10.16.2010

Frederick Douglass Academy has NO Textbooks - Contact Chancellor

By Gloria Dulan-Wilson

Hello All:

I received from Reverend Cheryl Anthony, which follows below, in reference to the Frederick Douglass Academy in Brooklyn. I would be very interested in your recommendations for how to deal with this problem, you can feel free to respond to both of us. This is not just a New York - Brooklyn - problem - it's a Black problem that is replicated throughout the US, Caribbean, Africa, South America - anywhere Black people are subjugated to whites and their racist policies. I would also like to interject that Frederick Douglass did not put things mildly or politely; he was front and center; he was a man of action. I should think that any institution that bears his name should not take that lightly, but follow the spirit and example Douglass set over 150 years ago.

My response is first, the letter from Rev. Anthony follows immediately after.

Dear Rev. Anthony (Cheryl):

Interesting how monitoring a situation is really a code word for not so benign neglect. It's like walking behind a person who is critically ill and measuring him or her for a coffin, as opposed to offering the appropriate life saving intervention that might actually save his life.

The fact that books have not been delivered to the school speaks to the fact that there is deliberate neglect on the part of the Board of Ed which has a vested interest in seeing the school fail(they get more money for charter schools).

I would also venture to say that the founding principal of the school was probably forced out because of allegations of improprieties, brought about by the deliberate undermining of her efforts to provide a quality education.

Believe me, as an educator myself, I have no great fondness for the current public schools as they manifest in our communities. Many of teachers, as far as I can tell, have no vested interest in the success of our children, just the regularity of their paychecks.

Nor am I bowled over by the overabundance of resources lavished on so-called charter schools. Because, as with anything else, what has been given can also be taken away once they have strategically decimated the public schools in the community -- eventually leaving us with no schools.

What frightens me is the parents. Our parents must be comatose! That's the only reason I can see for their not raising cain (I was going to say holy hell, but didn't want to offend my friends in the clergy) about the lack of resources in the schools.

Either our parents are comatose or they don't love their children, and so don't care whether they get a decent education or not -- also a reason for their apparent inaction.

Or, worse than my other two conjectures, they must be extremely ignorant, and therefore not aware of the fact that their children not receiving appropriate educational resources will handicap them for life -- making them illiterate, unemployable, and ripe for crime targets and stereotyping.

And perhaps the most tragic reason for the lack of action could be that the parents, and people of the community, feel that they are powerless against the system, and have given up making any effort whatsoever.

There are times I wish I had that proverbial two-by-four to be able to deliver the necessary whack upside our heads to wake us up from the somnambulism we find ourselves in. We watch the idiot box, we dress in the latest hoochie mama fashions, our kids are morbidly obese, our young males (and some of our hard-ankle females) are killing each other for the crappiest and most insipid reasons; and we look down our noses on those who try to help us help ourselves. Then we say it's the fault of the white overseerstructure. While this may be true, we are the ones who are co-signing their actions through our lack of Blackbone.

At a recently held meeting of the Freedom Party at the Nazarene Church, one of the presenters mentioned that our great grand and grand parents didn't have cell phones, computers, or televisions, but managed to provide us with better educations and better leadership than we have today. WE now have access to the most modern, up to date equipment, and are further behind than they ever were.

Yes, we must certainly let our voices be heard at the Board of Education, but I'm also for shaking us out of the lethargy, that complacency, complicity, and complaining, that has become the mantra for so many problems.

We must develop our own standards, a modus operandii, and consolidate our energies and efforts to provide our own education, write our own texts, and teach our own children, regardless of what they're doing at the bored of education. (Isn't that what the Jews, East Indians and Japanese are doing? Isn't that why they are autonomous? Why they don't fall prey to the economic ills that impact the rest of us?)

Isn't what the phrase "God bless the child whose got his own means? Not just the physical/financial, but the applied faith and spiritual/intrinsic wealth that God gave us? It comes from within, both individually and collectively - not just lip service, or recitation of a few scriptures, but applications of those principles in the areas of our lives where we are experiencing lack, loss or limitation.

We have a litany of tales of woe about who hates us, who did what to us, and how it keeps happening over and over again; what we don't do -- or haven't to date -- is take that mess and turn it upside down and proactively do what we need to do to help each other and save ourselves. Our favorite retort is that "we don't trust each other:" or "we don't have enough time;" or talk about how the enemy is keeping us from doing it. But in the spirit of the underground railroad, we have to do it anyway. By stalth as well as out front and in the open. We have to take back our power, as the Urban League says, empower ourselves, and do the job for our selves.

