PUB: Call for Papers: ‘Children’s Literature from the Commonwealth of Nations’ > Geoffrey Philp, author of Who's Your Daddy?

Call for Papers:

‘Children’s Literature from the

Commonwealth of Nations’

We invite submissions for a Special Issue of Bookbird in conjunction with the Commonwealth Education Trust (CET). The CET has promoted education, literacy and literature throughout the member states of the Commonwealth of Nations for 125 years. Their work has much in common with IBBY. Papers are invited on the literatures of Commonwealth countries, as well as on literacy education, the development of the imagination and critical thinking through reading, and other practical uses of literature. Papers of 4000 words are invited on, but not limited to, the following topics: 

  • National identity in literature for children and teens

  • Literacy programmes which incorporate children’s literature

  • Thematic developments in national literatures

  • Indigenous and diasporic literatures for children

  • Multilingual children’s literature

  • The impact of colonization and/or Empire on national literatures for children

  • The oral tradition and/or literary retellings

  • Trends in illustration techniques

  • Prizes for children’s literature

  • Non-fiction publishing for children and teens

Titles and abstracts of 250 words should be sent to both editors by 15th May 2012. Roxanne Harde rharde@augustana.ca and Lydia Kokkola lydia.kokkola@utu.fi

The full papers will be expected by 30th June 2012. Please see Bookbird’s website at www.ibby.org/bookbird for full submission details.

In addition, short reviews of recently published children’s literature (c.a. 300 words) or of research on children’s literature (c.a. 750 words) are warmly welcomed.

Papers which are not accepted for this issue will be considered for later issues of Bookbird.


Bookbird: A Journal of International Children's Literature (ISSN 0006 7377) is a refereed journal published quarterly by IBBY

 

PUB: Call for Contributions: Muslims and Ageing (Contemporary Islam Journal) > Writers Afrika

Call for Contributions:

Muslims and Ageing

(Contemporary Islam Journal)


Deadline: 31 July 2012

The International referred journal Contemporary Islam: Dynamics of Muslim Life welcomes and encourages the submission of articles which reflect on ageing, perceptions of it and the impact that it has on Muslim communities both in Muslim majority countries as well as Muslims living in the west.

QUESTIONS AND TOPICS FOR DISCUSSION INCLUDE, BUT ARE NOT LIMITED TO:

- The concept of ageing as discussed among Muslims

- Ageing identity and self among Muslims communities

- Challenges faced by Muslim communities as far as an increased ageing population

- Changes in the care of the elderly among contemporary Muslim communities

- Problems that elderly Muslims face in the West as far as care and support are concerned

- Ageing and faith

- Relations between the young and the old: inter-generational conflict, respect, and veneration

- Political and social discrimination against elderly Muslims.

The deadline for receipt of submissions is 31 July 2012 For this special issue, please direct all enquiries, requests for further information as well as actual manuscripts to our Assistant
Editor: Ms Siobhan Irving siobhan.irving@gmail.com

SOME INFORMATION ABOUT CONTEMPORARY ISLAM:

- Contemporary Islam has an acceptance rate of about 33% (applying to original research papers, so excluding book reviews and special issue papers)

- Contemporary Islam has a very fast “time-to-first-decision” of 53 days on average despite submitting manuscripts to a very selective peer-review process (2 or 3 peer-reviewers)

-Thousands of academic institutions worldwide now offer access to Contemporary Islam

CONTACT INFORMATION:

For inquiries: siobhan.irving@gmail.com

For submissions: siobhan.irving@gmail.com

Website: http://www.springer.com/journal/11562

 

PUB: Zharmae Press's $1500 Spring Science Fiction-Fantasy-Horror Writer's Competition (worldwide) > Writers Afrika


Zharmae Press's $1500 Spring

 Science Fiction-Fantasy-Horror

 Writer's Competition (worldwide)


Deadline: 5 May 2012

WHO CAN PARTICIPATE?

The competition is open to anyone in the known universe with an interest in science fiction, fantasy, or horror. Participants must be at least 13 years old to enter. If you are under 18 years of age, you must have your parent’s permission to participate.

WHEN CAN I SUBMIT MY WORK?

The competition runs every year from February 5th to May 5th, however, we do accept submissions year-round. Entries received after May 5th will be considered for the upcoming year's competition. Winners are announced annually on June 5th.

WHY DO YOU HOLD THE COMPETITION?

TZPP Holds the competition as one way of recruiting qualified authors to work with for full length books. Many of the winning writers, especially those in the Top 5 get offers to work with TZPP on future works.

HOW MUCH DOES THE COMPETITION COST TO ENTER?

It’s free to enter the competition!

WHAT ARE THE RULES (They’re As Easy As 1-2-3!)

1. Dream up (on paper) a story of 5,000 to 20,000 words of amazing science fiction, brilliant fantasy, or heinous horror.

2. Proofread your work for errors in spelling and grammar (remember to always put your best foot forward)

3. Submit your story for the opportunity to win up to $400 and publication in our Annual Anthology.

PRIZES

All winners will receive publication in our Annual Anthology, and three free copies of the anthology they are featured in, as well as, cash prizes totaling $1,500!

