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9 Documents Found
![Discussion on the effects of global white supremacy on Africans](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Date: 10/23/1991Call Number: AFR 053Format: Cass A & BProducers: UAM: United African MovementProgram: Global White Supremacy, Part 1Collection: Africa- General Resources
Recorded off mic.
Discussion on the effects of global white supremacy on Africans historically, legally, and psychologically. The audio begins with Imhotep Gary Byrd leading the audience in a song. John Henrik Clarke speaks how black people are the chosen people of God, and how historically, the Jews have benefited from the slave trade. He also talks about Louis Farrakhan, minister of the nation of Islam, and his contributions to the black man. He also gives a historical perspective on global white supremacy, saying that blacks do not understand white supremacy because they don’t understand white people. He asserts that whites feel superior because they aren’t rich in culture and family life like blacks are, and they want that without paying for it. Clarke calls people to read more and to become educated. He speaks about Egypt not being white because it is deep within Africa, so they cannot claim superiority over other Africans. He also speaks about the bastardization of Africans, physically through skin color, and mentally through the desire to be white. He claims there is no reason for white colonization except the whites desire for resources and to take over another people. He says that the only way to overcome global white supremacy would be for all Africans to unite.
Audio tape includes a rap song about race relations between minorities (blacks) and whites. No Justice, No Peace.
![Discussion on the effects of global white supremacy on Africans](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Date: 10/23/1991Call Number: AFR 054Format: Cass A & BProducers: UAM: United African MovementProgram: Global White Supremacy, Part 2Collection: Africa- General Resources
Recorded off mic.
Discussion on the effects of global white supremacy on Africans historically, legally, and psychologically. The audio begins with Imhotep Gary Byrd leading the audience in a song. John Henrik Clarke speaks how black people are the chosen people of God, and how historically, the Jews have benefited from the slave trade. He also talks about Louis Farrakhan, minister of the nation of Islam, and his contributions to the black man. He also gives a historical perspective on global white supremacy, saying that blacks do not understand white supremacy because they don’t understand white people. He asserts that whites feel superior because they aren’t rich in culture and family life like blacks are, and they want that without paying for it. Clarke calls people to read more and to become educated. He speaks about Egypt not being white because it is deep within Africa, so they cannot claim superiority over other Africans. He also speaks about the bastardization of Africans, physically through skin color, and mentally through the desire to be white. He claims there is no reason for white colonization except the whites desire for resources and to take over another people. He says that the only way to overcome global white supremacy would be for all Africans to unite.
Audio tape includes a rap song about race relations between minorities (blacks) and whites. No Justice, No Peace.
![Black and New Afrikan Political Prisoners](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Date: 11/29/1991Call Number: PM 251Format: CassetteProducers: Prison RadioProgram: You Can’t Jail The Spirit #3Collection: New Afrikan Prisoners
About the Black political repression, exile, incarceration, and the criminal justice system's interference with political resistance through a discussion of the lives of Mumia Abu Jamal, Assata Shakur, and Geronimo Pratt. Soffiyah Elijah, Dr. Mutulu Shakur, and Kiilu Nyasha, discuss the criminalization of revolutionaries and the future of radical organizing.
![Tongues Untied](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Date: 7/16/1991Call Number: V 487Format: VHSProducers: Marlon RiggsCollection: Videos in many formats – both camera originals as well as reference materials
Film by Marlon Riggs that recounts his life history, intermixed with Essex Hemphill’s poetry, a visit to the Institute of Snap!thology, and a celebration of black men loving black men as a revolutionary act.
![Black and New Afrikan Political Prisoners](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Date: 11/29/1991Call Number: PM 390Format: CassetteProducers: Prison RadioProgram: You Can’t Jail The Spirit #3Collection: New Afrikan Prisoners
On Black political repression, exile, incarceration, and the criminal justice system's interference with political resistance through a discussion of the lives of Mumia Abu Jamal, Assata Shakur, and Geronimo Pratt. Soffiyah Elijah, Dr. Mutulu Shakur, and Kiilu Nyasha, discuss the criminalization of revolutionaries and the future of radical organizing.
![Repression, Resistance, and Knowing Your Rights](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Date: 1/1/1991Call Number: PM 391Format: CassetteProducers: Prison RadioProgram: You Can’t Jail The Spirit #7Collection: Political Prisoner Periodicals
Repression of progressive movements, resistance to grand juries, FBI repression, and knowing your rights. An interview with Dr. Mutulu Shakur, from Lompoc prison, and Ricardo Romero from the MLN.
![Pusher Man: a poem](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Publisher: Forward MotionDate: 9/1991Volume Number: SeptemberFormat: PeriodicalCollection: Robert F. Williams!
A poem by Robert F. Williams
![Like It Is: WABC-TV interview with Robert F. Williams](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Publisher: WABC-TVDate: 11/10/1991Volume Number: 10-NovFormat: TranscriptCollection: Robert F. Williams!
Gil Noble (host) interviews Walter Sisulu (deputy president of ANC) and Robert Williams (author of Negroes with Guns)
![By Any Means Necessary](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Publisher: New Afrikan People's OrganizationYear: 1991Volume Number: Fall/WinterFormat: PeriodicalCollection: New Afrikan People's Organization
Cover Story: And the Struggle Continues; NAPO Elections. Inside: Message from the Chairman, NAPO Newsbriefs, A Snake is a Snake (Clearance Thomas), Support Our Mandelas (Geronimo Ji Jaga), 500 Years of Native Resistance, Is the Image of Malcolm Being Pimped, New Orleans Police Murder Black Youth, more.
9 Documents Found