The Westside Gazette

Page 1

THE WESTSIDE GAZETTE POST OFFICE 5304 FORT LAUDERDALE, FL 33310

PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE PAID FT. LAUDERDALE, FL 33310

PERMIT NO. 1179

Broward County's Oldest and Largest African American Owned and Operated Newspaper oud PPaper aper ffor or a Pr oud PPeople...Sinc eople...Sinc Proud Proud eople...Sincee 1971 THURSDA VOL. 45 NO. 2 50¢ A Pr THURSDAYY, FEBRUAR FEBRUARYY 18 - WEDNESDA WEDNESDAYY, FEBRUAR FEBRUARYY 24 24,, 2016

From slave ships to ‘Black Lives Matter’: Nation’s newest Smithsonian to tell story of African Americans By Edna Kane-Williams In 1955, Mamie Till, the grieving mother of Emmett Till, said she wanted the world to see what had been done to her son. Sixty years later, the glasstopped coffin that displayed the mutilated body of the 14year-old victim of racial hatred is among thousands of compelling artifacts slated for display in the Smithsonian’s new National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington. Anticipation builds as the museum, opening in September 2016, prepares to receive visitors from around the world. It will tell the story of American history like never before from an African-American perspective. When the doors open, the three-floor, 400,000-squarefoot facility will not only display

Among the exhibits in the new National Museum of African American History and Culture is a collection of glass shards and a shotgun shell collected from the gutter outside the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala., after the 1963 bombing that killed four young girls. Photo credit: Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture ancient artifacts but also showcase more current events and

how they fit into the continuum of American history.

“We want to be the place where people come and say, ‘OK, this just happened. What’s the background to this? What preceded this?’” says John Franklin, a museum director. So items from recent occurrences such as the Black Lives Matter campaign and the 20th anniversary of the Million Man March will be included. The five-acre museum site, located on Constitution Avenue, between the Washington Monument and the National Museum of American History, will be the only national museum devoted exclusively to the documentation of AfricanAmerican life, art, history and culture. Among the exhibits: * An underground gallery tracing artifacts from a sunken slave ship from the 1500s to the administration of President Barack Obama, America’s first African-American President. (Cont'd on Page 13)

Being grateful for the stewardship that God has given us “How beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him that bringeth good tidings, that publisheth peace; that bringeth good tidings of good, that publisheth salvation; that saith unto Zion, Thy God reigneth!” — Isaiah 52:7 (King James Version) By Bobby R. Henry, Sr.

Happy Birthday Westside Gazette! When I use the term ‘I’ in this piece, I am referring to all of the families of the Westside Gazette, those who are here now and those who have crossed over to eternity. We toil every day to do the best that we can with what God has given us and what He has allowed us to do. Carrying on in the footsteps of those that came before us and standing upon their shoulders looking boldly into the future - most humble, grateful and exuberantly proud to accept that honor and most importantly the favor from God. I could only imagine but one thing that could give so much pleasure and pain at the same time, and that is giving birth to a child. Like a hungry baby drawn to full breasts of mother’s milk with love and joy, that’s how we cherish what stewardship God has given to us. (Cont'd on Page 12)

Young people can impact the world by ‘standing The HIV conversation about PrEP gets heated on the shoulders’ of mentors

By Steve Rothaus, Palette Magazine John Byrne was born in 1981, a few months before the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention revealed a new report about “five young, previously healthy, gay men in Los Angeles” suffering from strange infections that had already killed two of them. That was on June 5th. Throughout that summer, doctors across the United States reported similar cases of “GRID” (gay-related immune deficiency) and The New York Times went on to report on a deadly cancer affecting 41 gay men in New York and California in early July. The next year, the CDC named the new plague AIDS, and gay men in San Francisco and New York City began the first community-based efforts to eradicate its cause, human immunodeficiency virus or HIV. Condoms were the only reliable defense against contracting HIV then, and AIDS activists fervently encouraged young gay men not to bareback. Little Helper More than three decades since those first reports, plenty has improved across the country when it comes to HIV and AIDS. Still, Miami-Dade and

