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Public Employee Press
Celebrating
25 years of Black history
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The Young Peoples Chorus of New York City performed
for Local 1549 members Feb. 23 at DC 37.
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District Council 37s 25th celebration of Black History
Month featured 16 events sponsored by locals and the Black History Committee
to honor and build on the African American legacy.
Finale Night, Feb. 24, drew 450 union members, elected officials, local
presidents andexecutives Lee Saunders and Vernon Watkins of DC 37s
national union, AFSCME.
A procession of drummers, local leaders and politicians followed DC 37
Executive Director Lillian Roberts into the main hall where Local 420
2nd Vice President Togba Porte offered a libation in Dahl, a West African
language spoken in his birthplace of Liberia. Today we are all Africans,
Porte said as he called out for blessings.
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A dancer's creative moves wow Local 1320 members.
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The future belongs to those who prepare for it today,
Roberts said. As New York labor chair of the United Negro College Fund,
Roberts raised $110,000 for the educational charity. UNCF reps held a
college fair at DC 37s Black History Month Family Day, and will
lead seminars starting in April for members and their children.
Before the Medgar Evers College Imani Singers performed
traditional spirituals on Finale Night, the Black History Committee co-chairs,
Cynthia Chin Marshall and Sherwyn Britton, invited Roberts to lead a candle
lighting ceremony honoring the late Coretta Scott King and Rosa Parks.
Disparities and hope
These women devoted their lives to the movement and were in the
forefront of a revolution for civil rights, Roberts said.
The committees use of the Sankofa symbol, a Ghanaian term meaning
to reclaim the past to understand the present and create a better future,
is appropriate, Roberts said, because the struggles and achievements
of African Americans matter. We have a history to tell.
When we dont honor our history, we risk going backwards,
said Saunders, the evenings keynote speaker. The contributions,
triumphs and defeats of African Americans are emblazoned upon this nations
soul.
Giving an eyewitness account of Hurricane Katrinas destruction made
worse by leadership failures, Saunders noted the irony of the New
Orleans mayor seeking aid from foreign governments when the Bush Administration,
busy rebuilding Iraq, failed to help. History will place the 9th Ward
with Rosewood, Fla., and Black Wall Street in Tulsa, Okla., as communities
ravaged for profit, Saunders said.
He noted that disparities between the races in America include retirement
security, access to quality health care, and household net worth, which
for the typical white family is $121,000 while the typical black familys
net worth is $19,000.
Changes will come as more people use knowledge to confront those
in authority, call attention to the unfairness, and gather information
needed to take greater control of our destiny, Saunders said. If
we can rise up from 300 years of slavery and nearly 100 years of Jim Crow,
we can certainly rise up from the problems were facing now!
Diane S. Williams
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BHC's Maynard Anderson, Wanda Williams with DC 37 Exec. Director
Lillian Roberts, Norman Issacs, and co-chairs Sherwyn Britton
and Cynthia Chin-Marshall, at 25th Black History Finale Night.

Drummers for the Wayne Daniel Dancers at Local 1407s event
Feb. 13.

Court, County and Dept. of Probation Employees Local 1070
hosted a theatrical production about the waning years of juke
joints. Reathas Juke Joint written, produced
and directed by Francine Crawford is one owners soul
search while holding onto her business in the face of competition
from casinos and hotels. The Mississippi Delta region once had
as many juke joints and blues clubs as churches. But as economic
opportunities grew and Jim Crow declined, blacks increasingly
abandoned juke joints to frequent casinos that lured customers
with free music, drink and food. Reathas Juke Joint
discusses the challenges of social and economic change mixed with
song-and-dance numbers. Reatha must deal with a dwindling clientele
and address the concerns of her worried workers as she struggles
to maintain her deceased husbands place. Ultimately, she
decides to open a more modern establishment. We are closing,
says Reatha as she gathers her workers and loyal customers to
toast her deceased husband. At the same time, this is a
new beginning, because you move on. GNH
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The Medgar Evers College Imani Singers performed traditional spirituals
on Finale Night Feb. 24.

Local 957s Black History Month celebration featured Hazel
Rosetta Smiths production of Tell-It, Sing-It, Shout-It!
Members of the New York City Housing Authority local enjoyed an
evening of comedy and drama Feb. 21, with the performance of Smiths
play. As a morning worship service is about to start, the pastor
instructs his parishioners to Tell your story and dont
leave anything out! Five religious sisters proceed to tell,
sing, and shout their stories. The testimonial gospel musical unfolded,
accompanied by piano and drums, and wowed the DC 37 audience. We
need to bring them back for an encore performance, said Local
957 President Walthene Primus. Next year, well enjoy
this again in March, for Womens History Month.
JL
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At its 19th annual
Black History Month event Feb. 15 Civil Service Technical
Guild Local 375 presented Katrina, A Wake-up Call,
with TV host Gil Noble, of WABC-TVs Like It is.
Like you, I was almost ashamed of my blackness,
said Noble, recalling his upbringing in Harlem. Noble delivered
a poignant message on the impact of racism in brutally honest
personal terms. He also recounted how the civil rights struggle
and Black Power movement helped him develop pride and opened
the door for his success in television. Noble said his personal
evolution began when saxophonist Jackie McLean introduced
him to jazz, which instilled a pride in Black achievements.
After that the civil rights movement erupted. That woke
me up, he said. Despite progress, the country today
continues to face the painful legacy of racism, and economic
polarization in the United States and abroad must be addressed,
Noble said.
There is no such thing as painless major surgery, and
thats what we need in this country, Noble said.
We have to begin to talk candidly among ourselves, between
races. GNH
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