I recently spoke at a meeting of the clergy at Antioch Baptist Church, and called for a consolidation of the churches to develop our own educational system, regardless of denomination, based on the educational principles and criteria of Carter G. Woodson, coupled with Leon Sullivan's OIC (Opportunities Industrialization Centers), and other autonomous programs that have served Black people well.

I've not heard back from them, but the necessity is no less urgent. Even if it's just a Saturday School, the way the Japanese and other groups have done to maintain standards of quality, we need to stop talking about it and do it. Let each church tithe 10% of their Sunday contributions to establish the school and hire the educators. We have enough brilliant people in Brooklyn - in New York City -- to make it happen.

Why we still beg the people who hate us the most to provide us with services we should be providing for ourselves, I truly don't understand. They definitely owe us big time, but I don't think it wise to sit and hold our breath waiting for them to ante up -- besides, I doubt very seriously that we would trust them if they did -- we've been there before.

No, the time is now to let Mother Necessity give birth to the invention of a Black Board of Quality Education, and begin being the ones who we've been waiting for to save us.

Stay Blessed &
ECLECTICALLY BLACK
Gloria Dulan-Wilson

REV. DR. CHERYL ANTHONY'S LETTER:

From: DR CHERYL ANTHONY
Subject: Frederick Douglass Academy has NO Textbooks - Contact Chancellor
Date: Thursday, October 14, 2010, 10:11 PM

Below is the article from today's paper. How can it be that Frederick Douglass Academy has no textbooks and resources and a new charter school is being dedicated tomorrow? This is very much an educational disparity. Contact the Board of Education by email or phone to express our outrage (be polite but direct). Peace and Blessings
I Choose 2 Change "Live the Choice...Love The Change!
Rev. Dr. Cheryl Anthony, Judah International Christian Center, Inc.
141 Rogers Avenue, Brooklyn, New York 11216-3978
718-771-0383 visit us on the web at: www.judahinternational.com

Five weeks into school year, Bed-Stuy school Frederick Douglass Academy still has no textbooks BY Ben Chapman DAILY NEWS WRITER Thursday, October 14th 2010, 4:00 AM

Students at a troubled Bedford-Stuyvesant school still don't have textbooks or after-school programs five weeks into the new academic year, the Daily News has learned.
The Frederick Douglass Academy IV earned an "F" on the city's progress report for falling test scores and a dismal learning environment last month - just one of eight schools across the city to earn the failing grade.
The school has also been thrown into turmoil in the last year over its leadership, losing two principals since September 2009.
Teachers and students at the Lafayette Ave. school said this year could be even worse.
"The school's an absolute mess," said a teacher who wouldn't give his name because he feared retribution. "We need books and classroom materials and strong leadership. We have none."
Many sixth-graders at the K-12 school lack reading, science and math books, forcing one teacher to use an overhead projector to deliver classroom lessons.
In other classes, students share textbooks and rely on online reading materials and photocopies instead of the real thing.
"It makes it harder to study when you don't have the books," a 10th-grader said. "Sometimes the Web doesn't work or you can't read the photocopies."
Students also said they're disappointed that the 508-student school has yet to offer any after-school clubs or sports.
"I know that times are tough, but it doesn't cost much to run a chess club," said senior Alamasi Ghullikie, 17, who lives in Bed-Stuy.
Teachers blamed turnover in the principal's office for the school's poor condition.
Principal Marian Bowden, who founded the school in 2002, resigned last November after being cited by the state for maintaining inadequate facilities for special-ed students.
Bowden's replacement, interim acting principal Claytisha Walden, resigned recently, said Chiara Coletti, chief spokeswoman for the principals union.
Department of Education spokeswoman Barbara Morgan said the city is monitoring the school closely.
"A grade of an F on its middle school Progress Report is serious cause for concern," said Morgan.
Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/brooklyn/2010/10142010-10-14_5_weeks_in_still_no_textbooks_at_failing_bedstuy_ school.html#ixzz12O7unRWg


Okay, so now it's your turn to weigh in on this subject. I look forward to hearing from you. Whether or not you yourself have children, or yours are grown and gone, as my friend Sam Brown of Our Children's Foundation says, "these are our children and nothing is too good for them."