Broward counties currently claim the highest rates of new HIV infections in the United States. Byrne, publisher of RawStory.com, and others throughout South Florida have begun their own communitybased campaigns to address this alarming local trend. And they are dropping the latex in favor of a little blue pill deemed equally effective in preventing the spread of HIV. The pill, Truvada by Gilead Sciences, has been used for about a decade for HIV treatment. As it turns out, it’s been

found to be nearly 100 percent effective in preventing people who are HIV negative from contracting the virus. I never really liked condoms. It didn’t feel sexy. It didn’t feel like sex. — John Byrne “Swallow This” is the slogan for a campaign Byrne recently launched. He is advocating something revolutionary: the widespread use of PrEP or preexposure prophylaxis. Byrne’s “I Am PrEP” party held at Hotel Gaythering in mid-November attracted about 100 young and middle-age men. He and many others cheer they can at last enjoy having a healthy, active sex life without having to worry about condoms. “I never really liked condoms. It didn’t feel sexy. It didn’t feel like sex,” says Byrne, who came out at 15 and became sexually active in high school at the height of the AIDS crisis. (Read full story on www.thewestsidegazette.com)

Broward County Transit Bus Operator Leroy Montgomery was recently recognized for his 30 years of safe driving and service to Broward County. The presentation was made before the County Commission. Montgomery, (c), is pictured holding award with Bertha W. Henry, County Administrator and Mayor Marty Kiar.

Pleading Our Own Cause

WWW.

Mount Hermon A.M.E. Church’s Greek Unity Day 2016 The Mount Hermon A.M.E. Church Family (Fort Lauderdale), and our dynamic Pastor, Rev. Henry E. Green, Jr., cordially invites the entire community to attend our 22nd Annual Greek Unity Day Observance. Through this program we annually acknowledge and recognize Black Greek lettered organizations for their numerous contributions and accomplishments. This year, the Rev. Morehouse College student Jajuan Chain and Georgia State University student Samaria Muhammad listen as civil rights veteran Lonnie King explain principles of leadership and organization. Photo credit: Sheila Pree Bright By Edna Kane-Williams When Jajuan Chain, a history major at Morehouse College in Atlanta, needed to interview someone for a class assignment, he reached out to 1960s civil rights icon Lonnie C. King Jr., a founding member of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and founding chairman of The Committee on Appeal for Human Rights. After their first encounter, neither King, 79, nor Chain, 22, ever expected that within weeks they would become mentor and protégé working on an organizational project involving Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) and other universities in Atlanta that Chain believes will impact the rest of his life.

Chain says that King is taking the time to share his experience to train him as a young leader. And their collaboration is working. “We want more than a movement,” Chain says. “We want something that’s going to last for generations, something that’s going to have substance that will not only have a national impact, but an international impact.” Unlike King and Chain, clarity and understanding between young and older generations has not always been the case during recent uprisings against police killings of unarmed African Americans over the past several years. Photographer Sheila Pree Bright, who documented recent demonstrations in Ferguson, Mo., and Baltimore, has been an eyewitness to the friction. (Read full story on www.thewestsidegazette.com)

The Westside Gazette Newspaper

@_Westsidegazett

thewestsidegazette.com

(954) 525-1489

Thewestsidegazettenewspaper

DR. COUSIN Dr. Michael A. Cousin, Sr., has been invited as the Messenger for the program. He is a member of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc. Dr. Cousin currently serves as the pastor of Saint Stephens AME Church in Detroit, Mich., and previously served as pastor of Mount Hermon AME Church (Fort Lauderdale). During his tenure as our pastor he established and introduced the concept of Greek Unity Day to our church, and to this community. (Cont'd on Page 11) MEMBER: National Newspaper Publishers Association ( NNPA), and Southeastern African-American Publishers Association (SAAPA) Florida Association of Black Owned Media (FABOM)


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
The Westside Gazette by westside gazette - Issuu