Friday, April 22, 2005

Denye bout wout sou chimen Lakay

Alo fanmi m yo,
Lone ak Reverans pou nou !
 
Se Djaloki.  Kouman sa ye bo kote nou ?  Bo kote pa m, tout bagay anfom.  Nou kontinye ap pote mesaj louvri je, edikasyon, Respe ak Diyite pou Zanset yo nan peyi Blan Meriken.  Prentan louvri barye lakou li a, li kite nou antre.  Epi mwen desann nan Sid, pi pre lakay, pi pre Soley.  Li te le l te tan !  Mwen satisfe ak laviwonn mwen anpil nan peyi etranje, men m santi m bezwen rantre lakay pou m rekonekte ak Manman Te a.  Le m preske rive; m byen kontan !
 
Mwen Miami kounye a, m ap vizite kek fanmi ak zanmi nan zon Florida.  M pat janm resi konn Joj, petet m a resi konn ti fre li (Djeb Bouch, gouvene Florida)…
 
Le 30 Avril, yo envite m pale sou relasyon ant Krisyanis ak Spirityalite Afriken, nan konferans Fellowship of Friends of African Descent (FFAD - “Quakers” Nwa Ozetazini : http://www.fellowshipoffriendsofafricandescent.org).  Sa ki enteresan anpil se kote sa ap fet:
 
Youn: Konferans lan ap fet nan St Helena Island, South Carolina.  Se yon ti zile tou piti, kote desandan Afriken ki te vini nan epok esklavaj yo kenbe kilti ak langg Zanset yo ki te soti nan zon Sierra Leone, ann Afrik de lwes.  Yo rele yo “Gullah People” (Pep Gola).  Youn nan dirijan FFAD a se yon fanm Gullah ki konsakre tout lavi li sou rechech istwa ak kilti pep li a (Althea Natalga Sumpter).  Li te fe yon phD sou sa.  Sit web li, se www.altheasumpter.com.  Respe maksimom pou Pep Gullah, Pep vanyan, Pep rezistan, fanmi nou !
 
De: Ayopo ki pi pre St Helena Island, se Savannah, Georgia, kote plizye santen gerye Ayisyen te al pote kole ak Ameriken nan batay pou libete an 1779.  Anri Kristof te ladan yo, Desalin tou, si m pa twonpe m.  Yo konsidere epizod sa a kom denye gwo batay kont lame wa Angle a ki pat dako ak endepandans Etazini.  Kidonk se batay sa a ki te pote laviktwa definitif, malgre Etazini te gen tan endepandan deja.  Sanble yo pral monte yon moniman nan memwa Ayisyen sa yo, m sipoze se sou sit kote batay la te pase.  Mwen pral fe youn ou de jou Savannah.  Mwen poko gen okenn kontak direk sou plas, ni m pa konn ki kote egzakteman batay la te fet.  M ap fe rechech sou sa.  Nenpot moun ki gen nenpot enfomasyon sou batay Savannah a, ni an 1779, ni nenpot kontak nan Savannah mwen ka jwenn kounye a, tanpri fe m konnen vit !  Mesi davans pou sa.
 
M ap antre lakay le 8 Me sidyevle.
 
Respe ~ Lape ~ Lanmou ~ Sajes ~ Libete
 
Posted by Djaloki in 23:54:46 | Permalink | Comments (4)

Earth Day message from the United Confederation of Taino People

Date: Thu, 21 Apr 2005 18:52:41 -0000
From: “UCTP Office” <la_voz_taino@yahoo.com>

Subject:

Remembering Our Role As Caretakers of Mother Earth…

Happy Earth Day! No gifts to buy or cards to send this holiday –
celebrating Earth Day this Friday can be quick and easy.

1) Send a message to car makers - Cars are one of the biggest sources
of global warming pollution. California’s groundbreaking new law cuts
global warming pollution from cars. But the auto industry is suing to
block the law. As a potential customer, your voice matters. On Earth
Day, take a moment to tell car makers they should build less polluting
cars instead of suing.

http://actionnetwork.org/campaign/car_company_lawsuit/853b6×4f5738be

2) Earth-friendly seafood - print a wallet-sized list - Farmed salmon
or wild - which is better for you and the planet? Carry this list of
fish with you, so whether shopping for groceries or dining at a
restaurant, you can always navigate your way to the best seafood
choices. Print an extra for a friend!

http://www.environmentaldefense.org/documents/1980_pocket_seafood_selector.pdf
 
3) Follow 20 simple steps to help undo global warming - Global warming
is our most serious environmental problem. Today, tweak a daily habit
or two (or twenty!). Bike or carpool to work. Or even brighten your
house with more energy efficiency bulbs.   

Share this list with your friends and family, and enjoy Earth Day!

http://www.undoit.org/undoit_20steps.cfm

Posted by Djaloki in 21:03:59 | Permalink | Comments (2)

Wednesday, April 13, 2005

Racism against Ayitian school children in Queens

The Haitian Community Says:
No to Racism!
No to Discrimination!
No to the Denigration of our Children in their Own Schools!

