HARLEM HAPPENINGS

Basketball’s “Wonder Boy” Buried With Honors

January 31, 2009 · Leave a Comment

 Basketball’s “Wonder Boy” Buried With Honors

Basketball’s “Wonder Boy” Buried With Honors

By: NY1 News

Friends and family gathered at the Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal Church in Harlem today to honor and bury 93-year-old basketball legend John “Wonder Boy” Isaacs.

Isaacs played on the all-black New York Renaissance, which was the first city basketball team to win a championship game.

At last night’s wake in Wakefield, Bronx, relatives and friends said Isaacs will be remembered for his positive effect on city kids. Isaacs participated in many children’s organizations, like the Madison Square Boys and Bronx’s Girls Club, throughout his life.

“He was more than just sports. He was into education, he went to schools, said do the right thing, stay out of trouble, and live your life. That’s the type of man he was,” said a mourner.

“He’ll be missed, but his spirit will never die,” said former co-worker Ralph Porter. “It’s amazing here tonight. You see the young, the middle-aged and the old. So you know the impact that he had.

Isaacs died Monday in a Bronx hospital after suffering a stoke last Friday.

Technorati Tags: , , , ,

Categories: ALL BRONX NEWS · HARLEM NEWS · HARLEM SPORTS · NARMER'S NEWSTAND · SANKOFA · SANKOFA21 · UPTOWN FLAVOR
Tagged: ,

Can Obama boost cause for Afro-Latinos?

January 31, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Can Obama boost cause for Afro-Latinos?

 

While this country’s indigenous population has been on the march for new rights, Bolivians of African descent still find themselves living on the sidelines of society.

There are no black legislators or justices; their history is left out of school text books; they are not even specifically counted in the census.

“When we go into the city, they think we are Venezuelans or Colombians,” says Reina Ballivian, a resident of Tocaña, a tiny community made up mostly of Afro-Bolivians in the lush Yungas Valley. “It’s hard to convince them that we are black and Bolivian.”

But last Sunday, Afro-Bolivians received a major boost with the passage of a new Constitution that gives them their first legal recognition.

Many black activists here hope the charter is the first step in ending years of discrimination and say it is one of many victories for African descendants across Latin America, where blacks are demanding new rights, winning key political posts, and ushering in a new black pride movement.

They also see another development, far from their borders, that is a significant boon to their cause: the election of US President Barack Obama.

“Obama stands as an example that we can follow,” says Marfa Inofuentes, a leader of the Afro-Bolivian Center for Comprehensive Community Development in La Paz. “We, like him, want to have our own representative in Congress. And we dream than we can also have an Afro-Bolivian president some day.”

While activists don’t expect Mr. Obama to specifically reach out to their communities, they do hope that the dialogue between him or his administration with Latin American leaders could have a positive impact.

Between 30 and 40 percent of the population in Latin America is of African descent – compared with just 10 percent for indigenous.

Claire Nelson, a development equity specialist at the Inter-American Development Bank, who has focused on the Afro-Latino population for more than 15 years, says that black activism is seeing a resurgence thanks, in part, to the rise of Obama. “[It] has come a long way in terms of organization and strength.”

Gains for Latinos of African descent vary across countries. In the Caribbean, in English-speaking countries such as Jamaica and Barbados, most heads of state are of African descent.

“It’s not perfect, the dialogue on race and class, but political power is in black hands [there],” says Ms. Nelson. “In the rest of Latin America power is not in black hands.”

The black civil rights movement in Latin America is strongest in Brazil and Colombia, which boast the largest populations of black Latinos. Brazil has made major advances with affirmative action and its first black Supreme Court justice, Joaquim Barbosa, who is considered one of the most influential justices. A major advance for Afro-Colombians came with a 1993 guarantee of rights to formal titles to their ancestral lands. Today they are also guaranteed representation in federal Congress.

“These have been important conquests, even if Afro-Colombians have not yet had an important political impact,” says Carlos Rosero, an activist in Colombia. “We have had more impact on issues such as land rights. We need more strategic coordination to address the day-to-day issues.”

