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Nebraska’s Only Black Owned Newspaper Vol. 82 - No. 1 Omaha, Nebraska
Friday, January 10, 2020
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Revisiting Martin Luther King Jr. with 20/20 Vision By Terri L. Crawford, J.D. “Let us be dissatisfied until America will no longer have high blood pressure of creeds and an anemia of deeds. Let us be dissatisfied until the tragic walls that separate the outer city of wealth and comfort from the inner city of poverty and despair shall be crushed by the battering rams of the fires of justice. …” – Martin Luther King Jr. As we prepare our minds and spirits to honor the legacy of Martin Luther King Jr., we must honor the entire legacy, and not just the portion of the “I Have a Dream Speech” that makes us comfortable. The “content of our character” portion of the speech, we remember, but can we have a conversation about the March 12, 1968 speech delivered by Martin Luther King Jr. titled “The Other America”? Not just within its historical context, but with 20/20 vision in a contemporary context for the year 2020. If we are truthful with ourselves, some of the annual celebrations of Dr. King are an exercise in absurdity considering where we find ourselves in the fight for economic equity. Most modern memorials take stock of Dr. King around the “I Have a Dream” speech in 1963 – likely his popular high
point in the eyes of white onlookers. However, few bother to look beyond that speech or the few passages wherein “We Shall Overcome” gives us a warm fuzzy feeling to walk away with. Far fewer peer into his early or latter years. They miss the fraught political landscape of his death and the “white backlash” he warned about (a manifestation repeated after an Obama presidency). They missed the ways in which his legacy has been whitewashed from the very beginning to lessen his more pointed economic and societal critiques. It’s quite amusing (not in a good way), that we are still having this conversation in 2020 with little to no movement towards true equity of all humans. Why has this not occurred? Dr. King in “The Other America” proffered an answer by stating, “The first thing I’d like to mention is that there must be a recognition on the part of everybody
National Pay It Forward Challenge for Education HOUSTON – The National Pay It Forward Challenge for Education is set to launch on Jan. 20 to honor the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. through a national challenge that provides hope, inspiration and support to our students. To learn more about the campaign, take a look at the video at https://payitforwardeducation. org. To kick off the year, Natalia Peart, Ph.D., founder of Pay It Natalia Peart, Ph.D Forward Education, a 501(c)3 nonprofit, is challenging everyone on Jan. 20, Dr. King’s National Day of Service, to create a short video or post on social media, share their favorite Dr. King quote and then Pay it Forward by offering a piece of advice that can help students succeed. Participants are encouraged to use #PayItForwardChallenge to post on their favorite social media platform - Facebook, Instagram, or Twitter. Dr. Peart is encouraging everyone to tag their friends and share the posts. She’s hoping this is the beginning of a national call to action on behalf of our students that lasts throughout the rest of the school year. “All kids need a good education to succeed in our world today,” says Dr. Peart, a nationally acclaimed author and psychologist, “But our system, from elementary school all the way to college is in crisis. So, they need us now more than ever. The purpose of the Pay it Forward Challenge is to pay tribute to Dr. King, as well as bring awareness to the continued challenges our students face, and how critical it is that we support them.” Dr. Peart says, “Dr. King’s holiday provides us all with an opportunity to honor his legacy and to make a real difference by letting students know their future matters and that we stand with them.” As Dr. Peart loves to say, “No one can do everything but everyone can do something.” This challenge gives everyone a way to be a part of a campaign that will hopefully spark a groundswell by seeing the power we all have to change a student’s life through one small act. Dr. Natalia Peart is a psychologist, business and educational consultant who has spent more than 25 years helping students, people and organizations achieve success. She has served on the Federal Reserve Board, 10th District, is a Forbes Contributor, and has been featured in various media outlets including Harvard Business Review, Wall St. Journal, Oprah Magazine, and Black Enterprise. Pay it Forward Education is a 501(c)3 societal benefit organization that brings together students, families, educators, interested adults, and organizations to support student preparedness for the 21st century and to expand opportunity for all students.
