Played 29 times

Ile Ire - House Blessing, my latest mix. Enjoy the vibe…..and the quick trip down memory lane.

The short story, courtesy of the film’s website, goes… Larry Davis was a New Yorker who shot six New York City police officers on November 19, 1986, when they raided his sister’s Bronx apartment. The police said that the raid was executed in order to question Davis about the killing of four suspected drug dealers. At trial, Davis’s defense attorneys claimed that the raid was staged to murder him because of his knowledge of the involvement of corrupt police in the drug business. With the help of family contacts and street friends, he eluded capture for the next 17 days despite a massive manhunt. Davis eventually surrendered to police, and was acquitted of attempted murder charges in the police shootout case, and was acquitted of murder charges in the case involving the slain drug dealers. He was found guilty of weapons possession in the shootout case, acquitted in another murder case and was found guilty in a later murder case and was sentenced to 25 years to life in prison.

In 2008, Davis was stabbed to death in a fight with another inmate.

The Larry Davis case generated controversy. Many were outraged by his actions and acquittal, but others regarded him as a folk hero for his ability to elude capture in the massive manhunt, for so many years, or as the embodiment of a community’s frustration with the police, or as “a symbol of resistance” because “he fought back at a time when African-Americans were being killed by white police officers.

Based on that true story, The Larry Davis Project gives insight into the motivations of a Bronx youth in the 1980s. At a time of police corruption, drug proliferation and rampant poverty, a young Larry Davis struggled with who he would become - thug or artist?

The feature film, which comes from Epoch Motion Pictures, is scheduled to debut sometime this year.

Check out a sneak:

(Source: blogs.indiewire.com)

Community Organizer, Lecturer, DJ, Writer, and Father, LUMUMBA BANDELE is the DJ/host of the Off-Broadway showcase titled “Elevating: 20 Years of Arts and Activism, Live!” The event, presented by Baruch Performing Arts Center, will take place on 12/16/12 and is a celebration of AKILA WORKSONGS’ two decades of social entrepreneurship.

CELEBRATE THE 20TH ANNIVERSARY OF AKILA WORKSONGS
with our FIRST OFF-BROADWAY SHOWCASE!


Elevating

Baruch Performing Arts Center (BPAC) presents
“Elevating: 20 Years of Arts and Activism, Live!”
An AKILA WORKSONGS Production


Sunday, December 16, 2012
2:30pm – 4:30pm
Baruch Performing Arts Center (BPAC)
55 Lexington Avenue, New York, NY 10010
Enter on E. 25th Street,
between Lexington & 3rd Avenues.
Get directions HERE

———————————————————

TICKET INFORMATION

General Admission: $25
College Students: $10 with proper ID
Access AKILA Members and Promo Code Users: $20 

Get tickets online HERE, via the BPAC box office, or via phone at (866) 811-4111 

Elevating Artists (Confirmed Performers)
Camille A. Brown (dance)
Kelly Zen-Yie Tsai (poetry)
Masauko Chipembere of Blk Sonshine (music)
Mo Beasley (drama)
Pyeng Threadgill (music)
Ras Baraka (poetry and reflections)
Safiya Washington (poetry)
Toni Blackman (poetry)

Hosted by MK Lewis | Music by DJ Lumumba

John Malatesta, Managing Director of BPAC; Co-Executive Director
April R. Silver, Founder and President of AKILA WORKSONGS, Inc; Co-Executive Producer
Leslie “ButtaFlySoul” Taylor, Director

For more info, call 718.756.8501 or 646.312.4090. Email pr@akilaworksongs.com.

We remember Chairman Fred Hampton and Mark Clark.  Assassinated in a pre dawn raid by the FBI and Chicago Police Department.

We remember Chairman Fred Hampton and Mark Clark.  Assassinated in a pre dawn raid by the FBI and Chicago Police Department.

Former Black Panther and Freedom Fighter Mark Clark Assassinated on December 4, 1969 in a pre-dawn raid by the FBI and Chicago Police department.

Former Black Panther and Freedom Fighter Mark Clark Assassinated on December 4, 1969 in a pre-dawn raid by the FBI and Chicago Police department.

Bed Stuy rides for Gaza - Solidarity
End the Occupation now!

Bed Stuy rides for Gaza - Solidarity

End the Occupation now!

Say their names and know Palestine will be free! -

Names, not numbers: a film commemorating the Palestinians killed by Israel’s Operation Pillar of Cloud, by Harry Fear - http://fb.com/harryfear - © http://GazaReport.com

Statement From Leonard for National Day of Mourning

November 21, 2012
Greeting my relatives, friends, and supporters,

It is with great honor that I get a chance to speak with you even though it’s a written message that someone has to read.

I’m saddened that we have to call this a Day of Mourning, but we must take every opportunity to remind this nation when it comes to keeping their word about treaties, about human rights, about the environment, about excess pollution – that it has failed miserably on all of those concerns.  Also want to remind the major religions that speak about peace and love and brotherhood and are celebrating this thing called Thanksgiving, that we the native people of this land realistically overall have nothing to truly be thankful about regarding the arrival of the pilgrims.