But the challenges are daunting. In Brazil, while Afro-Latinos comprise about 45 percent of the population, they make up 69 percent of the extremely poor. Poverty rates for Afro-Ecuadorians, who make up between 5 and 10 percent of the population, are much higher than the rest of the population – 90 percent compared with 62 percent overall. Only 17.2 percent have access to basic services such as running water and phones.

Many Afro-Bolivians say racism remains a part of daily life. Mario Medina, a resident of La Paz, says it takes many forms, but the one he notices most often is on the football field. “They’ll say, hey, Juan, pass the ball. But to me they say, hey, ‘negrito.’ “

“They used to think we were only good for hard work, soccer, and dancing,” says Ms. Inofuentes.

But that is starting to change. Groups are starting to work together across the region, especially on issues such as census recognition. And even in countries with small black populations, many feel a new era has arrived.

“Now a political consciousness has been awakened,” says Inofuentes. “We are pushing for our rights and political recognition.”

The activist movement in Bolivia began about 20 year ago as a cultural movement: preserving their music and dance called saya. On a recent evening in La Paz, a hip clientele crowded around a group of Afro-Bolivians beating drums and swirling in circles – a clear sign that their culture has been embraced by mainstream Bolivia.

Afro-Bolivians descend from slaves brought from Angola and Congo in the 16th century. They were sent to the mines of Bolivia and later the sugar plantations in the Yungas Valley, a semitropical region about three hours from La Paz. Today there are communities across the country, as many have migrated to cities for jobs, but the largest concentration is in these valleys. Leaders estimate their population to be about 30,000.

In Tocaña, perched on a verdant mountain, there are just 30 families. It has long been isolated. Potable water and electricity came just seven years ago. There is one elementary school, and a health clinic staffed on Saturdays only. Most have cellphones, but they prefer to call out to one another up and down the mountain.

Residents, who chop wood to heat their ovens, work fields of coca and citrus during the day. At night the town comes alive, with soccer matches and children playing outside the single Catholic church.

As in other countries, the gains made by the indigenous here – in 2006 Bolivia elected its first indigenous president, Evo Morales – have inspired black activism. As the indigenous pushed forward for demands to rewrite the Constitution, Afro-Bolivians saw an opportunity to promote their own causes.

“We realized we had to be represented in the Constitution,” says Juan Vasquez, the community leader of Tocaña. Now they have won that, their next battle will be specific inclusion in Bolivia’s next census.

“For years they just considered us Aymara because we live in the midst of the indigenous,” Mr. Vasques says. “Now that is changing. We have recuperated our self-esteem as black descendants.”

 
 
 
Find this article at: 
http://www.csmonitor.com/2009/0130/p25s19-woam.html
 

Categories: GENERAL

KJ highest US poverty rate, census says

January 31, 2009 · Leave a Comment

 KJ highest US poverty rate, census says

KJ highest US poverty rate, census says
Expert on Hasidic communities says large families, poverty linked

By Matt King

Times Herald-Record

January 30, 2009 6:00 AM

KIRYAS JOEL — This village has always had the distinction of being a cultural and religious enclave, but now it can add another:

Kiryas Joel is the poorest place in the country.

According to the latest round of U.S. Census figures, released late last year, the village has the highest poverty rate in the nation, and the largest percentage of residents who receive food stamps. Only one other place in the 50 states has a lower median income. The median household income in Kiryas Joel is $15,848; in Carbondale, Ill., it’s $15,799.

More than two-thirds of Kiryas Joel residents live below the federal poverty line and more than 40 percent receive food stamps, according to the American Community Survey, a U.S. Census Bureau study of every place in the country with 20,000 residents or more.

That makes the village poorer than crumbling big cities like Detroit and noted slums like East St. Louis, and by far the poorest place in the mid-Hudson.

The poverty rate in Newburgh, the next-poorest place, is 28 percent. Regionwide, it’s about 11.5 percent. Places in the country with poverty rates similar to Kiryas Joel are mostly college towns with large populations of students who don’t have full-time jobs.

