDEO: Mortu Nega “Death Denied” (Guinea-Bissau-Film) > TheNewAfrican

Amilcar Cabral, Leader of PAIGC

 

Mortu Nega “Death Denied”

(Guinea-Bissau-Film) (by KRBNSN)

Mortu Nega (English: Death Denied or Those Whom Death Refused) is a 1988 historic film by Flora Gomes, a director from Guinea-Bissau. Mortu Nega was Gomes’ first feature-length film. This is the first docufiction, more precisely the first ethnofiction, from his country that shows, in an expressive and touching way, the experiences of the Guinea-Bissau War of Independence. Mortu Nega was the first film produced in independent Guinea-Bissau. Its world premiere was at the Venice Film Festival on August 29, 1988.

 

HISTORY + VIDEO: The 1979 Greensboro Massacre > The New Liberator

The 1979

Greensboro Massacre

Nelson Johnson

Nelson Johnson at the body of Jim Waller

Late morning, November 3, 1979, at the corner of Carver and Everitt Streets in Greensboro, North Carolina, forty Ku Klux Klansmen and American Nazis handed each other shotguns and automatic weapons from the trunks of their cars and opened fire on black and white anti-Klan demonstrators and union organizers who had gathered at Morningside Homes, a black housing project.

ssmith
Sandi Smith

 Sandi Smith, a nurse who’d been active in the black student movement and was at the time trying to unionize textile workers, was shot between the eyes. 

The KKK and Nazi members shot at anyone who wasn’t hiding while four television news teams and one police officer recorded the action.  They then got back into their cars and sped away after which the Greensboro police arrived and began arresting protestors.

In the aftermath five people were killed and 11 wounded in the attack.   All five were members of the Workers Viewpoint Organization (WVO), and four were rank-and-file union leaders and organizers.

*Murdered were:

Sandi Smith,  president of the student body and a founding member of the Student Organization for Black Unity (SOBU) at Greensboro’s Bennett College. She was a community organizer for the Greensboro Association of Poor People (GAPP) and became a worker at the textile mill where she and others formed the Revolution Organizing Committee (ROC) to unionize the plant. Sandi was a leader of a march of over 3,000 people in Raleigh to free the Wilmington 10, ten young activists jailed on false charges to stop them from organizing. In her work at a Cone Mills textile plant, she battled sexual harassment, low wages, and unhealthy working conditions.  

Jim Waller

Jim Waller

Dr. Jim Waller who received his medical degree from the University of Chicago and trained at the Lincoln Hospital Collective in New York City. In 1973 at Wounded Knee, South Dakota, Waller organized medical aid and set up a clinic to aid American Indian Movement activists under siege by the FBI. When he moved to North Carolina to teach at Duke University he coordinated Brown Lung screenings in textile mills, co-founding the Carolina Brown Lung Association. He later gave up his medical practice to organize workers becoming vice president of the AFL-CIO local textile workers union  Waller and went to work in a Cone Mills textile plant in Haw River. From inside he helped organize and eventually became president of the AFL-CIO union local after leading a strike in 1978 that helped the union grow from about 25 members to almost 200.

wsampson
Bill Sampson

William “Bill” Sampson was a student anti-war activist and president of his college student body. He studied at the Sorbonne in Paris during college, received his Masters degree in Divinity from Harvard in 1971, then studied medicine at the University of Virginia. As a medical student he organized health care workers to support the liberation struggles in southern Africa. Bill left medical school to work and organize in one of Cone Mills’ Greensboro textile plant, where he built the union and focused on training new leaders. The workers had chosen Bill to run for president of the local.

Cesar Cauce
Cesar Cauce

Cesar Cauce was a Cuban immigrant who graduated magna cum laude from Duke University, where he was a campus leader in the anti-war movement. He rejected a full scholarship to study history at the University of California at Berkeley and instead to help to unionize Duke Hospital workers. Cesar organized strike support for union struggles throughout NC and was a regular participant in the Goldkist strike, a campaign to organize poultry workers in Durham. He also traveled extensively throughout the South, writing about class struggles for the Workers Viewpoint.

Michael Nathan
Michael Nathan

Dr. Michael Nathan, chief of pediatrics at Lincoln Community Health Center in Durham, a clinic that helped children from low-income families. Nathan had been an anti-war and civil rights student activist at Duke University. He organized and led a chapter of the Medical Committee for Human Rights (MCHR), an organization that fought for improved health care for poor people. Mike studied child health and treated sick children in a mountain clinic in Guatemala in 1972 and 1973, and was a leader in a movement to send aid to liberation fighters who eventually toppled the apartheid system is what’s now Zimbabwe.