Winners will receive their cash prizes based on the following ranking:

  • 1st Place $400
  • 2nd Place $350
  • 3rd Place $300
  • 4th Place $250
  • 5th Place $200

HOW DO I SUBMIT?

All submissions will be electronically sent to competitions@zharmae.com as an attachment. Acceptable formats need to be document/text files, double spaced with one inch margins all around.

The Subject line should read: Last Name, First Name -- Annual Spring Sci-Fi & Fantasy 20XX Submission

In the body of the email you need to include the following information:

  • Name: Travis Grundy
  • Street: 123 Apple St,
  • City/State: Spokane, WA 99205
  • Phone: 509-555-1234 (cell/home)
  • Email: travis@zharmae.com
  • Title of Work: “The Day I Became Invisible”
  • Word Count: 8,205 words
  • Comments to the Editor: I hope that you have as much fun reading this story as I had writing it!

That's it! You'll hear back from us within thirty (30) days of the close of competition if you are a winner. We will publish a list of the winners and their story titles by June 5th. We wish the best of luck to all participants.

NOTICE: If you submit a winning short, you will be notified within thirty (30) days of the close of this competition. Additional information will be required for publication and copyright registration. Winners will receive three complimentary editions of the Anthology. This competition is open to all persons, 13 years of age or older. Entrance in this contest does not constitute an agreement by the publisher to accept or to publish your work. All submissions are subject to future use by the Publisher. Should a submission be used in any way other than and or through inclusion in an upcoming anthology, the writer will be compensated at a rate of at least $25, but not more than $100 and no further compensation will be required. Copyright is retained by the Author. Works accepted for publication may require additional contract signing. Accepted authors acknowledge that prize winnings constitute full payment for the use of their work, and no further payments will be owed to the Author from the sale of the works to include advances against royalties, or future royalties. The Annual Spring Science Fiction & Fantasy Writer's Competition is one method used by The Zharmae Publishing Press, L.L.C. to recruit qualified writers for future endeavors.

CONTACT INFORMATION:

For inquiries: competitions@zharmae.com

For submissions: competitions@zharmae.com

Website: http://zharmae.com/

via writersafrika.blogspot.com

 

ECONOMICS: Boom time for Mozambique, once the basket case of Africa > The Guardian

Boom time for Mozambique,

once the basket case

of Africa

 

As African lions outpace Asian tigers, one of the world's poorest states is moving from civil war bust to boom – but who will gain?

A Mozambican gold miner in Manica province. The wealth of resources in the southern African country could herald a new era for a people still recovering from 15 years of civil war. Photograph: Goran Tomasevic/Reuters

The shells of stylish colonial-era buildings, like shipwrecks on the ocean floor, still give Maputo a distinct character. But the capital of Mozambique no longer feels like an urban museum. Amid the crumbling grandeur rumble cranes and mechanical diggers, carving out a different skyline.

A construction boom is under way here, concrete proof of the economic revolution in Mozambique. Growth hit 7.1% last year, accelerating to 8.1% in the final quarter. The country, riven by civil war for 15 years, is poised to become the world's biggest coal exporter within the next decade, while the recent discovery of two massive gas fields in its waters has turned the region into an energy hotspot, promising a £250bn bonanza.

The national currency was the best performing in the world against the dollar. Investment is pouring in on an unprecedented scale; as if to prove that history has a sense of irony, Portuguese feeling Europe's economic pain are flocking back to the former colony, scenting better prospects than at home. Increasingly this is the rule, not the exception in Africa, which has boasted six of the world's 10 fastest-growing economies in the past decade. The first oil discovery in Kenya was confirmed on Monday, while the British firm BG Group announced that one of its gas fields off the Tanzanian coast was bigger than expected and could lead to billions of pounds of investment. Bankers, analysts and politicians have never been so bullish about the continent, which barely 10 years ago was regarded as a basket case.

From Cape Town to Cairo, there are signs of a continent on the move: giant infrastructure projects, an expanding middle class, foreign equity scrambling for opportunities in telecoms, financial services and products aimed at a billion consumers. Growth is no magic bullet for reducing inequality or fostering democracy, but the stubborn truth that it is still the world's poorest continent has done little to dull the confidence and hype about the African renaissance.

Africa has 16 billionaires, topped by Nigerian cement tycoon Aliko Dangote with an estimated fortune of $10.1bn (£6.5bn), according to Forbes magazine. Economic growth across the continent will be 5.3% this year and 5.6% in 2013, the World Bank predicts, with some countries hitting double digits. "Africa could be on the brink of an economic take-off, much like China was 30 years ago and India 20 years ago," the bank says. Many of the African lions are already outpacing the Asian tigers.

Africa exports its natural resources with the price and demand for them determined by growth in China, whose bilateral trade with Africa has grown tenfold in a decade, eclipsing that of the United States.

In return, Chinese loans are funding many of the infrastructure projects changing the face of the continent.

There are an estimated 1 million Chinese in Africa: trading, investing, building, labouring, running micro-businesses and, critics say, exploiting its wealth of natural resources.