And I would also like to remind the major various religions of this country that in all their teachings it says you reap what you sow.  And if that is a true statement, if that is the law given by the Creator, then you have to only look around at the news of the day to see that that statement is coming to pass. This country is not keeping its solemn word under god that it gave regarding our treaties.  And they don’t keep their own Scriptures that say not to bear false witness or lie.  They’ve tried to keep us from honoring our fathers by destroying our culture.  They violated their word where it says “thou shalt not kill”, violated every one of their commandments regarding our people in this land.  And they will truly reap what they sow.

I also want to say that in the spirit of compassion and reason, and fairness, and forgiveness, that its never too late to turn things around.  Actually I should say that’s not quite correct, it can be too late.  There’s an old Cheyenne saying that a nation is never destroyed until the hearts of its women are on the ground.  And if you look around you will see the decline of America.  And it is entirely possible that that teaching is not far off.  One thing as a people that we do have to be thankful for and thankful to the Creator only, we are still alive we are still a people.  And we still know who we are, we still have a commitment to the Creator to protect this land, we still have a commitment to protect the laws of nature that were given unto us, to our ancestors.  We are probably the only people on this continent that would be better off if this whole system fell apart.  Because we possess the knowledge, the teaching and the culture to live in harmony with that which the Creator has given us.

I want to encourage all the young people, to always remember your health and the health of the earth are the most important things that you possess.  And that self-discipline is the most important thing that you can learn.  And taking responsibility for ourselves and our future is the most empowering thing that we can do.  Right now you are listening to my words the words of a man in prison for 30 something years.  A man who has had limited contact and yet I am able to speak to you now.  And the reason I am saying this is because with all the freedom that you do possess you could do so much more.  Educate yourself to our true history, educate yourself to what is really going on today, and educate yourself as to what needs to be done to make a better tomorrow for yourselves and your children’s children, our future generations.

Again I want to say I am just an ordinary man caught up in extraordinary circumstances.   There is nothing that I have done or said that you cannot do or say and much better because you possess more freedom than I do.  We need each other.  If I am ever to be free, I need you.  And the truth is, none of us are truly free right now, because any people who is afraid of their government, is not free.  We all need to be warriors of one.  Each needs to know how to defend themselves on any level.  And as I’ve said before we need to recapture the freedoms we’ve lost and protect the ones we still have.

In closing I want to encourage each and every one of you to stand up in your own way in whatever way you can for what’s right, try to right what’s wrong and know that in my heart and in whatever way I can help you,  that I will be with you.  We need each other, you need each other, and we need the help of all peoples to correct this great damage that is taking place throughout the earth.  Our battle is not with a race a people or a color, our battle is with ignorance and greed that is ruling the governments of men today.

Again I want to thank you and in the spirit of crazy horse and all those beautiful people that have stood up for what’s right in the past, and the ones standing up now.  Stay strong and support one another,

Your Friend Always and in All Ways,

Leonard Peltier

(Source: whoisleonardpeltier.info)

Malcolm X Grassroots Movement statement condemning the Israeli assault on Gaza and the Palestinian People

The Malcolm X Grassroots Movement condemns in the strongest terms the Israeli assault on Gaza and the US governments full political and diplomatic support for this illegal and amoral military operation.

We firmly assert the right of the Palestinian people to resist their ongoing occupation and colonization by the Israeli government and the international forces of Zionism. We also firmly support the Palestinian peoples right to self-determination and statehood, and the unequivocal and irrevocable right to return.

We recognize that this assault comes at a very critical period for the Southwest Asian and North African region. A period where political alignments and being renegotiated and political maps redrawn by a shifting body of forces, some progressive and some extremely reactionary. In this context we call on the Arab League and all of the Arab governments from Algeria to Iraq, from Saudi Arabia to Sudan, to stand united in solidarity and resistance with the Palestinian people. And to those states that supported regime change in Libya, and are supporting the ongoing regime change operation in Syria, we call on them to provide the Palestinians with the same level of political and economic support for their just cause against the illegitimate Zionist colonial project.

Finally, we call on all people of Afrikan descent within the United States to stand with us in condemning this assault and the ongoing occupation of Palestine. We ask you all to join us in demanding that President Barack Obama condemn this assault, demand that Israel cease its aggression, abide by international law, and by the numerous United Nations resolutions that condemn the occupation, the apartheid system, and the various human rights violations being committed by the Israeli state.

Free the Land!

Monday, November 19, 2012

www.mxgm.org

(Source: )

via Desiree Gordon - “Judaism is beautiful. Zionism is not the same thing. Anti-oppression is not the same as anti-semitic. What explanation can make this greed as beautiful Judaism?  Imperialism is imperialism, whether it be done in the name of Allah, Yahweh, Oil, or “Security”.  Blessed are we who believe in Freedom. For Everyone.”

via Desiree Gordon - “Judaism is beautiful. Zionism is not the same thing. Anti-oppression is not the same as anti-semitic.
What explanation can make this greed as beautiful Judaism?

Imperialism is imperialism, whether it be done in the name of Allah, Yahweh, Oil, or “Security”.
Blessed are we who believe in Freedom. For Everyone.”