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CRIMINAL JUSTICE
The Crisis magazine is a quarterly journal of politics, culture, civil rights and history that seeks to educate and challenge its readers about issues facing African-Americans and other communities of color. ADVOCATES WORK TO COUNTER VOTER ID LAWS THAT CRIPPLE RURAL By Cynthia Yeldell Anderson As the United States enters the 2020 presidential election without the full protection of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, voting advocates are working to counter voter identification laws that are increasingly used to suppress the minority vote. Kat Calvin, founder and executive director of Spread the Vote, an organization that helps people obtain IDs, said the BLACK DOCTORS ON THE FRONTLINES OF THE PANDEMIC A remodeled hospital wing with a labyrinth of chambers separated by zippered plastic curtains belies the front line of COVID-19 care at one small Houston hospital. After stepping through the United Memorial Medical Center’s first makeshift entry secured against the wall with painter’s tape, clinicians change from street clothes into hospital scrubs. Joseph Gathe is one of two doctors THE THREE COMMITMENTS We need to transform our priorities for Black liberation in the United States of America. The next 400 years of Black life in America requires everyday people fighting for their liberation, along with leaders and organizations. We can no longer withstand the brutal and entrenched attacks from political, cultural and corporate forces focused on trying to deny our humanity. LANGSTON HUGHES: A RENAISSANCE MAN Black History Month: The writer Langston Hughes was born on Feb. 1, 1902. Hughes was one of the young Black, creatives who came to fame during the Harlem Renaissance — a time in the 1920s when that particular New York City neighborhood bustled with Black arts and culture. Hughes wrote poetry, plays, essays and more during his career. Much of his work had to do with the Black THE CASE FOR REPARATIONS (The following is testimony by William Darity Jr., on the proposed Commission to Study and Develop Reparations Proposals for African Americans Act before the 116th Congress 2019-2020 on June 19, 2019) The time has come for the United States, finally, to lay to rest the issue of what has been called, variously, the Slave Problem, the Colored Problem, the Negro Problem, the Black Problem, andSAY HER NAME
Roadside assistance. That’s all Corey Jones wanted in the early hours of Oct. 18, 2015. Instead, Nouman Raja — a Florida police officer in plain clothes and an unmarked vehicle — shot him to death. On March 7, a jury convicted Corey Jones' killer of manslaughter and attempted murder, marking the first time in 30 years that an on-duty police officer in Florida has been convicted in this RADIO HOST JOE MADISON FINDS HIS ROOTS Natalie McNeal When radio show host and civil rights activist Joe Madison was asked to appear on the popular PBS genealogy show Finding Your Roots, he jumped at the opportunity. “It’s a chance to learn information about your ancestors and keep them alive,” said Madison, a SiriusXM weekday host. “It’s something you can pass on to your children.” Without giving away too many COVID-19 VACCINE AND AFRICAN AMERICANSAUTHOR: THE CRISIS MAGAZINE By Cindy George For the last six years, vaccine scientist Dr. Kizzmekia Corbett has been working on the best and safest immune response for coronaviruses as part of a pandemic demonstration project at the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Corbett’s work was based on the “what if” scenario of a real outbreak. Then, in late 2019, the “if” happened. Corbett’s work was foundational NATION’S FOUR BLACK MEDICAL SCHOOLS BATTLE COVID-19 With that, Meharry one of the nation’s four historically Black medical colleges and universities, entered the global race to find a vaccine or a treatment for the novel coronavirus or COVID-19.CRIMINAL JUSTICE
The Crisis magazine is a quarterly journal of politics, culture, civil rights and history that seeks to educate and challenge its readers about issues facing African-Americans and other communities of color. ADVOCATES WORK TO COUNTER VOTER ID LAWS THAT CRIPPLE RURAL By Cynthia Yeldell Anderson As the United States enters the 2020 presidential election without the full protection of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, voting advocates are working to counter voter identification laws that are increasingly used to suppress the minority vote. Kat Calvin, founder and executive director of Spread the Vote, an organization that helps people obtain IDs, said the BLACK DOCTORS ON THE FRONTLINES OF THE PANDEMIC A remodeled hospital wing with a labyrinth of chambers separated by zippered plastic curtains belies the front line of COVID-19 care at one small Houston hospital. After stepping through the United Memorial Medical Center’s first makeshift