On a recent afternoon at the Southern Sun hotel in Maputo, overlooking the Indian Ocean, the arrival of a delegation of Chinese businessmen in smart suits surprised no one. Mozambique is now an immensely attractive prospect as it emerges from a traumatic past of colonialism and civil war.

When the Portuguese pulled out hastily in the mid-1970s, they did so with spite, sabotaging vehicles and pouring concrete down wells, lift shafts and toilets, leaving the country in disarray. The civil war claimed about a million lives. Devastated by famine and economic mismanagement, it was only in 1994 that the first democratic election paved the way for a long, hard recovery.

Today there is a growing middle class, as seen in the opening of shopping centres and, in 2010, a private hospital offering the country's first cosmetic surgery. And now Mozambique's long-untapped energy resources are coming into play. The remote Tete province boasts possibly the last big coking coal mine in the world. The giant Brazilian mining firm Vale, which began shipping from there last September, is spending billions on operations including a coal terminal and railways. It aims to double capacity from 11m tonnes a year to 22m by 2014.

Jackpot

But it is the recent discovery of a gas field off the northern coast that is already being described as a "jackpot" with the potential to transform this impoverished, donor-dependent country's fortunes – and which has turned east Africa into the most exciting prime target for energy multinationals.

Last year the US oil group Anadarko found an estimated 850bn cubic metres of natural gas in Rovuma basin – more than three times the reserves left in the North Sea. The Italian energy group ENI also made two big discoveries nearby.

Mozambique's time has come partly thanks to location: Asia, especially energy-hungry India, is eager to acquire liquefied natural gas. The discovery triggered a bidding war for the London-listed Cove Energy, which has an 8.5% stake in the Rovuma gas field.

There is competition from Shell and the Thai state-owned PTT Exploration, while two Indian firms are also considering offers.

"Economically this will be of huge benefit [to east Africa]," John Craven, Cove's chief executive, told the Sunday Times last year. "For the economy of Mozambique, this is a huge project. They will have the ability to transform their country if they play their cards right."

Shell, BP and Total are also reportedly vying to acquire a 20% stake in Eni's gas field. Local analysts estimate that the gas could bring Mozambique revenue of $200bn to $400bn over 40 years. This would be a huge windfall in a country where, despite the impressive recent growth, GDP stands at a modest $1,100 a head and government spending at $6bn.

And where there is gas, there is usually lucrative oil. Mateus Zimba, country manager for the South African energy company Sasol, said: "Looking at the size of the gas in place, I think this country can't be the same any more. This has to change the nature of what Mozambique does. I'm looking at it as a Mozambican and saying we will be a world player.

"I hope coal and gas will give us enough independence to take control of our own destiny, and looking at foreign investment rather than foreign donations. I can only hope we are on the right track to avoid polarisation in this country, because that is the biggest issue we face."

The lack of wealth trickling down has cast a shadow over Africa's success stories. This is the case in Mozambique, which ranks fourth from bottom of the UN's human development index behind the likes of Afghanistan, Ethiopia and Liberia. About 54% of people remain poor, according to a 2008-09 survey, and poverty reduction has slowed down. This is despite anti-poverty government budgets that allocate a fifth of spending to education.

Will coal and gas change anything? Africa's history is littered with broken promises of spectacular finds that enrich greedy despots and giant corporations but leave the people worse off than ever. The so-called "resource curse" is a constant threat, although today's governments and campaigners alike are more alive to it. Shell admits that Mozambique offers a chance to rehabilitate its image after the PR debacle of its oil business in Nigeria.

Gabriel Fossati-Bellani, an Italian-born entrepreneur whose ventures provide services for the energy industry, is optimistic. "It's a huge jackpot of gas," he said. "Mozambique has tremendous potential through this opportunity and is already showing it wants to take the right approach to equitable distribution of wealth. The local business environment is ready for a larger participation in the profits of the sector."

"I would bet not only on short-term business growth in Mozambique but the long term, including a business-minded government trying to deliver equity."

He believes the country can steadily replace dependency on foreign aid with its burgeoning private sector. "The hype is real. It's going to happen. The country is in the middle of its logarithmic curve of compounded growth," he said.

"People are expecting a lot from Mozambique – and they should. Business is growing, the middle class is growing, the level of professionalism and service delivery has gone up in leaps and bounds. Maputo is a metropolis now. It functions like a city should in this day and age."

That means new shopping centres and hotels struggling to keep up with demand, restaurants where pre-booking is now a must and lengthening traffic jams of expensive cars. Almost every week brings a fresh business delegation from countries such as Australia, Brazil, Britain, India, Norway, Turkey and China, which is making its mark here as in the rest of Africa.

Most ambitious of all is a planned $1bn waterside complex in Maputo with 300,000 square metres of office, residential, retail and hotel buildings, which is expected to take 15 years to construct. José Pinheiro, chief executive of property developers CR Holdings, said: "It will be a new rebirth of the city. It is probably the most important development since the beginning of the 20th century.

"I came here from Portugal in 1997 and the differences are huge. Back then, a director in the government probably had a salary of about $400-$500; now it's $2,000-$3,000. The development in the social tissue of the country is amazing. There is still a long road but it has evolved really well."

He added: "You see more investment coming from the UK, Germany, Spain.