Stay Blessed &
ECLECTICALLY BLACK
Gloria Dulan-Wilson

10.12.2010

MEMORIAL SERVICES HELD FOR MIRIAM HOLDER MOTHER OF ATTORNEY GENERAL ERIC HOLDER

By Gloria Dulan-Wilson

Most of what we see and hear in the media about Attorney General Eric Holder has primarily been of national importance. But an event infinitely more significant in his life took place on Saturday, September 25, when Attorney General Holder, along with his brother William (Billy Holder), paid tribute to their beloved mother, Miriam Y. Holder, who passed away quietly in the presence of her sons and family members at the sea shore of Martha’s Vineyard on August 13, 2010.

Though low profile in it’s scope -- the papparazzi was not invited or involved -- it was high intensity in its impact. Close lifelong friends and family turned out to celebrate the life of a lovely woman who successfully raised her children in the community of East Elmhurst, Queens, NY. She was the pillar of the community and the not so quiet storm credited with instilling in them a sense of quality, courage and purpose.

Each son is successful in his own right, making their mother extremely proud indeed. However, along their path to success, they never loss their ties to their community.

Miriam Rosalie Yearwood was born in Atlantic City, NJ in 1924, the daughter of William and Rosalie Harding Yearwood. She moved to Harlem and later to East Elmhurst after having met and married her husband, the love of her life, Barbados-born, Eric Holder (Sr.) in 1950. They were married for 48 years until his passing in 1998.

Miriam Holder was definitely no stranger to volunteering and community building, having been involved since childhood with programs in her Atlantic City community. While in high school she volunteered to help soldiers who were recovering from Second World War (WWII) by working with the USO. She also worked in the hospitals where many of the wounded were being treated.

A devoted mother, Ms. Holder focused on raising her sons throughout her life. The spirit of volunteerism and community building is reflected in the close ties that are still evident to this day. It's also evident that her devotion and encouragement as a mother is what led to Eric's entering a school for gifted and talented youth in the fourth grade.

While Eric Holder and his brother were infant/toddlers she volunteered in the schools they attended. Later, when they were older and more independent, she began working for the then Rector of Church of the Resurrection, Harold Louis Wright, serving as his secretary. She continued working with him throughout his career --from becoming the first African American Suffragan Bishop in the Episcopal Diocese of New York, through his leadership at The Cathedral of St. John The Divine until his death.

Ms Holder worked with diocese til her retirement. Upon her retirement she focused even more on volunteering with the Elmcor Senior Center and being involved in the ever expanding lives of her sons and their families.

Attorney General Holder, who presided over the repast after the memorial services, greeted and exchanged hugs, greetings and well wishes from friends and family members who had grown up with him all their lives. There was a profound sense of intimacy, affection and respect, and they walked up to (Ricky) Holder, expressing their condolences, or shared a story or remembrance about having grown up with his mother. While all were proud of his having become the Attorney General, they were even prouder of the fact that he has never forgotten or forsaken his home grown roots.

No doubt the Secret Service Security detail that was evident in the room were exposed to something they hadn’t seen for a long time in their tour of duty -- an event where family, friends, love and closeness were the top priority of the day. As hug after hug was exchanged, with neighbors and relatives addressed the Attorney General as “Ricky” and his brother as “Billy”, it was clear that the heights to which he has risen has in no way diminished the soulful depths from which he has emerged. (“…If you can walk with kings nor lose the common touch...” IF by Rudyard Kipling)

The continuity is most likely part and parcel of what makes him one of the greatest Attorney Generals this nation has had to date.

The memorial services were presided over by Arch Deacon Bernard; Reverend Canon Haroldean Ashton delivered the Homily, and Rev. Pierre-Andre Duvert was the Rector. Ms. Holder is mourned and remembered by her friends, relatives and neighbors "for whom she cared a great deal, and who returned her affection in equal measure."

Our condolences to Attorney General Eric Holder and brother William Holder, and all the members of the Yearwood/Holder family.