entry secured against the wall with painter’s tape, clinicians change from street clothes into hospital scrubs. Joseph Gathe is one of two doctors THE THREE COMMITMENTS We need to transform our priorities for Black liberation in the United States of America. The next 400 years of Black life in America requires everyday people fighting for their liberation, along with leaders and organizations. We can no longer withstand the brutal and entrenched attacks from political, cultural and corporate forces focused on trying to deny our humanity. LANGSTON HUGHES: A RENAISSANCE MAN Black History Month: The writer Langston Hughes was born on Feb. 1, 1902. Hughes was one of the young Black, creatives who came to fame during the Harlem Renaissance — a time in the 1920s when that particular New York City neighborhood bustled with Black arts and culture. Hughes wrote poetry, plays, essays and more during his career. Much of his work had to do with the Black THE CASE FOR REPARATIONS (The following is testimony by William Darity Jr., on the proposed Commission to Study and Develop Reparations Proposals for African Americans Act before the 116th Congress 2019-2020 on June 19, 2019) The time has come for the United States, finally, to lay to rest the issue of what has been called, variously, the Slave Problem, the Colored Problem, the Negro Problem, the Black Problem, andSAY HER NAME
Roadside assistance. That’s all Corey Jones wanted in the early hours of Oct. 18, 2015. Instead, Nouman Raja — a Florida police officer in plain clothes and an unmarked vehicle — shot him to death. On March 7, a jury convicted Corey Jones' killer of manslaughter and attempted murder, marking the first time in 30 years that an on-duty police officer in Florida has been convicted in this RADIO HOST JOE MADISON FINDS HIS ROOTS Natalie McNeal When radio show host and civil rights activist Joe Madison was asked to appear on the popular PBS genealogy show Finding Your Roots, he jumped at the opportunity. “It’s a chance to learn information about your ancestors and keep them alive,” said Madison, a SiriusXM weekday host. “It’s something you can pass on to your children.” Without giving away too many BLACK NEWS & POLITICS The Crisis magazine is the official publication of the NAACP. Since 1910 it has served as an outlet for African-Americans and other communities of color on politics, culture, civil rights, and BlackHistory
COVID-19 VACCINE AND AFRICAN AMERICANS By Cindy George For the last six years, vaccine scientist Dr. Kizzmekia Corbett has been working on the best and safest immune response for coronaviruses as part of a pandemic demonstration project at the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Corbett’s work was based on the “what if” scenario of a real outbreak. Then, in late 2019, the “if” happened. EDUCATION | THE CRISIS MAGAZINE The Crisis magazine is a quarterly journal of politics, culture, civil rights and history that seeks to educate and challenge its readers about issues facing African-Americans and other communities of color. MS. PEARL SET THE STANDARD: Lifetime Memberships are Lifeblood of NAACP By Maria Morales At 110 years old, Pearl Bassett was the oldest living member of the NAACP. Ms. Pearl, as she was affectionately called, joined the NAACP in 1930 after witnessing a lynching in her hometown of Marion, Indiana. Known for her sharp wit and show-stopping hats, Ms. Pearl, who celebrated her 110th birthday on April 28, still attended unitCRIMINAL JUSTICE
The Crisis magazine is a quarterly journal of politics, culture, civil rights and history that seeks to educate and challenge its readers about issues facing African-Americans and other communities of color. NEW FILM REVISITS THE 1921 TULSA RACE RIOTS As a college student, Dekoven Riggins came across an interesting exhibit several years ago at Langston University. “I was just walking through the library and there was this huge display,” the Oklahoma City native told attendees at a screening of his feature film, Black Wall Street Burning at Tulsa’s Circle Cinema in February. “I walked past the display and then I moonwalked backwardsTHE BLACK 14
They remember it like it happened yesterday. Nearly 50 years ago, the 14 African-American football players at the University of Wyoming considered wearing black armbands during their upcoming game against Brigham Young University (BYU) to protest racist practices of the Mormon Church and other indignities. They gathered in the stands at the field house on the Laramie, Wyo., campus for a RADIO HOST JOE MADISON FINDS HIS ROOTS Natalie McNeal When radio show host and civil rights activist Joe Madison was asked to appear on the popular PBS genealogy show Finding Your Roots, he jumped at the opportunity. “It’s a chance to learn information about your ancestors and keep them alive,” said Madison, a SiriusXM weekday host. “It’s something you can pass on to yourchildren.”
