Great Forward from Edward Thomas Jr.

Every day emails and email forwards I often would like to share with my friends and family come from Edward. I don’t always get to them in a timely way.  Edward sent one on  January 31 about a great show on finances on Moyers & Company. I checked out the site today and found another one on the organizer Saul Alinsky. You can view the full episodes. Glad to see Bill Moyers is back.

I am asking Edward to become a regular contributor so he can post directly on 4comculture.com.  Hope he will come on board.
Bob L

 
Forward: Edward Thomas Jr.
Subject: Information
If anyone is interested the Bill Moyers and Company show tonight covered important financial news.
 Check out www.BillMoyers.com.  On that show he introduced the book “Throw Them All Out” – Peter Schweizer.
Edward

Black Heritage Day February 7

Bookfair Benefit for MLK Outreach Center 2 PM February 18

Support Jerrelene Williamson and the Martin Luther King Jr Family Outreach Center. Come to Jerrelene’s book signing at the Spokane Valley Barnes & Noble Bookfair.  A percentage of every book bought at the bookfair or online using the bookfair ID 10692119 will go to benefit the MLK Outreach Center.

Barnes & Noble is located in the Market Pointe Shopping Center 15310 East Indiana Avenue.

 

Hi, all:

My mom, Jerrelene Williamson, will be signing her book “African Americans in Spokane” on Saturday, Feb. 18, at  Barnes & Noble bookstore in the Spokane Valley.  This time it is also a bookfair to benefit the Martin Luther King Center Jr. Family Outreach Center.  

If you buy ANY book that day from B&N using the attached voucher in ANY store, or using the bookfair ID number online, the MLK Center will get a percentage of the proceeds.

If there’s a book you want to buy, now’s the time to support my mom and a good cause.  Thanks a million!

Jennifer Roseman

Publisher’s Note: Jerrelene Williamson is the mother of Jennifer and Larry Roseman, all long-time contributors to the community.

Black Heritage Day February 6

Gospel Explosion: Black History Month Celebration

February 10 7 pm Seeley G. Mudd Chapel: Join Whitworth students and Spokane-area choirs for this annual celebration of Black History Month. Contact Stephy Nobles-Beans 509.777.4568 or sbeans@whitworth.edu

March 8 7:30 pm Robinson Teaching Theater, Weyerhauser Hall: Great Decisions Lecture: Megan Hershey “Democratic Challenges and Change in Contemporary Africa”. Hershey won the Carlton T. Hodge Prize in African Studies and Fulbright Hays Research Abroad Grant for her work with NGOs addressing HIV/AIDS in Kenya.

‘Slavery by Another Name’: Dr. Sharon Malone

Eric Holder’s wife tells her story in PBS’ ‘Slavery by Another Name’. Dr. Sharon Malone speaks during the ‘Slavery By Another Name’ panel during the PBS portion of the 2012 Winter TCA Tour held at The Langham Huntington Hotel and Spa on Jan. 4, 2012 in Pasadena, Calif.

*Imagine this… You do some research into your family tree and discover that your uncle, who was born nearly 30 years after slavery ended in the U.S, was one of thousands of black men pulled back into a forced labor system in which they were arrested – largely on trumped up charges – and compelled to work without pay as prisoners. Imagine that this “convict leasing” system saw the groups of prisoners sold to private parties – like plantation owners or corporations – and that it was not only tolerated by both the North and South, but largely ignored by the U.S. Justice Department. Now, imagine that nearly a century after your uncle served 366 days in this penal labor system, you find yourself married to the head of the U.S. Justice Department, who, ironically, just so happens to be the first African American in the position.

Dr. Sharon Malone, wife of U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, tells the heartbreaking story of her Uncle Henry in the upcoming 90-minute PBS documentary “Slavery by Another Name.” The film is based on the eye-opening book by Douglas A. Blackmon, which exposes a part of American history that most folks either had no clue existed, or didn’t know existed to the extent that it did. “I want people to understand that this is not something that’s divorced and separate, and this doesn’t have anything to do with them,” Dr. Malone told EURweb exclusively at the Television Critics Association press tour last week. “If you were a black person who grew up in the South, some way or the other – whether or not you were directly involved in the system as my uncle was – you knew somebody who was, or your daily lives were circumscribed by those circumstances.” “But more importantly,” she continues, “why I really want people to see this film is because this is American history. This isn’t just southern history, or African American history. It explains a lot of who we are as a people. It is a missing puzzle piece for what happened. You had the Civil War, you had reconstruction, gap, gap, gap, and then you’re at Martin Luther King. This fills in that gap.”

“Slavery by Another Name,” narrated by Laurence Fishburne and produced and directed by Sam Pollard, premieres Monday, Feb. 13, 2012 at 9 p.m. ET on PBS. Click on link below to watch the promo. Dr. Malone says she sensed that something was always on low boil with Uncle Henry. http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=5s8ccKepCms <http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&amp;v=5s8ccKepCms>  History has repeated itself with the rate of incarcerations of this century!!

Thanks, Yvor, for the heads up.   Slavery by Another Name is on the KSPS channel 7 schedule at 9 pm on February 13.

Black Heritage Day February 5

Black Heritage Day February 4

Ira Gardner: Happy belated birthday Dr. King

Martin Luther King Day



Happy belated birthday Dr. King. I am typically late with birthday wishes and this one is no exception. I started to write this the morning of January 16th but was interrupted by a lack of confidence that as a white male I had any right to publish words about such a great leader. Today I thought better of it and decided to push through my own discomfort.

Today is Martin Luther King’s birthday and a Federal holiday. I took this day off to enjoy being with my son and his boy scout troop skiing. I am grateful for this time together but also feel obligated to acknowledge and honor the gift Martin Luther King has given us through his words, acts, and ultimately with his life.

Thanks to the power of the internet and podcasts, I started the day listening to a lecture by the poet Rita Dove and learning about a African-European concert violinist George Bridgetower who at one time was the acquaintance of Beethoven and inspired him to write a sonata dedicated to him. I have been a fan of Beethoven since I learned to play Für Elise as a young child on the piano. I was surprised I had not heard of Mr. Bridgetower before, but then again I wasn’t as it seems most of the contributions of people of color are overlooked in mainstream society and we continue to teach our children the ideology of Manifest Destiny.

Writing Your Life Story Class Correction

In our post “We All Have A Story” of February 1, 2012 we gave information about a writing class. The class has been cancelled for winter quarter but will be offered in the Spring. The new information is below.    For more information check the Community Colleges of Spokane Continuing Education website.

Writing Your Life Story*
Item: M370 Dian Zahner
1:00 PM – 3:00 PM Location: Magnuson Building, Rm: 0120
Sessions: 5 Tu 2917 W Fort George Wright Drive Spokane, WA 99224
4/3/2012 – 5/1/2012 Fee: $36.00