MPower 360

MPower 360 A Nevada non-profit civic engagement and social justice organization

Sebastián Lemba Calembo was a former slave who led a rebellion against slavery on the island of Hispaniola, becoming one...
02/24/2022

Sebastián Lemba Calembo was a former slave who led a rebellion against slavery on the island of Hispaniola, becoming one of the first to start the fight against slavery in the Americas. Lemba is an important figure in Black history, and he is revered as a national hero in the Dominican Republic with a statue in his honor.

It is not known exactly when he was born. But it is known that he was born in Africa, probably a member of the Lemba tribe on his mother’s side and a member of the Calembo tribe of the Kongo people on his father’s side, which is perhaps where his surname comes from.

When Sebastian Lemba was a young man, he was captured in Africa and taken to Hispaniola in approximately 1525 to work in the region’s crops, like millions of other enslaved Africans who were part of the transatlantic trade of the African forced labor force in the Americas.

Ever since he arrived in the Americas, Lemba refused to accept life as an enslaved person. He and a group of other enslaved Africans, called Cimarrones, rose up against the Spanish colonists in 1532, fleeing to the mountains of the island.

For fifteen years (1532-1548), he fought against the Spanish authorities who had conquered the island of Hispaniola through a bloody process of conquest. They used to move at night, raiding and looting towns across the island while freeing other enslaved Africans.

Along with his followers, Lemba walked on foot across the entire island fighting the Spanish invaders. When he encountered enslaved people, he set the places on fire, freed the slaves, and fled, a technique that today is defined by military theory as “guerrilla warfare.”

~ Source: Travel Noire

Repost el-Hajj Malik el-Shabazz
02/21/2022

Repost

el-Hajj Malik el-Shabazz

We missed it yesterday, but we have to acknowledge the birthday of the late Huey P. Newton, cofounder of the Black Panth...
02/18/2022

We missed it yesterday, but we have to acknowledge the birthday of the late Huey P. Newton, cofounder of the Black Panther Party.

Huey Percy Newton was born February 17, 1942, Monroe, Louisiana, U.S. He was an American political activist and cofounder (with Bobby Seale) of the Black Panther Party (originally called Black Panther Party for Self-Defense).

An illiterate high-school graduate, Newton taught himself how to read before attending Merritt College in Oakland and the San Francisco School of Law. While at Merritt he met Seale. In Oakland in 1966 they formed the Black Panther group in response to incidents of alleged police brutality and racism and as an illustration of the need for Black self-reliance. At the height of its popularity during the late 1960s, the party had 2,000 members in chapters in several cities.

In 1967 Newton was convicted of voluntary manslaughter in the death of a police officer. His imprisonment sparked protests—and the popular rallying cry “Free Huey.” His conviction was overturned in 1970, and he was released from prison. In 1971 he announced that the party would adopt a nonviolent manifesto and dedicate itself to providing social services to the Black community, which included free meals for children and health clinics. In 1974 Newton was accused of another murder and fled to Cuba for three years before returning to face charges; two trials resulted in hung juries.

Newton received a Ph.D. in social philosophy from the University of California at Santa Cruz (1980); his dissertation, “War Against the Panthers,” was subtitled “A Study of Repression in America.” Succumbing to factionalism and pressure from government agencies, the Black Panther Party disbanded in 1982. In March 1989 Newton was sentenced to a six-month jail term for misappropriating public funds intended for a Panther-founded Oakland school. In August of that year he was found shot dead during a drug dispute in Oakland.

~ Source: Encyclopedia Brittanica
📸: Blair Stapp, Library of Congress

Repost  It's time to make a significant   moment for Black women this year.Mia McLeod (South Carolina), Deirdre Gilbert ...
02/17/2022

Repost

It's time to make a significant moment for Black women this year.

Mia McLeod (South Carolina), Deirdre Gilbert (Texas), Connie Johnson (Oklahoma), Stacey Abrams (Georgia), Deidre DeJear (Iowa), and Danielle Allen (Massachusetts) have all made announcements to run.



John Benson was born in the 1850s as a slave on the shores of Kowaliga Creek – now covered by Lake Martin. John was owne...
02/16/2022

John Benson was born in the 1850s as a slave on the shores of Kowaliga Creek – now covered by Lake Martin. John was owned by James Benson a Virginian who owned a plantation along Kowaliga Creek. When James Benson died his plantation was divided and sold to neighbors and family. At a very young age, John was part of the property that was sent to an heir in Talladega, Alabama.

As the deathly veil of smoke lifted from the Civil War battle fields, John, was free. Given a mule, he took the Benson surname and left his Talladega slave home. John headed for Florida where he spent an entire summer looking for his sister who had been sold. It was a dangerous journey for anyone, much less a black teenager. He begged his way around Florida and found his sister. They traveled back to Alabama together. At this point, John went to work for $.60 per ton in the coal mines of the Cahaba Field in Shelby County.

By 1880, 19-year-old John had accumulated $100, an impressive amount for anyone in post-Civil War times much less a former slave. This $100 was enough money for John to move his family from the dusty coal mines to the rich green lands he once loved and worked as a slave. By 1890, he had managed to acquire on credit 160 acres of the former James Benson Plantation.

The fields once kept green by slave labor were now being farmed by the landowners and their sons. At harvest each year John bought more land. By 1898, John owned over 3000 acres and was using white and black labor to build his new 12 room farmhouse. More than 5 miles of Kowaliga Creek ran through John’s plantation and using the creek as a source of power, John built a brick yard, a sawmill, a grist mill, and a cotton gin and compressing mill.

John began lending money to his white neighbors and underwriting mortgages on land in Tallapoosa and Elmore Counties.

John, the former slave, had become a wealthy man.

