A BENEFIT CONCERT FOR THE SHANGILIA FOUNDATION MORE ON PAGE 5
INSIGHT NEWS January 31 - February 6, 2011 • MN Metro Vol. 37 No. 5 • The Journal For Community News, Business & The Arts • www.insightnews.com
Festival highlights cultural vitality
By Maya Beecham Contributing Writer On any given weekday or Saturday you can walk into Golden Thyme Coffee Café, a Black owned neighborhood business at 921 Selby Avenue, Saint Paul, MN 55104, and find a snapshot of the Black community ranging from elders, politicos, artists, clergy, thinkers, to children tagging along with parents. Every Friday night in the month of February the cultural hub will be visited by vintage Black Hollywood, during the First Annual Black History Month Film Festival sponsored by Golden Thyme. Esteemed elder and Black historian Professor Mahmoud El Kati will present Black cinema featuring iconic film stars such as Sidney Poitier, Lena Horne, Nina May McKinney, Jimmy Wright, Savannah Churchill, Bill Bojangles Robinson, and the Nicholas Brothers, to name a few. Each evening will include a social moment at 6:30pm, and a film showing at 7:00pm, free to the public. The film festival was created as an extension of Fourth Fridays at the Movies that has taken place at Golden Thyme for the last three years. In that time intercultural audiences have been exposed to films representing a long history of African Americans in cinema. These films, of significant educational and cultural value, encourage dialogue that promotes community in-gathering and intercommunity social interaction. Additionally, the gatherings restore intergenerational connections where wisdom and history informs youthful curiosity. Success of the monthly film showings overtime ensures the historic first annual film festival will be a value added community gathering for all to enjoy.
Schedule Friday, February 4, 2011 The Devil’s Daughter: Starring Nina May McKinney is the first feature in this year’s film festival. After her father passes away, Jamaican native Isabelle is left disinherited as her successful city-dwelling sister, Sylvia, returns home to claim their plantation for herself. Hoping to scare her sibling off, Isabelle conjures up some fake voodoo rituals but fails to send Sylvia packing. Friday, February 11, 2011 No Way Out: Starring Sidney Poitier in his first feature film. No Way Out is our second film of the festival. The movie was unique for its time. For the first time since the great Paul Robeson made films in the 1920’s and 1930’s, a Black actor, Poitier, was seen in a non-stereotypical role. He plays a doctor, a psychiatrist no less, treating white patients. It is emotionally riveting. Friday, February 18, 2011 Short Film Compilation (including Murder on Lenox Avenue): Starring Jimmy Wright and Savannah Churchill. It is a murder mystery which takes place in Harlem. It is eventually solved after a series of missteps and illusions and the usual fare of the mystery genre. This evening will also include a very special surprise for appreciators of popular culture. Friday, February 25, 2011 Stormy Weather: Lena Horne was Black America’s first female movie star. The classic “Stormy Weather,” is one of Hollywood’s 10 greatest musicals featuring the brightest African American stars of the era—Bill Bojangles Robinson, Lena Horne, and the spiritual dancing fathers of Michael Jackson, the Nicholas Brothers. For more information on the First Annual Black History Film Festival contact Golden Thyme Coffee Café at 651-645-1340. www.drmacro.com
Rally promotes education policy By Lydia Schwartz Contributing Writer
Dr. Carter G. Woodson
National Archives
The origin of Black History Month By Mahmoud El-Kati So often we find ourselves involved in activities without fully understanding why, as occasionally is the case during our annual observance of Black History Month. This celebration is our most meaningful opportunity to promote cultural awareness, provide direction for our young and take pride in our collective
historical accomplishments. Since 1926, there have been various ways in which Black people set aside a time of year to honor our past, appreciate our present and work toward fulfillment of the future. This concept was introduced by Dr.Carter G. Woodson, one of our most revered historians and critical thinkers. Dr. Woodson was a man
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Business
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The Minnesota Campaign for Achievement Now (MinnCAN) is a newly formed education reform advocacy organization that launched a new movement of Minnesotans dedicated to enact smart public policies to ensure that every Minnesota child, regardless of race or economic status, has equal access to adequate public schools. MinnCAN provides individuals with a platform to effectively speak on education reform and execute advocacy campaigns through research, policy, communication, and mobilization. This legislative session, the organization is declaring a ‘State of Emergency’ for Minnesota public schools in hopes to create state policy that will transform the way we educate Minnesota’s children. Vallay Varro, Exec. Director of MinnCAN, hopes that people will contribute to the dialogue that MinnCAN is working to promote. “It is time for Minnesota to have an honest conversation about the achievement gap to bring our state back together as one
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Vallay Varro because it is what’s best for our economy,” she says. Varro is also a mom, educator, and community leader. She has served as the Education Policy Director for St Paul Mayor Chris Coleman and as a School Board Director for the St Paul Public Schools.
Varro comes from a Hmong refugee family and was raised in Appleton, WI. She served as a Program Manager at the Minnesota Literacy Council, as a Director at Minnesota Reading Corps (an AmeriCorps program), and was a classroom teacher at the University of St
Aesthetics
Erica Hubbard: The “Let’s Stay Together” interview
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Photo courtesy of MinnCAN
Catherine Pre-K Education Center. MinnCAN already has a few recommendations for closing Minnesota’s achievement gap. Firstly, the organization plans
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Sports
A classic Superbowl match-up
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