THE MISEDUCATION OF BLACK CHILDREN In We Want to Do More Than Survive: Abolitionist Teaching and the Pursuit of Educational Freedom, University of Georgia education professor Bettina Love offers a striking and searing take on U.S. education. Drawing on close to 20 years of experience working in, and researching, urban schools, Love argues that Black, Latinx and Native American children—full of promise and possibilities—are ACTRESS S. EPATHA MERKERSON’S LINK TO GEORGETOWN On April 11, Georgetown University students overwhelmingly voted in a referendum to pay reparations for the descendants of the 272 slaves the school sold in 1838 to keep the school open. The proposed bill notes that undergraduate students would pay a new $27.20 fee each semester toward the reconciliation fund. CNN reported that these reparations would generate more than $400,000 a year BLACK NEWS & POLITICS The Crisis magazine is the official publication of the NAACP. Since 1910 it has served as an outlet for African-Americans and other communities of color on politics, culture, civil rights, and BlackHistory
NATION’S FOUR BLACK MEDICAL SCHOOLS BATTLE COVID-19 With that, Meharry one of the nation’s four historically Black medical colleges and universities, entered the global race to find a vaccine or a treatment for the novel coronavirus or COVID-19. BLACK DOCTORS ON THE FRONTLINES OF THE PANDEMIC A remodeled hospital wing with a labyrinth of chambers separated by zippered plastic curtains belies the front line of COVID-19 care at one small Houston hospital. After stepping through the United Memorial Medical Center’s first makeshift entry secured against the wall with painter’s tape, clinicians change from street clothes into hospital scrubs. Joseph Gathe is one of two doctors ADVOCATES WORK TO COUNTER VOTER ID LAWS THAT CRIPPLE RURAL By Cynthia Yeldell Anderson As the United States enters the 2020 presidential election without the full protection of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, voting advocates are working to counter voter identification laws that are increasingly used to suppress the minority vote. Kat Calvin, founder and executive director of Spread the Vote, an organization that helps people obtain IDs, said theMORE THAN ROYALTY
The entirety of the African-American experience is the embodiment of resistance and resilience. Our position in this country has always been unwelcomed, illegal. We are the perpetual “other.” This marginalization and brutality are the source of a great many forms of resistance. But it was that famous Pan Africanist Marcus Garvey who noted that we of the African Diaspora who were strewn LANGSTON HUGHES: A RENAISSANCE MAN Black History Month: The writer Langston Hughes was born on Feb. 1, 1902. Hughes was one of the young Black, creatives who came to fame during the Harlem Renaissance — a time in the 1920s when that particular New York City neighborhood bustled with Black arts and culture. Hughes wrote poetry, plays, essays and more during his career. Much of his work had to do with the Black THE THREE COMMITMENTS We need to transform our priorities for Black liberation in the United States of America. The next 400 years of Black life in America requires everyday people fighting for their liberation, along with leaders and organizations. We can no longer withstand the brutal and entrenched attacks from political, cultural and corporate forces focused on trying to deny our humanity. THE CASE FOR REPARATIONS (The following is testimony by William Darity Jr., on the proposed Commission to Study and Develop Reparations Proposals for African Americans Act before the 116th Congress 2019-2020 on June 19, 2019) The time has come for the United States, finally, to lay to rest the issue of what has been called, variously, the Slave Problem, the Colored Problem, the Negro Problem, the Black Problem, and TONI MORRISON THE REVOLUTIONARY I loved Toni Morrison long before I read a word she’d written. Her life was an epic poem, a love poem written to African Americans — and by extension to all of humanity. She wrote from the intimacy of deep-in-the-bone knowledge. It was knowledge that she learned first at the feet of her parents and other family members. She listened, and she watched, and she carried their words with her.SAY HER NAME
Roadside assistance. That’s all Corey Jones wanted in the early hours of Oct. 18, 2015. Instead, Nouman Raja — a Florida police officer in plain clothes and an unmarked vehicle — shot him to death. On March 7, a jury convicted Corey Jones' killer of manslaughter and attempted murder, marking the first time in 30 years that an on-duty police officer in Florida has been convicted in this BLACK NEWS & POLITICS The Crisis magazine is the official publication of the NAACP. Since 1910 it has served as an outlet for African-Americans and other communities of color on politics, culture, civil rights, and BlackHistory
