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The Curry Report
April 19, 2011
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In This Issue
Rev. Al Sampson: An Uncelebrated Warrior
Republican Party leader slams colleague who sent Obama-chimpanzee email
Phonetic Clues Hint Language Is Africa-Born
Donald Trump's Baseless Challenge to Obama's U.S.Citizenship
Farrakhan Using Libyan Crisis to Bolster His Nation of Islam
Did Tea Party-inspired Republicans Steamroll Democrats?
Five myths about why the South seceded.
Gates looks at black experience throughout Latin America


Rev. Al Sampson: An Uncelebrated Warrior 


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By George E. Curry

NNPA Columnist

 

 

This is the first major civil rights organization of our culture that has given me an honorary opportunity with this particular gift.

 

The speaker was Rev. Al Sampson, a longtime civil rights activist and pastor of Fenwood United Methodist Church in Chicago. And the gift he was referring to was Rev. Al Sharpton's National Action Network's decision to honor Sampson along with former Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) President Charles Steele, Jr.; Barbara Shaw, board chair of the National Council of Negro Women, and me with a Rev. Dr. William A. Jones Justice Award. The awards were presented by the Social Justice Initiative of NAN.

 

Sampson, who was ordained by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. two years prior to the civil rights leader's assassination, was a movement stalwart. If you pick up any authoritative book on the modern civil rights movement, there will be at least one reference to Sampson, usually more.

 

Throughout his acceptance speech at the NAN convention that ended over the weekend, Sampson joked about all of the civil rights organizations that have never recognized his contributions. Beneath the laughter, however, there was deep pain. Not pain out of any need for public accolades, but pain that grew out of being ignored while others with lesser roles in the movement were allowed to take bows in public.

 

Jesse Jackson and I came out of North Carolina, Sampton noted. He was a transfer student [from the University of Illinois to North Carolina A&T University]. We were part of the Black State Legislature for a week. We passed a public accommodations bill. But PUSH never gave me an award.

 

In her book, My Life with Martin Luther King, Jr., Coretta Scott King recalled an incident in Chicago when a teenage gang member who had come to visit Dr. King complained about SCLC allowing Whites to participate in the movement.

 

She wrote, "Al told them that there were a lot of white people who were helping our Cause and that some had even died for us."

 

Bearing the Cross, the Pulitzer Prize-winning book by David A. Garrow, recounted how outspoken Sampson was as a young civil rights organizer with SCLC.

 

Writing about tension between local residents of Natchez, Miss. and SCLC organizers, Garrow wrote: "The breach had become more irreparable when SCLC's Al Sampson 'had denounce[d]

the local leadership in general and the NAACP by name, as unreliable, untrustworthy, and incapable' at an October 18 mass meeting."

 

Before joining SCLC, Sampson had been executive secretary of the Atlanta branch of the NAACP.

 

"The NAACP, I'm the only person, along with Albert Dunn and Charles Wells, that got arrested in Atlanta, Ga.," Sampson said. Constance Baker Motley [who wrote the original complaint in Brown v. Board of Education and later became the first Black woman judge appointed to the federal bench] was my attorney. Burke Marshall was the special counsel for the Justice Department and I'm the first person in America to testify for the United States Civil Rights Bill on the [segregationist restaurant owner and later Georgia governor] Lester Maddox Pickrick Restaurant case...But the NAACP ain't never gave me no award."

 

Sampson did more than take on Maddox, who closed his restaurant after passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act to avoid serving African-American customers.

 

Taylor Branch, author of a civil rights trilogy that won a Pulitzer Prize, wrote about the imprisonment of Sampson in Mississippi's notorious Parchman Prison Farm, 200 miles north of the Mississippi Delta. In one of his books, At Canaan's Edge, Branch wrote, "Prisoners smuggled out word that guards were beating the known leaders including SCLC's Rev. Al Sampson and that the 409 Natchez inmates were stripped, force-fed laxatives, and chilled by night fans."

 

Later in the book, Branch described how Sampson, Rev. Archie Hargraves and Bill Clark formed "a human shield around three terrified Puerto Rican men" in Chicago who had been cornered by a street gang.

 

In Coretta's book - she got a book, My Life with Martin Luther King - she mentions James Orange, James Bevel and myself living with Dr. King on the West Side of Chicago, on 16th and Hamlin, Sampson said. I'm all up in the book. But they built a development for him last week and flew Marty King in - that's alright. But I was on the property, in the building, documented by the mama but they didn't invite me.

 

SNCC was formed at a meeting on the campus of Shaw University while Sampson was enrolled there.

 

I gave SNCC the keys to Tucker Hall at Shaw University because they didn't have no meeting place, Sampson said. I would have been a member of SNCC but I was already president of the NAACP on campus. They had a reunion last summer. They didn't invite me and they didn't give me no award.

 

Once NAN made the decision to honor Sampson, he took extra precaution.

 

I didn't sleep much last night, he told the audience in New York. I've been behaving myself the last two days because I didn't want Brother Richardson [Board Chairman W. Franklyn Richardson] or Al Sharpton to take my award from me.

 

Although Sampson kept everyone at the ceremony laughing, ignoring his role in the movement was no joke.

 

 

George E. Curry, former editor-in-chief of Emerge magazine and the NNPA News Service, is a keynote speaker, moderator, and media coach. He can be reached through his Web site, www.georgecurry.comYou can also follow him at www.twitter.com/currygeorge.