Village officials did not return calls seeking comment, but an expert in Hasidic communities said the poverty figures are tied strongly to the village’s religious culture and mores.

Pressure to have many children and the demand to send them to expensive private schools, combined with a low number of people who go to college or leave the village to get higher-paying jobs, produces a static and poor society, said Samuel Heilman, professor of Jewish studies at Queens College.

“This is a population that sees childbirth as a sign of high status and for women a fulfillment of their divine and socially sanctioned role in life,” Heilman said. “They are also an insular community that see life on the inside superior to the outside.”

The tendency toward large families is borne out in the American Community Survey data.

The median age in the village is 14.4, meaning half of its more than 21,000 residents is 14 or younger.

Also, the village has the highest marriage rate in the country, with 80 percent of women ages 15 to 50 being married.

mking@th-record.com

Poorest places in the country and local results

Poverty rate

Kiryas Joel: 68 percent

Athens City, Ohio: 52 percent

State College, Pa.: 50 percent

Newburgh: 28 percent

Kingston: 19 percent

Middletown: 17 percent

CLICK TO READ MORE ….[RECORD]

Categories: GENERAL

BILLIE’S BLACK EVENTS

January 31, 2009 · Leave a Comment

HELLO FRIENDS,
 
HERE IS THE LATEST LIST OF EVENTS!!!!
 
 FEB 1ST- THE L WORD-  THE 3RD INSTALLMENT OF THE FINAL SEASON.  THE FUN STARTS AT 7 PM.  COME WATCH THIS SHOW EVERY SUNDAY UNTIL THE SERIES FINAL EPISODE.
 
FEB 7TH-HESHIMA MOJA. IN ASSOCIATION WITH MAKE IT HAPPEN ENTERTAINMENT (MIHE) WE PRESENT HESHIMA!!  . COME CHECK OUT THIS MULTI INSTRUMENTALIST/VOCALIST FOR HIS FIRST SHOW @ BILLIE’S BLACK!!!  (MORE DETAILS TBA)
  
FEB 11TH- KENDRA ROSS (POSTPONED FROM 1/23).  KENDRA IS SETTING THE VALENTINE’S WEEKEND OFF WITH A SPECIAL ACOUSTIC SET!!  COVER $10.00  
 
FEB 12TH- EAST BROOKLYN POETS-THEY ARE BACK AND CONTINUING THE VALENTINE’S WEEKEND CELEBRATION.  COME CHECK OUT “FOREPLAY” !!!  OOOOOOOOOO – CAN YOU FEEL IT?????  AND- NO COVER!! 
 
FEB 13TH- KIMBERLY NICHOLE – CONTINUING THE FESTIVITIES FOR VALENTINE’S WEEKEND, THE WONDERFUL MISS KIMBERLY NICHOLE IS HERE!!!!  THIS POWERFUL VOCALIST WILL MAKE IT DO WHAT IT DO!!!! (MORE DETAILS TBA)
 
FEB 14TH- HAPPY VALENTINE’S DAY!!!!  COME AND BRING YOUR SWEETIE TO ENJOY THE DECADENT DRINKS AND MOUTH WATERING MEALS WE ARE FAMOUS FOR.  LIVE ENTERTAINMENT TO SET THE EVENING OFF TO A ______________ START!!!!!  NO COVER!
 
FEB 20TH- KENNY WESLEY- ALL THE WAY FROM DC!!!! JAZZ/SOUL. SINGER IS MAKING HIS WAY TO HARLEM TO BLESS US WITH HIS BEAUTIFUL VOICE!!! THIS DUDE CAN SANG!!!!  COVER $5.00 
 
FEB 21ST- KREATION- THE MAKE UP SHOW FROM JAZZ/SOUL BAND KREATION. COME SEE SAXMAN KEVIN ROBINSON AND HIS BAND AS THEY GRACE THE STAGE OF BILLIE’S BLACK!!! COVER $10
 
FEB 27TH- COMEDY NIGHT!!!!  HOSTED BY OMAR RUFFIN, COME AND GET YOU LAUGH ON!!!!  (MORE DETAILS TBA)
 