There is growing awareness that the road to development is in Africa. They understand the same thing that China did 10 years ago. They want to be on the same road."

Alongside its other projects in Mozambique, CR Holdings is spending $50m to build a hotel, housing and Portuguese-designed shopping centre in Tete, a hot and isolated town dubbed "the new Johannesburg" because of the coal rush expected to attract 3,000 foreign workers. But this phenomenon is also raising grave concerns over local price inflation and its effects on the poor, including malnourished children.

Expats

"Natural resources have positive and negative impacts," Pinheiro conceded. "Rentals are suffering from coal mines bringing expats to the city. But it's also driving the building of new housing. It will bring investment and income to the country and benefit small companies. For example, a catering company in Maputo got work in Tete, producing 14,000 meals a day."

The role of donors, the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund should help insulate the Mozambican economy against the most pernicious effects of the resource curse, Pinheiro believes. But it will require patience and planning – accessing the gas will take the best part of a decade, and require tens of billions of dollars of investment.

Even then, some remain sceptical of what it will mean for Mozambique's 23 million people. They question whether the government will direct enough of its new revenue towards infrastructure, which is still sorely lacking, and improving agricultural productivity – the biggest single tool for reducing poverty.

Erik Charas, director of @Verdade (the Truth), Mozambique's biggest circulation newspaper, warned: "There is a lack of transparency in these deals. They're making deals for generations to come and I have no idea about them. The lack of transparency is a major flaw.

"The people in power are negotiating on their own behalf. We might end up with 50 billionaires who own private planes and the rest of the population impoverished. That is our biggest fear."

"Coal and gas have the potential to trickle down," he added. "There is enough time for things to be done right. The government should prioritise the people instead of impoverishing the communities where these things sit.

"The potential is there and it's not messed up yet. The country is definitely wealthy. We have no right to complain because we have this opportunity. But if we don't do it right, we could be poorer than we are now."

Adrian Frey, director of an estate agency, Pam Golding Properties Mozambique, summed up the mixed mood: "Gas changes everything. It changes our thinking. The investment expected in the next 10 years is $30bn. There is a huge demand for building and water and restaurants and banking facilities. We are on the right track and everything is getting better."

 

ACTION: Trayvon Martin—Steady Forward - Stay Cool, Stay Strong, Stop The Killings



#Tuesday4Trayvon Day of Internet Action for Trayvon Martin

#Tuesday 4Trayvon
Day of Internet Action
for Trayvon Martin
Inspired by a group of bloggers from Philly, Tuesday, April 10th is the day bloggers across the country will band together as one voice to advocate for justice on behalf of Trayvon Martin and his family. With a grand jury set to convene and decide on an indictment of Travyon's killer, George Zimmerman, it is important to continue to bring attention to the case and inform the public of the need to pressure Florida authorities to make Zimmerman answer for his crime.

Here's how to use your blog to help:

 
• Write a blog post about the case. Take any angle you like. The legal case against Zimmerman, gun laws, racism in America, personal reflection, or whatever other creative ideas you have. Please email us if you need fact sheets and support materials.

 
• Share this with other bloggers in your network and ask them to raise their voices for Trayvon.

 
• Spread your posts via social media like Twitter and Facebook using the hashtags #tuesday4trayvon, #millionhoodies and #hoodiesup.

 
• Send your posts to @millionhoodies on Twitter or post them to our Facebook page. We will spread them across the internet.

 
• Use the hashtags and SEO terms #tuesday4trayvon and #millionhoodies so people can search for your posts.

 
• Ask your readers to sign the change.org petition created by Martin's family calling for justice for Trayvon.

Trayvon Martin and his family deserve justice. We need your help to keep their struggle in the spotlight until they receive it. Your help with #tuesday4trayvon will not only help keep pressure on the authorities, but also show solidarity with Trayvon's family at a time when they need support. Please join us. #hoodiesup

 

__________________________

 

 

 

Trayvon Killing Eyewitness

On CNN:

I Offered To Show Police

Scene Of The Crime,

They Declined

VIDEO

Ashleigh Banfield, substituting in for Anderson Cooper tonight, spoke to an anonymous eyewitness to the death of Trayvon Martin byGeorge Zimmerman about what she saw that night. She had already spoken out anonymously, but she came forward today with more information. She revealed that after the police brought her in for questioning, she offered to bring them to the scene of the crime and show them what happened, but they declined her offer.

RELATED: New Trayvon Martin Witness Speaks To Anderson Cooper About Night Of Shooting

She told Banfield that she heard two cries of help, the second one more of a “devastating, desperate” yell. She said she believes that the yell came from Martin, and heard them loudly arguing outside her window, even if she couldn’t precisely decipher what she was saying. When Banfield asked if it sounded like a confrontation, she agreed. The eyewitness did call 911 and mentioned that she did hear a gun went off. She described the experience as like watching a movie and telling the dispatcher what was happening outside her home, play-by-play.

