Get to know some black leaders other than Sharpton and Jesse.
And some black issues you may not know anything about.
Why a program on the state of black America?
It’s more of a movement. From the website:
For the last six years, the country’s visionaries, educators, public policy makers, religious leaders, opinion makers, and community organizers have come together to weigh in on the most challenging issues facing Black America. This symposium–The State of the Black Union–has always encouraged dialogue and the exchange of ideas about issues and factors that gauge the progress of America’s promise for African Americans; however, last year’s gathering marked a turning point.
On the heels of the 2004 presidential election, a sour economy, a rising death toll in Iraq, a growing prison population, and deepening disparities in healthcare and public education, collectively “we the people” decided that it was time to shift the conversation from talking about our “pain” to talking about our “plan”. It is a plan that moves our critique of America to a construction of America–a country that is as good as its promise. At the close of the 2005 State of the Black Union, the public was invited to share what they wanted from this plan. African Americans across the country let us know what their concerns were once we put out the call for them to do so at our website. In short, take control of their own destiny. We believe that The Covenant has the power to do this and more.
Less than one year later, that plan, roadmap, blueprint was published as the Covenant with Black America. On the recommendation of Rev. Dr. Joseph E. Lowery, co-founder with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, we decided to call this document a “covenant” and not a “contract” because it speaks to the spiritual dimension of the Black struggle for progress in America.
We are especially pleased with the thought-leaders and opinion-makers who have contributed introductory essays to each of the 10 covenant chapters in the book. Each is nationally recognized for contributions in their various fields of interest and each donated his/her time and expertise to make this project possible.
It was important for us to maintain the integrity of this project by guaranteeing that from conception to birth, this project would be imbued with the spirit and soul of Black people. We made the plea over the nationally-syndicated Tom Joyner Morning Show and Black folk everywhere responded. The name of each donor is listed in the text of the book. It’s a wonderful thing to peruse the list and to see the names of individual Black family members who supported this effort. It is even more empowering to know that these citizens are serious about their future and that of our country.
The rise of the Covenant with Black America to #1 on the New York Times bestseller list proved that there was tremendous interest in a plan of action that addressed the concerns of Black Americans. Tavis Smiley, the visionary responsible for creating and building the momentum around the book, embarked on a five-month, 20-city national tour, holding sessions in churches in cities such as Philadelphia, Atlanta, Memphis, New York, Baltimore, and Cleveland.
To build on the excitement and discussion around the book, Tavis Smiley invited people around the country to host Covenant Celebrations as part of the Covenant Conversation and Celebration Weekend. The first 1,000 party hosts who sent Smiley an invitation to their celebration received a special covenant gift pack. One lucky party hosted Smiley and Princeton University professor Cornel West as their guests, where they discussed issues in The Covenant.
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. once said that the nettlesome task of Black Americans is to bear the burden of redeeming the soul of America. Without question, Black folk have always been the conscience of the country. It is our hope that we can yet again help our beloved nation live up to the promise of her ideals. The political paradigm has shifted; it’s time to build a new construct, and the Covenant with Black America is the tool for the task.
There will be a morning and an afternoon session.
The morning session had Douglas Wilder, Catherine Hughes, Tim and Daphne Maxwell Reid, Malika Saada Saar, Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton, among others.
The afternoon session will have Cornel West, Sonia Sanchez, Chuck D, Lerone Bennett and Charles Ogletree, among others.
Over here in the Central Zone, the morning session has broken for Barack Obama’s announcement for president speech.
About noon my time, the afternoon session will commence.
Hosted by Tavis Smiley and Tom Joyner, with black leaders both young and old, based on Smiley’s call for and book, The Covenant with Black America.
You can access via computer at http://www.c-span.org/watch/index.asp?Cat=TV&Code=CS using Real Player or Windows Media.
Everything will repeat later on today at 10 p.m. Eastern Standard Time (9 p.m. Central and 7 p.m. Pacific).
DVDs will be available for purchase as well, if you don’t copy it. Explore the C-Span website for further details.
It’s happening at Hampton University, one of the historically black colleges. And for the first time, I definitely see some white faces in the audience.
Tim Reid, Catherine Hughes, and Malika Saada Saar, in my view, were fantastic.
Tim Reid, as some of you may recall, played Venus Flytrap on WKRP in Cincinnati back in the day. He became widely known for the highly regarded dramedy, Frank’s Place. He and his wife Daphne have been activists for quite a while, particularly in the entertainment industry. They have their own production company.
Thanks for the info.
As an aside, I’ve listened to Travis Smiley’s show and it is by far the one on NPR that discusses controversial subjects with greater frequency and in greater depth than any other. Which tells you something about NPR — their management isn’t being squeezed to limit what he and his guests say because the administration doesn’t think there’s enough power in the African American community to bother with censoring the content on Smiley’s program.
I love Diane Rehm and Terry Gross, but lately both seem to have pulled their punches on a number of issues, and I’ve seen a noticeable increase on truly wingnut commentators appearing on their shows. It didn’t use to be that way.
Sorry, Tavis Smiley, not Travis. I don’t know why but I always have a problem with getting names right. Call it a senior moment.
Hmmm. Now I see why NPR doesn’t bother. Smiley’s program is actually produced by PRI, not NPR. No wonder. Just ignore my senseless blathering above (except for the part about the Rehm and Gross shows succumbing to administration pressure — I thinks that is very real).
They have their own production company.
Near my hometown. They’re just fabulous.
And thank you for posting this. My radio is never locked on one station (except for Democracy Now! because I have to get some real news from somewhere), I don’t have cable and I can’t get satellite (at least last I checked). I am “lucky” enough to get CSpan radio, even though it came to be on the demise of the last 24/7 REAL jazz station in the area. Sigh.
Anyway…will be watching out for it.
either session here. It would be interesting to see the responses.
I think that at one session a couple of years ago, they had invited contrarian wingnut Stanley Crouch. I’m not sure that they’re going to go that far on the spectrum for views.
Cornel WEST is my guy.