FEB 28TH- MICHAEL C. LEWIS JAZZ EXPERIENCE- FRONTED BY HORN PLAYER MICHAEL C. LEWIS, THESE MUSICIANS ARE SECOND TO NONE!!!! COME CHECK THEM OUT AS THEY CLOSE OUT BLACK HISTORY MONTH!!!!!  FOR ADVANCED TICKETS GO TO-  http://michaelclewis.ning.com/page/store-1 
 
 
ALL THROUGH MARCH, IN HONOR OF WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH,  WE ARE FEATURING FEMALE PERFORMERS!!!!!!!  COME SUPPORT AND SHOW YOU LOVE FOR ALL WOMEN FROM ALL WALKS OF LIFE!!!!  
 
MARCH 6TH- MELIKA MILLER.   THIS TALENTED SINGER/SONGWRITER IS COMING TO BILLIES’ BLACK.  IN HER OWN  WORDS- “I want my audience to feel me and for me to feel them. I want to reach into the hearts of anyone who hears my music or watches me perform.” This is her mission.  COME AND WITNESS HOW SHE IS STRIVING TO FULFILL HER MISSION!!!  (MORE DETAILS TBA)
 
MARCH 11TH- MARVEL ALLEN- THIS JAZZ, BLUES, SOUL SINGER IS DOING HER OWN SHOW AT BILLIE’S.  MARVEL’S RESUME INCLUDES PERFORMING WITH REGINA BELLE, WILL DOWNING AND DELFEAYO MARSALIS TO NAME A FEW.  CHECKOUT MS. ALLEN’S MYSPACE  TO GET A TASTE OF WHAT IS GOING TO HAPPEN ON THE 11TH!!  (http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewProfile&friendID=2453391600)
 
MARCH 13TH – AJ (AHSSH)- HUSBAND AND WIFE TEAM ARE MAKING THERE RETURN ENGAGEMENT.  SMOOTH AND SOULFUL MUSIC DONE RIGHT!!!! JAMES- SINGER/GUITARIST AND ANDREA- SINGER/FLUTIST AND THE BAND IS TIGHTER THAN TIGHT!!  (MORE DETAILS TBA)
 
MARCH 14TH- ANOTHER MIHE CONNECTION, WE PRESENT ARLETTE BEAUCHAMPS!!!  ACCOMPLISHED VOCALIST HAS BEEN SINGING AND TOURING SINCE THE AGE OF 15.  ARLETTE HAS HIT MANY SPOTS IN NY AND NOW SHE IS HITTING BILLIE’S BLACK!!!!  (MORE DETAILS TBA)
 
MARCH 20TH- VERSATILE SINGER PAULA RALPH-BIRKETT IS HEADLINING HER OWN SHOW @ BILLIE’S FOR THE FIRST TIME. COME SEE THIS LADY PERFORM JAZZ, GOSPEL AND WHATEVER ELSE SUITS HER!!!!  (MORE DETAILS TBA)
 
MARCH 26TH- SPECIAL EDITION OF HAIRITAGE LOUNGE.  THIS IS GOING TO BE A HOT SHOW!!!  MORE DETAILS TBA.
 
MARCH 28TH- LINDA MATOS- ONCE AGAIN MIHE AND BILLIE’S BLACK ARE JOINING FORCES TO BRING GREAT TALENT TO THE MASSES.  COME CHECK OUT SINGER, COMPOSER, PIANIST LINDA MATOS AS SHE CLOSES OUT WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH!!!.
 
AND AS ALWAYS- TUESDAYS WE HAVE KARAOKE W/ SOUL, HOSTED BY WES BLACK.  AND THE 3RD THURSDAY IT’S THE OPEN MYC SERIES- P MYNER.

THANK YOU!!!  HOPE TO SEE YOU THERE!!


Billie’s Black NYC
www.billiesblack.com
www.myspace.com/billiesblack
271 West 119th Street NYC
(212) 280-2248
A,B,D trains to 125th street


Categories: GENERAL