At one point, she held up her phone near the screen door so the dispatcher could hear what was happening. Banfield asked, when the gun went off, who it looked like was on top. The eyewitness answered that it looked like “the larger man,” meaning Zimmerman, was on top of Martin. At one point, Zimmerman started walking closer to where the eyewitness could see him, but could not discern whether his face was bloodied or not. When she was called in for questioning by the police, she said their questions did not necessarily have some depth to them, but merely just them asking her for a basic recap of what happened.

She offered to take them to the location of the crime, but claims that they were not interested. Banfield pressed her to explain why, but she said the police could answer that question better than her. And, in fact, the lead investigator told her that she misheard, and that it was Zimmerman who cried for help, not Martin. Following a community meeting to discuss the issue, she said she contacted the police two more times, but they did not get back to her.

Watch the video below, courtesy of CNN:

__________________________

 

 

Sybrina-Fulton-Tracy-Martin-trayvonmartin-parents

A Conversation With

Trayvon Martin's Mother

Posted: 04/ 7/2012

 

 

Rabbi Shmuley Boteach

 

 

 

My dear friend Kathryn Milofsky arranged for me to speak with Trayvon Martin's mother, Sybrina Fulton, and her attorney Benjamin Crump, today just before Passover. We had invited Trayvon's parents to our Passover seder, but as that could not be worked out I was grateful to speak to Ms. Fulton and offer her whatever words of comfort and healing I could muster.

The opposite turned out to be the case. It was I who found the conversation healing and inspirational and decided therefore, after asking her permission, to share it in a column this holiday weekend, holy to both Christians and Jews, even as I battle against the receding sun which will bring in the Sabbath and Passover and make it forbidden for me to write.

The conversation was not taped and I am writing from memory and I ask everyone's forgiveness, especially Ms. Fulton, if I have committed any errors. The quotations I have for Ms. Fulton are likewise done from memory.

Ms. Fulton thanked me for the column I wrote about her son in The Huffington Post. After expressing my heartfelt condolences on the tragic loss of her child, I asked her if she felt disappointed that some segments of our society may not understand the depth of her anguish.

She said that the key to understanding how she and her family felt was human empathy. Anyone who is a parent could appreciate what it might mean to lose a child, especially when they died under such appalling circumstances. To compound the pain, the feeling that there is no justice magnified the pain infinitely. She said that this was not an issue for the black or white communities or the political right or left. It was a human issue, an issue for all parents, an issue that concerns anyone who appreciates life and opposes senseless tragedy.

"I look at my older son, who is 21 years-old. And I see Travyon in him. And I keep on expecting Trayvon to come home. But he doesn't come home. And now, I have one son on earth, and one son in heaven. And I miss him."

I asked her if she felt any anger to George Zimmerman:

I have no time for anger. I don't want to grant it a place in my heart. I simply want justice. I don't hate him and I'm not angry at him. But my son died and we deserve to know what happened. It's not for the police to determine justice. It's for the courts. And we'll stand by what the court says. But that's what I'm focused on. We want an arrest. But it's not out of anger or hatred. I have too much to do to be sidetracked with any of that. But when your son dies and there isn't even an arrest, it makes it so much harder.

She uttered these words in a pained tone. She did not raise her voice. There was no malice or rancor. She spoke passionately and with deep conviction.

I asked her if she felt anger at God over her son's tragic death? She immediately quoted Proverbs 3:5, citing both chapter and verse: "Trust in the LORD with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding."

She said she was finding comfort in the verse. She does not question God. She was asking for understanding. "At first, I kept on asking why me, why Trayvon. But now I know that God has called Trayvon. He was chosen. His name is now known throughout the country and throughout the world. He is a symbol of the fight against injustice. People understand that there has to be fairness and righteousness. And they're learning it from Trayvon."

I told her that I was amazed that she quoted that verse. The first Hebrew word in the verse is Betach -- trust. It's my name, Boteach. And because my family name translates literally as Trust, I had chosen that verse as my main verse for my junior high school yearbook, and had adopted it as a mantra by which I had attempted to lead my life.

I asked her if she believed in America as a place of fairness and justice. She said she did. "But that's why this case is so important. If Trayvon can die and no one pays a price, it can be someone else's child next time. This isn't only about our family, it's about all families. It's about all children. Trayvon is everyone's child."

As she spoke I was reminded of Martin Luther King's famous words, "A threat to justice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."

I asked her how her family was coping. She said the tragedy had drawn the entire family closer. They were sharing many family meals, they were comforting each other, finding solace in one another.

Forgive me for sounding clichéd, and I am writing quickly so what is in my heart is being translated directly on to the page. I must tell you, I found her words, her voice, her demeanor, her compassion, and conviction and uplifting. Here was a mother who had buried her son under the most tragic circumstances. Yet she spoke without rage, hatred, or spite. She spoke of feeling God's presence in her heart and in her life. She said that other parents had to understand her campaign. That if anything like this had happened to their children, they too would shake heaven and earth to demand justice.

Before ending the conversation, I told her that since I was a boy, when my mother was going through a painful divorce and she was befriended and loved by an African-American co-worker at her bank, I had always felt a kinship with the black community. I told her that the black and Jewish communities are united not by a shared history of pain or suffering, but a shared history of spiritual promise and social redemption. That through all our trials and tribulations our two communities had always turned to God as the rock of our salvation, finding solace in His loving embrace. She echoed the sentiment and spoke of the all-encompassing presence of God in her life.