Learn more: https://www.russelllandshistory.com/john-benson.html

He has been compared to James Bond and Malcolm X, though his name has largely been left out of the history books.Abraham...
02/11/2022

He has been compared to James Bond and Malcolm X, though his name has largely been left out of the history books.

Abraham Galloway was born 185 years ago, on Feb. 8, 1837, in a small fishing village on the Cape Fear River. He and his mother were enslaved; Abraham worked as a brick mason. At age 20, he escaped to Philadelphia and then Canada by hiding in the hold of a ship carrying barrels of turpentine, tar and rosin. He traveled to Haiti to join revolutionaries planning an attack on the American South that never materialized.

Years later, Galloway became one of the Union's most trusted spies.

When the Union planned to invade the North Carolina coast, Galloway was the perfect insider to scout the coastline for the best landings.

Galloway worked for the Union Army, but he didn't trust it. He'd seen racism within its ranks firsthand. But he helped recruit thousands of Black soldiers to fight with the North.

Abraham Galloway didn't stop fighting for human rights once the Civil War ended. In 1868, he became one of the first African Americans elected to the North Carolina Senate. He advocated for women's suffrage and railed against the widespread use of the N-word.

Galloway died unexpectedly of an illness at age 33. His obituary in The Christian Recorder called him "bold, brave, defiant and a patriot." Some 6,000 people gathered in downtown Wilmington, N.C., for his funeral.

Source: npr.org

Angela Davis (b. 1944) is an American political activist, professor, and author who was an active member in the Communis...
02/10/2022

Angela Davis (b. 1944) is an American political activist, professor, and author who was an active member in the Communist Party and the Black Panther Party.

She is most famous for her involvement with the Soledad brothers, who were accused of killing a prison guard. During George Jackson’s trial in August 1970, an escape attempt was made at gunpoint and several people were killed. Davis was accused of taking part in the event and was charged with murder.

Evidence showed that the guns were registered to her and rumors said she was in love with Jackson, which later proved untrue. Davis went into hiding and was placed on the FBI’s most wanted list.

She spent eighteen months in jail, which led to the “Free Angela Davis” campaign and the Angela Davis Legal Defense Committee. In response, John Lennon and Yoko Ono wrote “Angela” and the Rolling Stones wrote “Sweet Black Angel.”

In 1997, Davis came out as a le***an during an interview with Out magazine. Since then, she has continued to tackle oppression faced by the black community, women, and the LGBTQ+ community.

After spending time traveling and lecturing, Davis returned to teaching. She served as a professor at the University of California, Santa Cruz, where she taught courses on the history of consciousness.

Her interests in prisoner rights led her to found Critical Resistance, an organization working to abolish the prison-industrial complex. Davis is the author of several books including Women, Race, and Class (1983) and Are Prisons Obsolete? (2003). ~ SI National Museum of African American History & Culture

📸 John Edmonds

Bayard Taylor Rustin was born March 17, 1912, in West Chester, PA, PBS reports. He was a pretty normal child, writing, s...
02/08/2022

Bayard Taylor Rustin was born March 17, 1912, in West Chester, PA, PBS reports. He was a pretty normal child, writing, singing in the choir, playing football, and crediting his Quaker values of equality to his grandparents.

An openly gay Black man, Rustin never allowed the words and actions of his detractors to stop his crusade for justice. He fought against racial segregation, army drafting, and championed nonviolent protest.

Rustin eventually traveled to Alabama, working with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and A. Philip Randolph to organize The 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. Despite attacks from the FBI and the Senate, Rustin persisted, uniting more than 300,000 people that day in August for what Dr. King referred to as "the greatest demonstration for freedom" in American history. ~ BOTWC

"We need, in every community, a group of angelic troublemakers." - Bayard Rustin

A. Philip Randolph was born April 15, 1889, in Crescent City, Fla., the second son of the Rev. James William Randolph, a...
02/07/2022

A. Philip Randolph was born April 15, 1889, in Crescent City, Fla., the second son of the Rev. James William Randolph, a tailor and ordained minister in the African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church, and Elizabeth Robinson Randolph, a skilled seamstress.

He brought the gospel of trade unionism to millions of African American households.

In June 1925, a group of Pullman porters, the all-black service staff of the Pullman sleeping cars, approached Randolph and asked him to lead their new organization, the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters. Randolph agreed. Besides his abiding interest in and knowledge of unions, Randolph's primary qualification for the job was his reputation for incorruptibility and the fact that he was not a Pullman Company employee—meaning the company could not fire him or buy him off.

For the next 10 years, Randolph led an arduous campaign to organize the Pullman porters, which resulted in the certification of the BSCP as the exclusive collective bargaining agent of the Pullman porters in 1935. Randolph called it the "first victory of Negro workers over a great industrial corporation."

Randolph became the most widely known spokesperson for black working-class interests in the country. In December 1940, with President Franklin Roosevelt refusing to issue an executive order banning discrimination against black workers in the defense industry, Randolph called for "10,000 loyal Negro American citizens" to march on Washington, D.C. Support grew so quickly that soon he was calling for 100,000 marchers to converge on the capital.

Pressed to take action, President Roosevelt issued an executive order on June 25, 1941, six days before the march was to occur, declaring "there shall be no discrimination in the employment of workers in defense industries or government because of race, creed, color, or national origin." Roosevelt also set up the Fair Employment Practices Commission to oversee the order.

~Source:aflcio.org

We are the people. .
01/22/2022

We are the people.

.

Congress, pass the   legislation and end the   now.Stop talking and ACT.   Dr. King would approve.
01/17/2022

Congress, pass the legislation and end the now.

Stop talking and ACT.


Dr. King would approve.

Happy Birthday, Dr. King. May we commit to realizing your dream.
01/16/2022

Happy Birthday, Dr. King. May we commit to realizing your dream.

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