On March 16th 2005, following an altercation between some students in the
lunchroom of PS 34 in Queens Village, Mrs. Nancy Miller, the Assistant
Principal of the school, singled out the 13 Haitian students of the school’s
only 4th grade Bilingual class and forced them to sit on the floor to eat
their lunch of chicken and rice with their bare hands. When the students
protested, she screamed at them in front of the all the other students in
the lunchroom: “In Haiti they treat you like animals and I will treat you
the same way here”.

Instead of acknowledging this cruel and inhumane treatment of our children
and the entire Haitian community, the Principal of the school, Mrs.
Pauline Shakespeare, who according to a Haitian parent described her child’s
behavior as “animalism”, has chosen to stand with her Assistant Principal.
She has been repeatedly pulling some of the 13 Haitian children out of their
class to try to convince them that the March 16th incident never happened.
According to one of the students, Mrs. Shakespeare has even gone as far as
offering the children free ice cream if they were to “say something else”.

We vow to our 13 children, who were so savagely humiliated by this racist
white woman who we are paying to educate them, and to all our children
everywhere that we will not allow this crime to go unpunished.

We demand no less than the firing of both, Mrs. Nancy Miller and Mrs.
Pauline Shakespeare. We don’t want them transferred to another school where
they will simply continue to abuse other parents’ children.

Join us on Tuesday April 12th, 2005 from 2pm to 4pm
at a picket line in front of PS 34
104-12 Springfield Blvd. in Queens Village, NY

Support us by calling to express your outrage and echo our demand:

Local Instructional Superintendent Janet Won at 718-281-3407
Regional Superintendent Judith Chin at 718-281-3407
Chancellor Joel Klein at 212-374-0200

Call EVERYONE to spread the word and fax this sheet to all Press contacts

For more Information: Call 718-464-6068

Posted by Djaloki in 04:46:57 | Permalink | Comments (4)

Thursday, April 7, 2005

University of Southern Maine

I spoke yesterday in a class of around 15 students at the University of Southern Maine (http://www.usm.maine.edu/), in Gorham, near Portland, ME.

Respect to the First Nations of Maine: Sepayik (Passamaquody), Pennobscott, Maliseet and Micmac, regrouped under the Wabenaki denomination.

~Djaloki~

Posted by Djaloki in 18:55:02 | Permalink | Comments (2)

Monday, April 4, 2005

Money

Just starting to read “Money - Understanding and Creating Alternatives to Legal Tender”, by Thomas H. Greco, Jr., offered by my new friends and peaceful warriors and amazones from the E.F. Schumacher Society (http://www.smallisbeautiful.org/).  The little I have read so far in it is enough to make it look like THE book on money I have been looking for in years, and to highly recommand it to anyone who thinks that the current global economy is REALLY insane and needs REAL change.

Check out the cover and link to the book online on the righthand side bar of this blog (in 27th and last position in the list of books, at the time I am writing this).  You can also get it directly from the E.F. Schumacher Society, which would be more logical and more cool.  If you are in Massachusetts or around, I suggest you just go visit their place and library in Great Barrington (140 Jug End Road - tel 413-528-1737).

Posted by Djaloki in 07:01:30 | Permalink | Comments (2)

Ironie du sort

I am finding myself in an ironic situation: beginning to earn some money from my lectures - which pretend to help people raising their awareness above the non sustainable capitalistic consumeristic patterns - I caught myself getting trapped precisely in one of these patterns: the strange urge to buy with the money I earn, to fulfill some new needs which did not exist before the money was there, the need to earn more to replace and to increase the money I spend, and the consequential stress associated with the whole thing…
 
Posted by Djaloki in 06:37:20 | Permalink | Comments (4)

Sunday, April 3, 2005

The Black Mozart

Thank you Lia for introducing me to this great Ancestor, Joseph Boulogne, born in Guadeloupe in 1745 from a African mother and whose classical music compositions equalled and inspired Mozart, Haydn and Beethoven.

The film “Le Mozart Noir” will hopefully be presented at the next Film Festival in Jacmel (Ayiti).  Meanwhile, I’ll buy the DVD and offer it to Tant K, the “born again Ayitian” violonist and revolutionary neo-abolitionist white Amazon of Gwo Jan.

Check out the web site ! http://www.lemozartnoir.com/index.htm

   
   
 

From Media Headquarters Film & Television Inc. comes a fascinating and groundbreaking performance art documentary on the life and music of Joseph Boulogne, Le Chevalier Saint Georges, also known as “Le Mozart Noir”.

Filmed for the first time, the story of Saint Georges portrays the remarkable life of a man who overcame the adversities of class, race and society to become a superstar in 18th century France. Born on Christmas Day, 1745 in Guadeloupe to a slave and a French colonialist, Saint Georges grew to be the first black man to lead France’s most important orchestras. His musical compositions inspired Mozart, Haydn and Beethoven. As if that weren’t enough, Saint-Georges was also France’s finest fencer, a famed lover, and a General who led an army of 1000 black soldiers in the French Revolution – unprecedented in European history.

Through the use of beautifully rendered historical recreations, archive-based narration and orchestral performance by the world-famous Tafelmusik Orchestra, Le Mozart Noir reveals in fascinating detail how such a talent was submerged beneath the waves of history.

 


DVD Now Available!

 

© 2004 Media Headquarters Film and Television Inc.
For information email: info@lemozartnoir.com

Posted by Djaloki in 19:21:55 | Permalink | Comments (2)