The permitted march and rally, declaring “Death to the Klan” was organized by the WVO, which was active in the poor neighborhoods and textile mills in the area. It advocated antiracism, unionism, and communist revolution. The group had previously clashed with Ku Klux Klan members prior to the deadly November encounter.  In July 1979 anti-racism protesters disrupted a screening of a pro-white supremacist film, “Birth Of A Nation” in China Grove, North Carolina.

Before the deadly encountered Klan Grand Dragon Virgil Griffin declared, “We can take our country back from the Communist Party, we can take it back from the niggers. It’s time for us to band together. If we have to git in the streets and fight in blood up to our knees, by God, it’s time to git ready to fight! Give them what they want! Fight for this country!”  Griffin “was in the lead car that came in and attacked our march,” said Sally Bermanzohn, one of the survivors of the massacre in which her husband Paul was critically wounded.

At the time, the polite white citizens of Greensboro said it was as a “shoot-out” between “outside agitators.”  And, that all of the dead were communists.  But the back story was that four of the five killed were white men who allied themselves with the black poor and working class’ grievance with the white power structure.  When white radicals began entering the mills, organizing cross-racially, and were elected to union positions, there was “a convergence of forces for social, racial, and economic justice” that the white power structure opposed and hoped would go away.

Court proceedings later revealed that the Greensboro Police Department had an informant in the Klan to whom they had given a copy of the march permit and route, and who two days later would lead the white supremacist caravan.  He informed for the FBI as well.  The federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, also had been running surveillance on the WVO and had an informant among the Nazis as well. At the time of the killings, the police special agent in charge of the Klan informant was at the back of the caravan, having trailed it to the site. He did not intervene, or radio for help, or trip a siren, or pursue the killers as nine of their vehicles got away. Arrests occurred only because two police officers broke ranks and apprehended a van.

Sixteen people were arrested but only six were brought to trial. After two criminal trials all-white juries acquitted the six defendants.  To this day not a single gunman has spent a day in prison, although in 1985 a civil jury found the city, the Ku Klux Klan, and the Nazis liable for violating the civil rights of one demonstrator; the city paid the widow of Dr. Michael Nathan $351,000 on behalf of all parties – some of which was used as seed money for grassroots progressive organizations.

The Greensboro Massacre was one of the “worst homicidal racial and political assaults of the era”, yet there is no historical markers of remembrance to the event, and at the site where it occurred, the streets have since been rerouted, names changed so the bloody intersection no longer exists.

In 2005, Greensboro residents, inspired by post- apartheid South Africa initiated a Truth and Reconciliation Commission to take public testimony and examine the causes and consequences of the massacre; the efforts of the Commission were officially opposed by the Greensboro City Council. The Commission determined that Klan members went to the rally intending to provoke a violent confrontation, and that they fired on demonstrators. It also found that the Greensboro Police Department had infiltrated the Klan and, through a paid informant, knew of the white supremacists’ plans and the strong potential for violence. The informant had formerly been on the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s payroll but had maintained contact with his agent supervisor. Consequently, the FBI was also aware of the impending armed confrontation.

 [Bios from Greensboro Truth and Reconcialition website - http://www.gtcrp.org/memory.php] | [ edited by Kevin Alexander Gray]

 

VIDEO: Gil Scott-Heron

GIL SCOTT-HERON

<p>Gil Scott-Heron: On Being New Here from Iain & Jane on Vimeo.</p>

__________________________

Video:

Gil Scott Heron

Live At El Rey Theatre

[Final L.A. Concert]

 

From videographer Theo Jemison comes this historic footage of Gil Scott Heron‘s final concert in Los Angeles, recorded October 4th, 2009 at The El Rey Theatre. This clip includes “Winter in America”; “We Almost Lost Detroit” and “The Other Side,” all performed in an intimate setting for a crowd that included Gil’s daughter Gia. Watch above and read the firsthand account from DJ Jeremy Sole (KCRW) below:

Gil was never a brother to take the power of words lightly, and this monumental night was a shining example of his affective and explosive concoction of humor, intellect, wit and humility. It was one of my highest honors as a DJ to open up for him that night. We all knew we were being treated to an especially intimate show, a candid experience that turned the El Rey theatre into family time around his kitchen table. Perhaps it was the fact that his daughter Gia was in the crowd. The night was a future memory in the making. Little did we know that that would be the last time Los Angeles would have the honor of hearing, learning from, and laughing along with Gil. He passed shortly after this concert, but if bodies are temporary, words are eternal – and as a man of words Gil Scott-Heron is now a man of eternity. Rest In Peace, Gil. – Jeremy Sole (KCRW)

spotted at HB

>via: http://www.okayplayer.com/news/video-gil-scott-heron-live-at-el-rey-theatre-1...