We agreed that we would G-d willing meet up when she was in New York. As I ended the conversation I felt as though I had been speaking with a giant, a woman of extraordinary heart, though it be shattered into a million pieces.

Shmuley Boteach, America's Rabbi, is the international best-selling author of 27 books and has just Kosher Jesus. Follow him on Twitter @RabbiShmuley. His website is www.shmuley.com.

>via: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rabbi-shmuley-boteach/sybrina-fulton-trayvon-ma...

 

 

 

VIOLENCE: Tulsa Shootings

 

Report: Tulsa Suspect

Made Racist Comments


By: Eric Hinton | 

 

 

Jake England (l) and Alvin Watts (r)

Updated April 8, 5:07 p.m. EDT -- One of the men arrested in the Good Friday shooting that left three black men dead and two critically injured in Tulsa, Okla., reportedly posted racist comments on his Facebook page prior to the shootings. Jake England, 19, posted comments about the two-year anniversary of his father's death, the Tulsa World reported. England wrote: "Today is two years that my dad has been gone shot by a f------- n----- its hard not to go off between that and sheran I'm gone in the head."

Updated April 8, 7:49 a.m. EDT -- Two men have been arrested in the Tulsa, Okla., shootings that left three men dead and two others critically injured Friday. A Tulsa police spokesman, Jason Willingham, told The Associated Press that the men, identified as 19-year-old Jake England and 32-year-old Alvin Watts, were arrested early Sunday and would be charged with three counts of first-degree murder and two counts of shooting with intent to kill. Police told the Associated Press they are still looking for a motive behind what appears to be random shootings.

Updated April 7, 6:17 p.m. EDT -- A taskforce called "Operation Random Shooter” had been formed to solicit leads, gather evidence and conduct interviews about the shootings in which all of the victims were black, reports CNN. About 30 representatives from the Tulsa police, Tulsa County Sheriff's Office, the U.S. Marshals Service and the FBI were assigned to it. Prior to the arrest Tulsa’s police chief Chuck Jordan had this message for the shooters: "We're coming for you."

Earlier:

A shooting spree on Friday in a predominantly black section of Tulsa, Okla., has left the community on edge as police search for a suspect. The incident left three dead and two critically injured, according to the Associated Press. The shootings all occurred within a three-mile span of each other, and all five victims were out walking when they were shot.

Police are reportedly looking for a white man driving a white pickup truck that was seen in the vicinity of three of the shootings.

From the Associated Press:

"We have to handle this because there are a number of African-American males who are not going to allow this to happen in their neighborhood," the Rev. Warren Blakney Sr., president of the Tulsa NAACP, told the Associated Press. "We're trying to quell the feeling of 'let's get someone' and we will make as certain as we can that this isn't pushed under the rug."

Four of the five victims were reportedly found in yards and the fifth was found in the street. Police said they don't believe the victims knew each other or shared any connection.

 

__________________________

 

 

Tulsa Shooting Rampage

Appears to Be Case of

Racial Revenge

Posted: 04/ 8/2012

 

 

Brian Levin, J.D.

 

One of the two white men arrested shortly before 2 a.m. Sunday morning for shooting three African-American North Tulsa residents to death and injuring two others appears to have had a racist posting on his Facebook pages. The apparently random racially motivated shootings have terrorized Tulsa's African-American community. The city in 1921 was the location of one of the nation's worst race massacres.

Jake England, 19, and Alvin Watts, 32, were taken into custody Sunday morning by a task force of local and federal law enforcement including the Tusla Police Department and Sheriff's office as well as the FBI and U.S. Marshals. The spree attacks apparently took place almost two years to the day after England's father was killed by an African-American man who tried to break into the apartment of suspect Jake England's sister. The father went to the North Tulsa apartment complex after the man who had attempted the break-in threatened the daughter upon his return.

On Thursday afternoon, Jake England appears to have posted the following message on his Facebook page:

Today is two years that my dad has been gone shot by a fucking nigger it's hard not to go off between that and sheran I'm gone in the head. 
RIP 
. Dad and sheran I 
. Love and miss u 
I think about both of u every second of the day


On Friday, England appeared to make the following posts

Chilling at that house people talking shit on me for some shit I didn't do lil man and cady Ian's here I do believer it just mite be the time to call it quits I I hate to say it like that but I'm done if something does happen tonite be ready for another funeral later


I'm cool I'm not guard do anything my son is the only thing I have to live for

In January, Alvin Watts, the other man arrested, allegedly wrote the following on his Facebook page:

O.b.a.m.a. Let me define. One big ass mistake america! Lol!

Carl England, Jake's father, according to local news stories from April 2010 went to the Comanche Park Apartments at 3608 North Quaker Avenue to assist his daughter after she was involved in a confrontation that day. The elder England was allegedly shot to death at the apartments by Pernell Demond Jefferson, a convicted felon. Jefferson was allegedly struck by the younger England's boyfriend with a baseball bat during an attempt to break into her apartment. Carl England appeared to go to the apartment after Jefferson threatened to get even with his daughter for being hit earlier in the day.