NATION’S FOUR BLACK MEDICAL SCHOOLS BATTLE COVID-19 With that, Meharry one of the nation’s four historically Black medical colleges and universities, entered the global race to find a vaccine or a treatment for the novel coronavirus or COVID-19. BLACK DOCTORS ON THE FRONTLINES OF THE PANDEMIC A remodeled hospital wing with a labyrinth of chambers separated by zippered plastic curtains belies the front line of COVID-19 care at one small Houston hospital. After stepping through the United Memorial Medical Center’s first makeshift entry secured against the wall with painter’s tape, clinicians change from street clothes into hospital scrubs. Joseph Gathe is one of two doctors ADVOCATES WORK TO COUNTER VOTER ID LAWS THAT CRIPPLE RURAL By Cynthia Yeldell Anderson As the United States enters the 2020 presidential election without the full protection of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, voting advocates are working to counter voter identification laws that are increasingly used to suppress the minority vote. Kat Calvin, founder and executive director of Spread the Vote, an organization that helps people obtain IDs, said theMORE THAN ROYALTY
The entirety of the African-American experience is the embodiment of resistance and resilience. Our position in this country has always been unwelcomed, illegal. We are the perpetual “other.” This marginalization and brutality are the source of a great many forms of resistance. But it was that famous Pan Africanist Marcus Garvey who noted that we of the African Diaspora who were strewn LANGSTON HUGHES: A RENAISSANCE MAN Black History Month: The writer Langston Hughes was born on Feb. 1, 1902. Hughes was one of the young Black, creatives who came to fame during the Harlem Renaissance — a time in the 1920s when that particular New York City neighborhood bustled with Black arts and culture. Hughes wrote poetry, plays, essays and more during his career. Much of his work had to do with the Black THE THREE COMMITMENTS We need to transform our priorities for Black liberation in the United States of America. The next 400 years of Black life in America requires everyday people fighting for their liberation, along with leaders and organizations. We can no longer withstand the brutal and entrenched attacks from political, cultural and corporate forces focused on trying to deny our humanity. THE CASE FOR REPARATIONS (The following is testimony by William Darity Jr., on the proposed Commission to Study and Develop Reparations Proposals for African Americans Act before the 116th Congress 2019-2020 on June 19, 2019) The time has come for the United States, finally, to lay to rest the issue of what has been called, variously, the Slave Problem, the Colored Problem, the Negro Problem, the Black Problem, and TONI MORRISON THE REVOLUTIONARY I loved Toni Morrison long before I read a word she’d written. Her life was an epic poem, a love poem written to African Americans — and by extension to all of humanity. She wrote from the intimacy of deep-in-the-bone knowledge. It was knowledge that she learned first at the feet of her parents and other family members. She listened, and she watched, and she carried their words with her.SAY HER NAME
Roadside assistance. That’s all Corey Jones wanted in the early hours of Oct. 18, 2015. Instead, Nouman Raja — a Florida police officer in plain clothes and an unmarked vehicle — shot him to death. On March 7, a jury convicted Corey Jones' killer of manslaughter and attempted murder, marking the first time in 30 years that an on-duty police officer in Florida has been convicted in this BLACK NEWS & POLITICS The Crisis magazine is the official publication of the NAACP. Since 1910 it has served as an outlet for African-Americans and other communities of color on politics, culture, civil rights, and BlackHistory
AGING WHILE BLACK: THE CRISIS AMONG BLACK AMERICANS AS By Rodney A. Brooks After a lifetime of racial and health inequities, Black seniors are at risk of spending their last years with declining health, little income and virtually no savings. Numerous studies have noted that Black Americans have worse health than their white counterparts, including chronic diseases and disabilities leading to shorter and sicker lives than white Americans. MS. PEARL SET THE STANDARD: Lifetime Memberships are Lifeblood of NAACP By Maria Morales At 110 years old, Pearl Bassett was the oldest living member of the NAACP. Ms. Pearl, as she was affectionately called, joined the NAACP in 1930 after witnessing a lynching in her hometown of Marion, Indiana. Known for her sharp wit and show-stopping hats, Ms. Pearl, who celebrated her 110th birthday on April 28, still attended unit COVID-19 VACCINE AND AFRICAN AMERICANS By Cindy George For the last six years, vaccine scientist Dr. Kizzmekia Corbett has been working on the best and safest immune response for coronaviruses as part of a pandemic demonstration project at the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Corbett’s work was based on the “what if” scenario of a real outbreak. Then, in late 2019, the “if” happened. Corbett’s work was foundationalCRIMINAL JUSTICE