Stay Blessed &
ECLECTICALLY BLACK
Gloria Dulan-Wilson

10.09.2010

EVENT ALERT: HOUSING AS A BASIC HUMAN RIGHT” Harlelm Tenants Council Annual Conference at Schomburg October 15 & 16

By Gloria Dulan-Wilson

Hello All:

I just received this press notification and thought it would be of great interest and urgency to those who are concerned about the dwindling numbers of affordable homes in New York (specifically Harlem), and the almost nonstop assault on Black families, communities, education by the media, police, city administration, etc.

If there was ever a time to show up at the Schomburg, this is is. Time to pack the joint. Be there and be prepared to be involved. No more time for sidelining and philosophizing; now is the time for action. Take this and pass it on. Moves being made are calculated, we have to be the same -- but we have to also utilize our Black solidarity in conjunction with all the legal forces we can bring to bear to stop them dead in their tracks. We built this city, we built this country. We will remain. And we will have decency, quality of life, and all the goods, services, peace and freedom in our communities that are accorded to other non-Black areas. GDW


Dear Brothers and Sisters:

Join us at the upcoming Housing Conference of the Harlem Tenants Council Annual Housing Conference  Friday, October 15th - Saturday, October 16th 2010
Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture
525 Malcolm X Blvd @ 135th Street
ADMISSION is FREE

Conference Theme: “WE DEMAND HOUSING AS A BASIC HUMAN RIGHT”

On Friday, October 15th and Saturday, October 16th at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture located at 525 Malcolm X Blvd at 135th Street the Harlem Tenants Council will host its Annual Housing Conference.

Our program will kick off on Friday, October 15th from 6 to 9 PM with a solution driven panel on Youth & Gun Violence: Harlem and the National Crisis moderated by Iesha Sekou, founder of Street Corner Resources with a diverse panel that includes community activists, parents who lost children to gun violence and youth members of Hip Hop Culture.

Following this panel we will screen the recently released documentary, "The Vanishing City" with an introduction by co-Director Fiore Derosa.

Glen Ford, Executive Editor of Black Agenda Report will deliver the keynote of the evening, The Crisis of Capitalism & Its Impact on Working People (Jobs, Housing, Education, Health Care) moderated by Jon Jeter, author of "Flat Broke in the Free Market: How Globalization Fleeced Working People. Panelists: Dr. Anthony Monteiro (Institute for the Study of Race & Social Thought at Temple University), Margaret Kimberley, Senior Columnist for Black Agenda Report and Author/Journalist Herb Boyd on "The Other Harlem, No Boom!'

On Saturday, October 16th from 8:45 AM to 5 PM we will have a series of workshop: Here are some of the highlights:

Workshop I:  9 - 10:30 AM: Know Your Rights (Housing activist Tom Siracuse takes on the New York State Division of Housing & Community Renewal sued by rent control tenants.) Other panelists to be announced.

Workshop II: 10:30 AM to 12 Noon: Our Struggles are Interconntected moderated by Attorney Joan Gibbs (National Conference of Black Lawyers) will panelists Mark Torres, Co-Chair of Coalition to Save Public Education; Dr. Mathews Hurley on the community struggle to preserve quality health care at Harlem Hospital; Chino Hardin of the Institute for Juvenile Justice Reform on the prison industrial complex decimating Black & Latino Communities; and  Christine Gauvreau (United National Anti-war Movement), We Demand Butter Not Guns!

The afternoon session of workshops under the title of " Communities Struggle Against Gentrification & Displacement"  from 1 PM to 4 PM and the Closing Plenary 4 to 5 PM.

Workshop III: 1 - 2:30  PM:  Columbia University's "Land Grab" & Its Impact on Harlem & Beyond: A case Study of Power, Greed & Corruption moderated by Nellie Hester Bailey (Harlem Tenants Council) with panelists Attorney Norman Siegel, Challenging Columbia University's eminent domain seizure of private property in the US Supreme Court; Christina Walsh (The Institute for Justice), The Abuse of Eminent Domain in New York State; Tom DeMott (Coalition to Preserve Community) The People Struggle Against Columbia University; Attorney Ruth Eisenberg, Environmental Racism: The Dangers of Columbia University's Proposed Bio-Research Laboratories and John Fisher, founder of Tenant.net, The Hype and Realities of Community Benefits Agreements.