Authorities have not yet released detailed information, although the arrests appear to be based on a hotline tip.

Follow Brian Levin, J.D. on Twitter: www.twitter.com/proflevin

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__________________________

 

3 killed, 2 injured in

Oklahoma shootings

By Nick Valencia, CNN
updated 12:46 PM EDT, Sat April 7, 2012

(CNN) -- Three people were killed and two were injured Friday in four shootings in north Tulsa, Oklahoma and police are searching for a lone suspected gunman, they said. Tulsa police spokesman Capt. Jonathan Brooks said investigators were looking into whether the shootings may have been possible hate crimes. 

"We're not absolutely certain, but a hate crime is a possibility. And we'll go with where the investigation leads us," he said.

  All of the victims are black. The suspected shooter is a white male and is believed to be traveling in a white truck, said Brooks.

 It was not immediately clear whether any of the victims knew each other, he said.

 They range in age from 31 to 54. They were shot over the course of seven hours at four different street locations in the early morning, Brooks said.

 Tulsa police formed a joint task force with the local FBI office as well as the U.S. Marshals Service. In the event the shootings turn out to be hate crimes, "they can help us pursue it," he said.

 "This is not your standard homicide," said Brooks.

 

 

HISTORY: Greenwood, Oklahoma: From the Black Wall Street to the Tulsa Race Riot > The ROOT

 

Greenwood, Okla.:

The Legacy of the

Tulsa Race Riot

In 1921, Greenwood, a successful, all-black enclave in Tulsa, was the site of the deadliest race riot in U.S. history. For the inhabitants of "the Black Wall Street," life would never be the same.

 

 

Right: J.B. Stradford (Courtesy of the Department of Special Collections, University of Tulsa)

 

Editor's note: Here's the story of a sad chapter of American history, pulled from The Root's archives.

J.B. Stradford, the son of a freed Kentucky slave, rose to prominence in Oklahoma during the early 1900s as one of the key developers of the all-black Tulsa enclave Greenwood. A lawyer and businessman, Stradford owned the 65-room hotel that sat right in the heart of the thriving community that would later become known as "the Black Wall Street."

But in a single day, all of that would change. On May 31, 1921, the arrest of a young black man on a questionable charge of assaulting a young white woman touched off the deadliest race riot in U.S. history. Whites charged through the community in retaliation, leaving an estimated 300 people dead, another 10,000 black residents homeless and 35 city blocks in ruin.

Stradford and 69 other black men were subsequently charged with inciting the riot. Stradford, however, jumped bail after his arrest and fled Tulsa for Kentucky. According to his great-granddaughter Laurel Stradford, his son (her grandfather), who was also a lawyer, used legal maneuvering to help his father avoid having to stand trial, including filing a petition for a writ of habeas corpus to keep him from being unlawfully detained.

"When I was a little girl, our grandmother used to tell us that J.B. had said that there was no greater gift that a man can be given than to have a son who saves his father's life," says Laurel Stradford. "There would be a lot of remembrance of my great-grandpa and the role he played in Tulsa, and the role my grandpa had in getting him free from being lynched."

But although J.B. -- who went on to run a successful law practice in Chicago -- managed to avoid facing "justice" in Oklahoma (he never returned to the state), the charges hung over him until he died. The Stradford family fought to clear J.B., but it wasn't until 1996 -- 75 years after the riot, and six decades after his death in 1935 in Chicago at the age of 75 -- that he was cleared of all charges. (Ultimately, none of the men indicted were convicted of anything.)

That 75th-anniversary year was also when the nation learned about the Tulsa Race Riot, which would come to be considered the most destructive race riot in U.S. history. "For years, silence engulfed this incident," says Hannibal B. Johnson, author of Black Wall Street: From Riot to Renaissance in Tulsa's Historic Greenwood. "In 1921, Tulsa was booming, so anything that would detract from its allure, such as the riot, was minimized."

Read on, or Learn About Other Black Towns Lost to History.

A Black Mecca

Indeed, Tulsa had been attracting thousands -- blacks and whites -- to the rich oil fields. By 1920, the overall population had swelled to more than 100,000 residents. Black Americans, migrating from Southern states as far as Georgia and Mississippi, were also attempting to escape the harsh realities of Southern racism.

But old Jim Crow laws followed them northwest. Tulsa was divided into two cities. Whites held court in the southern end of the city, closer to the larger main downtown area, while African Americans were segregated in the northern section of town.

The racial split, however, gave rise to black Tulsans' famed entrepreneurial mecca. Anchored by Greenwood Avenue, black-owned businesses stretched along the more than mile-long roadway. They included grocery stores, restaurants, medical and law offices, and two newspapers. Many black entrepreneurs in addition to Stradford -- including real estate developer and Greenwood founder O.W. Gurley -- thrived and reached regional and even national stature. Booker T. Washington, who had lectured in Tulsa, was the first to call Greenwood "the Negro's Wall Street." That moniker later became "the Black Wall Street."

Many white Tulsans, who referred to the district as "Little Africa," were not happy about the growth and prosperity of the community, according to Andrew Rosa, assistant professor of history at Oklahoma State University. "You had a pretty stable, upwardly mobile people in Greenwood, and the city's whites had their eye on Greenwood," says Rosa. "That was sort of the spirit of the friction."