For over 100 years, the Crisis magazine has reported on issues that affect African Americans and other communities of color. Your donation helps us uphold W.E.B.Du Bois' mission to "set forth those facts and arguments which show the dangers of race prejudice", past and BLACK CHURCHES STEP UP DURING THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC Before mainstream media began reporting the disproportionately high COVID-19 death rates among African Americans, Black churches were already on the move. As institutions on the frontlines, many of them knew immediately the additional ravage a pandemic would bring to the Black community. In the Bay Area, Pastor Michael McBride is one of many who sprung into action. OPINION: VOTER FRAUD MYTH A TROJAN HORSE FOR VOTER SUPPRESSION By Stephanie J. Jones Opinion contributor Published October 29, 2020 in The Cincinnati Enquirer | Cincinnati.com Within days after the U.S. Supreme Court eviscerated the Voting Rights Act in 2013 – gutting the requirement that changes in election procedures must first be precleared by the U.S. Department of Justice – state legislatures and election officials wasted no time ramming through BLACKS IN GHANA: WELCOME HOME Mabel’s Table sits at the edge of the Atlantic Ocean in Elmina, Ghana. In the distance is the Cape Coast Slave Castle, one of several dozens of slave dungeons in West Africa where captured Africans were kept before being exported to lands unknown. The slave castle represents Ghana’s past. Businesses owned by Black Americans, like Mabel’s Table, represent Ghana’s future. NEW FILM REVISITS THE 1921 TULSA RACE RIOTS As a college student, Dekoven Riggins came across an interesting exhibit several years ago at Langston University. “I was just walking through the library and there was this huge display,” the Oklahoma City native told attendees at a screening of his feature film, Black Wall Street Burning at Tulsa’s Circle Cinema in February. “I walked past the display and then I moonwalked backwards A HAMBURGER AND A BAD DAY A Hamburger and A Bad Day. By Lottie L. Joiner. On March 16, 21-year-old Robert Aaron Long of Woodstock, Ga., killed eight people, including six Asian women, at Atlanta-area spas. Long was arrested about 150 miles south of Atlanta after his parents reported him to authorities. The next day, Long, who was headed to Florida to commitmore crimes
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The 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre: My Family’s Story, America’s SharedHistory
By Anneliese Bruner The first time the police followed me, I was a fifteen-year-old girl walking to school one morning. Most days Iwould...
Elder Abuse: Another COVID-19 Evil By Jatika H. Patterson In the summer of 2019, my 90-year-old grandmother was placed in an assisted living facility. My grandmotherhad...
Rodney King and Freddie Gray: Remembering the Race Riots By Maria Morales April 29 will always be a day that stands out in my life and in our world. I was in Los Angeles when the “notguilty”...
Georgia’s Suppressive Voting Laws Will Not Silence Our Voices By Kevin Myles I am a 50-year-old Black, Democratic leaning voter who lives in Fulton County, Georgia. I am one of the voters whose voice... A Hamburger and A Bad Day By Lottie L. Joiner On March 16, 21-year-old Robert Aaron Long of Woodstock, Ga., killed eight people, including six Asian women, at...12 3
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The Crisis magazine is a quarterly journal of politics, culture, civil rights and history that seeks to educate and challenge its readers about issues facing African-Americans and other communities of color. The Crisis Magazine
For over 100 years, the Crisis magazine has reported on issues that affect African Americans and other communities of color. Your donation helps us uphold W.E.B.Du Bois' mission to "set forth those facts and arguments which show the dangers of race prejudice", past and present, as manifested toward people of color.DONATE AND HELP
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