Workshop IV: 2:30 - 4 PM: "Tenants: Battles Won and Struggles Ahead" moderated by Dr. Rosemari Mealy (District Council 37 Education Fund) with panelists Attorney Kim Powell (Buyers & Renters United), Challenging Predatory Equity Landlord in Federal Court; Attorney Seth A. Miller (Collins, Dobkins & Miller LLP), The Legal Impact of Roberts versus Tishman Speyer Properties; Filiberto Hermandez (Movement for Justice in El Barrio), Connecting the Local to the Global: How an immigrant led multi-issue organization defeated multi-national real estate corporation Dawnay.

Closing Plenary: 4 - 5 PM:
 "Don't Mourn, Organize & Build Communities: BEST PRACTICES: Lawrence Hamm, People's Organization for Progress; Ramon Jininez, Black & Latino Unity: Forging New Political Reaities; Rev Earl KooperKamp, St Mary's Church; Lumumba Bandela, (Malcolm X Grassroots Movement). Others TBA.
 
“The Vanishing City Directed by Fiore Derosa and Jen Senko (approximate time 50 minutes): Global trends in major cities around the world have changed rapidly in the last several decades. As cities become more interconnected, and less dependent on localized economic models, domestic issues of increased class inequality and sustainability have emerged as central components to city planning debates. These trends are perhaps best exemplified in the city of New York. Told through the eyes of city planners, developers, politicians, small business owners, landlords and tenants, the recent development boom in New York City is analyzed through a mix of archival footage, interviews, and personal stories. Issues of class formation, land use, rezoning decisions and the upheaval of longstanding neighborhoods (including Harlem) combine to provide a critical look into the deeply rooted policies of one of the worlds most iconic cities.
 
(*Organizations listed for identification purpose only) All workshops will take place in the Auditorium of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture.

We appreciate the generous support of Director Howard  Dodson of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture for making this conference possible. However, we are faced with cost for technical and staff support for both days. Your donations are appreciated to help defray cost. Please make checks payable to the Harlem Tenants Council (earmarked 2010 Housing Conference). Mail your check to Harlem Tenants Council, c/o Nellie Bailey, 507 West 111th Street, Apt. 23, New York, NY 10025. 
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SAVE THE DATES:
Post Conference Activities

October 26, 2010
7 - 9 PM
 The Maysles Cinema & Institute
545 Lenox Avenue (128th Street)
Screening: "The Rezoning of 125th Street"
Followed by a panel discussion:
"The Gentrification of Harlem: East River to  the Hudson River"

 November 6, 2010
A day in Solidarity With African people
"BEYOND OBAMA:
Seeking Real Solutions to the growing Racial Divide in the U.S"
1st Unitarian Church: Philadelphia
Visit the website:uhurusolidarity.org or call 215-387-0919

Saturday, November 20, 2010
"Let Us Not Forget Haiti"
Teach-in 2 to 5 PM
(Protest March & Rally 12 Noon to 1:30 PM)
St. Mary's Church
516 West 126th Street
(Between Amsterdam Avenue & Old Broadway)

Contact Harlem Tenants Council: harlemtenants@gmail.com/Telephone: 212-663-5248 or visit:harlemtenantscouncil.org We are a not-for-profit organization operating on a shoe-string budget with volunteer support from members of the Harlem community. We are looking for technical support to develop our website. Please contact Nellie Bailey at harlemtenants@gmail if you can offer assistance.

Stay Blessed &
ECLECTICALLY BLACK
Gloria Dulan-Wilson
 

NIGERIA CELEBRATES 50 YEARS OF LIBERATION FROM COLONIAL MONSTERS

by Gloria Dulan-Wilson

Nigeria is celebrating 50 years of liberation from British colonialism. They were liberated in 1960. Now to those of us who are part of the African Diaspora, I.e., offshoots of Africa, this may not have much resonance.

But to those brothers and sisters from Africa who have had to endure the invasion and desecration of their continent for over400 years, and invasion which spawned the transatlantic triangle trade known as slavery, which resulted in our being dropped off on islands between Africa and the US, as well as being thrown overboard when we suffered from the rigors of privation, rape and beatings - this means a great deal.

Which is worse - being stolen from your homeland, or having your homeland be invaded by racists who then proceed to dismantle your culture and superimpose their own?

In reality, there is no “worse;” there is no either/or. It’s really both/and. The fact that we African Americans supposedly got our freedom from slavery in 1865, and were at least on paper, supposed to now join the ranks of those free to pursue life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, was an illusive proposition, at best. It really was a hoax that we had to band together and enforce.

