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by Minister of Information JR
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Wednesday, 26 March 2008 |
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POCC Block Report Radio presents ‘Banished' Saturday, March 29, 7pm, at the Black New World, 836 Pine in West Oakland
"Banished" has to be one of the best documentaries created that focuses on the forced removal of Black people from land that they owned, after chattel slavery, by mobs of white people unjustifiably. It shows a part of the Black experience in Amerikkka that is rarely shown in documentary form.
This film also goes into the present day ramifications of this grand theft by interviewing and following the descendants of the forcibly removed Black people when they addressed the white descendants of the thieves who stole their land.
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by Wanda Sabir
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Wednesday, 26 March 2008 |
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Our condolences to Kimara Dixon on the loss of his father. Kimara, a wonderful photographer, composer and musician was to be on the panel this Thursday at Swarm. I was listening to Farai Chideya's News and Notes Friday evening, March 21, and she was speaking about Ivan Dixon, whose role in "Nothing but a Man" with Abby Lincoln epitomized the effect of racism and oppression on the Black family, especially Black men who are socially and politically emasculated when they assert their manhood. I didn't think anything of the last name "Dixon," but when I looked up Ivan Dixon's children's names, there was an Alan, which is Kimara's other name.
What a loss to the community and to my friend and brother Kimara. His father would have been 77 April 6. The television and film actor, who starred in "Hogan's Heroes" and "The Twilight Zone," died on Sunday, March 16, in Charlotte, N.C. Visit www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=88760112. The guest book is at www.legacy.com/GB/GuestbookView.aspx?PersonId=105988768.
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by Tony Robles - Poor News Network
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Wednesday, 26 March 2008 |
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How a treasured musician is being harassed, gentrified, silenced and criminalized out of San Francisco for the sole act of playing his drums
"To me, the drum has been the communicator since the beginning of time. I'm sure it was the first message ever sent. When I think of the beat centuries ago, it was the only thing that kept us together," said Lloyd Price, legendary rhythm and blues pioneer and performer. He spoke these words in the academy award winning documentary, "When We Were Kings." The film was set in 1974 in Zaire, Africa, and the stage was the heavyweight championship of the world between George Foreman and Muhammad Ali.
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by Wanda Sabir
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Tuesday, 18 March 2008 |
 Casper Banjo, shot to death by Oakland police last week, is shown at AAMLO last year at the reception for the book “Black Artists in Oakland.” Duane Deterville, in the checkered hat, is seated beside Casper. Ted Pontiflet is behind Duane and Casper, and another artist is in the rear. Photo: Wanda Sabir When I heard that Casper Banjo had become Oakland's latest homicide, shot to death by Oakland Police, I couldn't believe it. I asked Orlonda Uffre, who was the bearer of the sad news Monday evening, why would OPD shoot to kill a 71-year-old man - so no Black man is safe from assassin's bullets, not even old Black men?
I immediately thought about the film "Reign Over Me" (2006) with actors Don Cheadle and Adam Sandler, where Sandler's character is traumatized with grief over the loss of his entire family in a 9/11 plane crash, so he designs new kitchens for his dead family who will never return until one day he snaps - takes his gun into the center of New York traffic, waving it as he dares the police to shoot him and put him out of his misery. But the police are surprisingly sympathetic.
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by Apollonia Jordan
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Tuesday, 18 March 2008 |
 Omar Miller Actor, producer, writer, director ... you name it and Omar Miller is probably trying to pursue it. This 29-year-old grew up in Los Angeles, then came to the Bay Area and graduated from San Jose State University. He has worked alongside actors and entertainers such as Terrance Howard and Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson.
His most recent film is about four soldiers from the army's Negro 92nd Division, who find themselves separated from their unit and behind enemy lines. Risking their lives for a country in which they are treated with less respect than the enemy they are fighting, they discover humanity in the small Tuscan village of St. Anna di Stazzema.
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