 

 

 

 

 

  

O.C. Republican Party leader slams colleague who sent Obama-chimpanzee email
Obama monkey 

 

 

  

By Christopher Goffard

© Los Angeles Times

April 17, 2011

 

Some Orange County Republican leaders are denouncing an email distributed by a long-serving party committee member that portrays President Obama's face superimposed on a chimpanzee, with the words: "Now you know why - No birth certificate!"

County GOP Chairman Scott Baugh has called for the resignation of Marilyn Davenport, an elected member of the party central committee who sent the email to some committee members and others last week. Baugh said he received it Friday afternoon and quickly responded with an email telling Davenport it was "dripping with racism and is in very poor taste."

READ MORE

Phonetic Clues Hint Language Is Africa-Born

 Africa

 

 By Nicholas Wade

© New York Times

April 14, 2011

 

A researcher analyzing the sounds in languages spoken around the world has detected an ancient signal that points to southern Africa as the place where modern human language originated.

The finding fits well with the evidence from fossil skulls and DNA that modern humans originated in Africa.

READ MORE

 

 

Donald Trump's Baseless Challenge to Obama's U.S.Citizenship

Donald Trump  

 

  

By George E. Curry
NNPA Columnist
 
Donald Trump, who is again flirting with the possibility ofrunning for president on the Republican ticket, has garnered widespread publicityby repeating thoroughly discredited claims that President Obama was not born inthe United States and therefore is ineligible to be president of the UnitedStates. He has hired private investigators to look into whether Obama was bornin Hawaii.
Trump should save his money. There is no doubt that Obamawas born in the United States. The only people who refuse to accept this truthare ignorant, brain dead or decline to let facts get in way of their right-wingpolitics. In this case, Donald Trump might fit all three categories.

 

 .READ MORE

 

 

Farrakhan Using Libyan Crisis to Bolster His Nation of Islam

 
Farrakhan

By David Lepeska

© New York Times

April 9, 2011

 

When Louis Farrakhan, leader of the Chicago-based Nation of Islam, staunchly defended Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi recently, he seized headlines for an organization that has made little news in recent years.

In an often-fiery speech on March 31 at Mosque Maryam, the group's South Side headquarters, Mr. Farrakhan recalled the decades of friendship and millions of dollars Colonel Qaddafi had lent the Nation of Islam over the years.

 

"What kind of brother would I be if a man has been that way to me, and to us, and when he's in trouble I refuse to raise my voice in his defense?" Mr. Farrakhan said to cheers and applause from hundreds of the faithful gathered at the mosque.

 

Mr. Farrakhan, 77, sounded sincere in his efforts to come to the aid of the embattled Libyan leader. But amid a significant drop in Nation of Islam membership, waning popular interest in the movement he leads and growing concerns over succession, Mr. Farrakhan may also be using the conflict in Libya as an effort to return to relevance.

READ MORE 

Did Tea Party-inspired Republicans Steamroll Democrats?

 

 
Obama Congress 09

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

By George E. Curry

TheDefendersOnline.com

April 15, 2011

 

Democrats control two of the three institutions that determine federal priorities and laws, but you would never know that by the way Tea Party-inspired Republicans in the House steamrolled President Obama and Senate Democrats in the latest budget showdown designed to cut $38.5 billion from the fiscal year that is already half over.

 

In exchange for approving budget funding to keep the federal government afloat through the fiscal year that ends September 30, Republicans demanded significant spending reductions. Slightly more than half of the cuts are aimed at favorite GOP targets: education, health and labor programs. Of the $38.5 billion in overall reductions, roughly $20 billion would come from domestic discretionary programs and $17.8 billion would be taken from mandatory programs.

 

 

 

 

READ MORE

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Five myths about why the South seceded

    Confederate flag  

 

 

By James W. Loewen

© Washington Post

February 26, 12:01

 

One hundred fifty years after the Civil War began, we're still fighting it - or at least fighting over its history. I've polled thousands of high school history teachers and spoken about the war to audiences across the country, and there is little agreement even about why the South seceded. Was it over slavery? States' rights? Tariffs and taxes?

 

As the nation begins to commemorate the anniversaries of the war's various battles - from Fort Sumter to Appomattox - let's first dispense with some of the more prevalent myths about why it all began.

 

1. The South seceded over states' rights.

Confederate states did claim the right to secede, but no state claimed to be seceding for that right. In fact, Confederates opposed states' rights - that is, the right of Northern states not to support slavery.

On Dec. 24, 1860, delegates at South Carolina's secession convention adopted a "Declaration of the Immediate Causes Which Induce and Justify the Secession of South Carolina from the Federal Union." It noted "an increasing hostility on the part of the non-slaveholding States to the institution of slavery" and protested that Northern states had failed to "fulfill their constitutional obligations" by interfering with the return of fugitive slaves to bondage. Slavery, not states' rights, birthed the Civil War.

 

 

 

 READ MORE

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Gates looks at black experience throughout Latin America

 Latin America


 

By Sam Allis

© Boston Globe

April 17, 2011

 

When we think of Latin America, we think of a sprawling quilt of Hispanic cultures sewn in Spain. What we know much less about is the huge African-American population that has been in the region since the Spanish first brought African slaves there.

 

 "Upward of 120 million people of African descent live in Latin America today,'' says Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates Jr., who, even though he is a scholar of African-American history, says he was staggered by the number when he first learned of it.

 

READ MORE

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