The liberation of Nigeria came after years and years of struggle, negotiations, and continuous rip off of Africa’s natural resources by the Euro powers, America and Great Britain. I have friends from Africa who, when were attending college, would not eat chocolate, because they or their family members were forced to work to harvest it for Cadbury and the others who then sold them as candy and confectionaries.

And how many of you realize that the empires of Goodyear Tire and Rubber emanate from rubber plantations that were plentiful throughout the entire region. What about gold, diamonds (don’t think the movie about blood diamonds is the only info about rip off of African resources); bauxite, emeralds, phosphorous, etc. But the king of king exploitation was and is petroleum -- better known as oil. Oil has made America rich, investors rich; but put Nigerians at peril.

50 years ago was also the beginning of the escalation of the Civil Rights Movement in America. It was the beginning of Black Power. It was the beginning of our attempt to reunite with our brothers and sisters from the Continent. It was the beginning of our ignoring the lies and the barriers that had been deliberately placed between Black Africans and Black African Americans, where we ourselves tore down the walls and begin a dialogue that would, in many ways destroy the lies and hostilities that had been fostered by whites between us. You know, the old divide and conquer tactics that have been used so effectively against for all these centuries. But this time, much to the amazement of the Brits, it wasn’t working, and the pressure was coming from both Africans and African Americans who were joining forces on both sides of the Atlantic to oust the colonial monsters (I call them monsters, others call them “colonial masters” - but I want to debunk that slave/master imagery that has so long haunted us on both sides of the ocean).

Nigeria has much to celebrate. It is the largest country in area and population on the Continent of Africa. It has produced wonderful leaders and concepts. It, along with Ethiopia, was one of the first African countries to have its own African president, Nnamdi Azikiwe, who graduated from Lincoln University in Pennsylvania (USA) -- my alma mater!! Zik, as he was called back in the day, was a Black leader from the very beginning, with many of his concepts solidified while at Lincoln. It was President Azikiwe who made it possible for Kwame Nkrumah (later the president of Ghana) to attend Lincoln University.

As with the Black Power movement, the voting rights act, and the Civil Rights Act, the liberation of Nigeria began with Azikiwe and his followers pushing against colonial rule and the status quo. Pushing against the go along to get along mentality. That spirit and energy is even more prominent and evident today, with Nigeria beginning to develop its own economic imperatives, and beginning to tell her own story from her own standpoint to educate and elevate her people and bring them competitively into the 21st century.

Likewise, as with the trans-Atlantic slave trade, a little matter of reparations has never been addressed nor reconciled. England and the US owe Nigera big time -- and in the aggregate, they owe all Black people of African heritage, big time. They don’t appear to be in any hurry to repay either one of us, or make good on the empty promises that have been made over the decades (but our American Indian brothers and sisters could have told you not to hold your breath on that one - they, like Nigeria, have been colonized for centuries. They now reside on reservations -- depleted land areas where they were relegated while the best of the lands were turned over the pioneers or invaders (depending on whose telling the story).

Despite the fact that Nigeria still has not received just compensation for the indignities they have suffered, this is never the less an occasion for celebration. And celebrate they are.

At the kick off of UN Week 50 Women of Nigeria were celebrated at a Fifty at 50 Event, displaying Nigerian designed fashions, jewelry, logos and themes. It was a wonderful event, which was sponsored by the wife of the current president, Goodluck Jonathan. From that time forward there have been non-stop festivities surrounding this wonderful occasion.

I say we, who are brothers and sisters residing in the diasporic African regions of the US, Caribbean, South America and anywhere else Black people are found, all join in the spirit and congratulate Nigeria, President Goodluck Jonathan, and all the brothers and sisters who reside on both sides of the Atlantic -- whether they are here in the Diasporic USA, or at our continental home in Nigeria -- CONGRATULATIONS!!

Congratulations and please DO ONE HIGHLIFE FOR ME!!

Stay Blessed &
ECLECTICALLY BLACK
Gloria Dulan-Wilson

PS: EVENT ALERT: TODAY, OCTOBER 9, 2010 The African Day Parade kicks off at 11:00 am at 54th Street and 2nd Ave, culminating in a street festival at 47th Street and 2nd Ave, Dag Hammerskjold Plaza. Wear your best and most beautiful traditional African clothing and come out to celebrate our heritage and their accomplishments.

Stay blessed
GDW