White Rage Unleashed

The underlying racial and economic tension finally boiled over on May 30, 1921. Dick Rowland, a 19-year-old shoe shiner in downtown Tulsa, had gone to use the only bathroom for blacks, located at the top of an office building. He crossed paths with white elevator operator Sarah Page, 17, whom a store clerk claimed to have heard scream. The clerk said that he found a distraught Page and saw a young black man running from the building. There is no record of what Page told the police.

Rowland was arrested but never charged. The incident, however, made the front page of the Tulsa Tribune -- along with an editorial entitled, "To Lynch Negro Tonight."

Right before dawn on June 1, a mob of nearly 10,000 white men launched an all-out assault on the Greenwood District, systematically burning down every home and business. They dropped firebombs and shot at blacks from planes that had been used in World War I. Those blacks who were captured were held in internment camps around the city by the local police and National Guard units.

Martial law was eventually declared. The National Guard confirmed that 37 blacks and whites were killed, although historians (pdf) have put that number at closer to 300. Many of the dead black Americans were buried in unmarked graves around town, and some were laid to rest in an anonymous section of Tulsa's Oak Lawn cemetery. Some photographers made their pictures of the dead into postcards. 

The riot "just shows you how irrelevant, not only from the view of Oklahoma but that of the nation as a whole, black life was. It was seen as expendable," says Rosa.

After the riot, black Tulsans, who were living in tents and forced to wear green identification tags in order to work downtown, still managed to turn the tragedy into triumph. Without state help, they rebuilt Greenwood, and by 1942 the community had more than 240 black-owned businesses.

Justice Denied

In subsequent decades, however, the community declined as the pioneers of Greenwood died and many of their descendants moved away. The district struggled most critically during the 1960s as Tulsa became more integrated, which led to a decline in the Greenwood population and also undermined many of the local black family-run businesses. In the 1970s, a large segment of Greenwood was demolished to make way for an interstate highway that became a main connector for the downtown area.

An Oklahoma state commission conducted an investigation of the riot from 1997 to 2001, questioning survivors about that day back in 1921. The commission recommended specific reparations to the community, the living survivors and their descendants.

The state did subsequently enact a law in June 2001 that provided about 300 scholarships for descendants, developed a memorial and pushed for development in Greenwood -- but the law fell far short of what the commission had recommended. The remaining survivors have continued to fight for further restitution, which is addressed in the 2008 documentary Before They Die!

For some descendants, the demise of such a prosperous business community highlights the struggles that black America continues to face today. "The difference is that our society now is desegregated much more, and the challenge now is for our businesses to do successful business with a majority of firms," says John Rogers Jr., the founder of Chicago-based Ariel Investments, LLC -- and the great-grandson of J.B. Stradford. "There's still a remnant of historical discrimination."

Monée Fields-White is a Chicago-based writer who covers a wide array of topics, including business and economic news.

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VIDEO: 'Voyage To Next': Trippy Dizzy Gillespie Film Touches On Themes Still Relevant Today (VIDEO)

'Voyage To Next':

Trippy Dizzy Gillespie Film

Touches On Themes

Still Relevant Today

(VIDEO)

 

The Huffington Post  |  By


Dizzy Gillespie In 1955

Dizzy Gillespie is renowned as a trumpeter of incredible ability and inimitable style, but his legacy extends far beyond bebop. In 1974, the jazz legend lent his music and his voice to a forward-thinking animated film by husband-and-wife filmmakers John and Faith Hubley.

With its hand-drawn animation and psychedelic colors, "Voyage To Next" oozes nostalgic vibes. But despite being 38-years-old, the film's message -- and its music -- are still quite relevant.

Highlighted on NPR's "A Blog Supreme," the 9-and-a-half-minute-long film touches on a diverse set of themes -- conservation, anti-war and anti-nationalist sentiment, the power of public dialogue and the basic equality of humankind -- all within in a broader message of personal choice and responsibility.

The film explores its subject matter through a non-linear narrative that is a conversation between Mother Earth (voiced by actress Maureen Stapleton) and Father Time (Gillespie). Sometimes the lines feel ad-libbed, but nevertheless poignant. It is perhaps the former quality that saves the latter from seeming too preachy.

Like much of the Hubley oeuvre, "Voyage To Next" employs abstract imagery and draws from mythology and indigenous art to illuminate its points. The film offers an interpretive summation of human history, and takes poetic license to further its central metaphor -- Marco Polo only made part of his return voyage by sea, but, you know, time is a river and we are islands in the stream, right?

The score, written and conducted by Gillespie, features some fantastic jazz scat vocals by Dee Dee Bridgewater, particularly around the 6-and-a-half-minute mark. Gillespie's ethereal soundscape swells, evaporates and creeps back on the listener. It is at once primeval and evolved, emotional and erudite.

"Voyage to Next" was Gillespie's third collaboration with the Hubleys, having previously worked with the couple on the films "The Hat" and "The Hole." The latter, which was their first project together, won an Academy Award in 1962.