A Raisin in the Sun opens at OCP – Jan. 17. See In the Village
in this nation that America is still a racist country. Now however unpleasant that sounds it is the truth and we will never solve the problem of racism until there is a recognition of the fact that racism still stands at the center of so much of our nation and we must see racism for what it is.” Dr. King had several policies he advocated for in order to reverse the evils of white supremacy. He outlined these policies, often in full detail, in many of his speeches before and after “I Have a Dream.” He sought race-specific measures such as affirmative action, outlined support for universal jobs and housing guarantees in his “Freedom Budget” (first released in 1966). In speeches he announced his support for universal health care. Dr. King did not necessarily advance a comprehensive view on immigration. Although, he evinced a clear support for global citizenship and for
America’s mandate to shoulder the burden of global antipoverty programs. In his speech in East Berlin in 1964, Dr. King made that position clear: “For here on either side of the wall are God’s children, and no man-made barrier can obliterate that fact. Whether it be East or West, men and women search for meaning, hope for fulfillment, yearn for faith in something beyond themselves, and cry desperately for love and community to support them in this pilgrim journey.” Dr. King also spoke of the three major evils – the evil of racism, the evil of poverty, and the evil of war. “These are the three things that I want to deal with today. Now let us turn first to the evil of racism. There can be no gainsaying of the fact that racism is still alive all over America. Racial injustice is still the Black man’s burden and America’s shame. And we must face the hard fact that many Americans would like to have a nation which is a democracy for white Americans but simultaneously a dictatorship over black Americans.” We must face the fact that we still have much to do in the area of race relations. We rarely unpack the conversation of what Dr. King was openly stating to the world; human rights are the rights See MLK continued on page 2
Request for Early Ballots by Mail Can be Submitted in January
LINCOLN – Those who wish to get an early jump on the 2020 primary will soon be able to request an early ballot by mail. The first day to submit applications for an early ballot at county offices is Jan. 13. “Counties receiving early voting requests for early ballots will accumulate those requests on a list,” said Nebraska Secretary of State Robert B. Evnen. “Those will be among the first ballots mailed starting April 6, 2020.” Evnen noted that some counties also maintain a permanent early voting list, which allows counties to reach out to voters who have indicated an ongoing preference to vote by mail. Each voter on the list will receive a postcard, which the voter can return indicating that he or she would like to receive a ballot by mail. Only in precincts designated as all-mail will voters automatically receive a ballot by mail for the primary election. To date, there are 145 precincts in 17 counties. By law, all-mail precincts are located in counties that have a population of less than 10,000, for which the county clerk has made a request that has been approved by the Secretary of State. For questions or additional information phone the Secretary of State Elections Division at 402-4712555 or visit the website www.sos.nebraska.gov.
Neighborhood Rallies to Clean Up Eyesore By LaVonya Goodwin Neighbors and businesses around the 24th and Burdette area noticed that trash was accumulating behind Skeet’s Barbecue, a North Omaha restaurant that closed in October after the passing of the owner, David Deal. But it wasn’t until a local news station aired a story on Jan. 2, reporting illegal dumping on the property, that the community took action. The news story sparked members of the newly formed North 24th Street Business Improvement District to get involved. One email prompted a chain reaction and before long the 24th Street neighbors had a plan (along with a list of donations and volunteers) to host a cleanup the next day. Little did they know that a Good Samaritan had the same idea. Early Friday morning, a local resident who also saw the story began cleaning up the trash, refusing any reimbursement or compensation and insisting on remaining anonymous. “It hurt my heart to see all of the trash,” said the Good Samaritan, who owns a lawn care and hauling company in Omaha. “I grew up around here.” Habitat for Humanity also pitched in to offer to pay the dumping fees. By mid-afternoon, The City of Omaha had dispatched personnel from Litter and Weeds and the area was completely cleared. This is the kind of collaboration that is needed if we are going to see the North 24th Street community revitalized. It’s not one person, one organization or one government entity that can do it all. But if each of us makes a sincere commitment to change, we can turn our community around. One of the primary goals of the North 24th Street Business Improvement District is to implement a litter control program in 2020. If you see illegal dumping, call the mayor’s hotline at 402-4445555.
See MLK Jr. National Holiday events inside this issue.
Kathy Tyree performs at the Jewell – Jan. 26. See In the Village