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Category Archives: Murder
The Black Arts Movement
The theme for this Black History Month is African Americans and the Arts. For purposes of this blog, I’ll highlight the “Black Arts Era” (1960-1975). The Black Arts Era began at the very beginning of what Samuel F. Yette, influential … Continue reading
Posted in Black Shadows and Through the White Looking Glass, Education, ezwwaters, John F. Kennedy, Lest We Forget, Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, Murder, Nation of Islam, Politics, race
Tagged Black History Month, Decisive Decade, democracy, JFK, Larry Neal, Malcolm X, MLK, Muhammad Ali, RFK, Samuel Yette, The Black Arts Era
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Black Fruit, Strange Fruit
My first book, the award-winning epic poem, Black Shadows and Through the White Looking Glass: Remembrance of Things Past and Present, deals with the theme(s) of “the captivity, exploitation and suffering of Black people in America.” But not all of … Continue reading
The Siren Song of Mass Murder
The latest mass murder in America, in Lewiston, Maine, sounds like a broken record, a siren song. In the tenth month of this year, America has experienced and witnessed more than 500 mass murders. Still, the Second Amendment is sacrosanct, … Continue reading
Posted in ezwwaters, Murder, Parole, parole board, Politics
Tagged Article 78, Lewiston Maine, mass murder, mental health, sirens
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Remembering My Father as I Remember Maceo Snipes, Black Veteran, Shot to Death After Voting in Georgia Primary — July 18, 1946
As a teenager my father, a Native Southern Son (NC and VA), was drafted to serve in the segregated U.S. Army during World War II. Shortly after he was honorably discharged from the Army in 1946, he moved to Brooklyn, … Continue reading
Emmett Till — On this day in history, August 28, 195…
…Emmett till was kidnapped and murdered. In my latest collection of poetry, “The Black Blood of Poetry,” which I am shopping around, the title poem begins with the murder of Emmett Till. For those not familiar with poetic forms, “The … Continue reading
I’m Driving as Fast as I Can
Bell Gayle Chevigny is another woman I met through my work with PEN America Center’s Prison Writing Program (PWP). She is also the editor of Doing Time: 25 Years of Prison Writing, an anthology of some of the best writing … Continue reading
Posted in crime, ezwwaters, Justice Chronicles, Lest We Forget, Life Sentences, Murder, Parole, Poetry, Politics, race, raising black boys, Reentry, Relationships, remorse
Tagged American Studies Association, Bell Gale Chevigny, Doing Time, PEN, Prison Writing Program, Vassar College
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Fiat justitia ruat caelum
Today I get to uplift an advocate and an author, Claudette Nurse. I have not met a person more passionate about justice than Claudette. (She causes “good trouble.”) She is an attorney. She worked for the Legal Aid Society, in … Continue reading
A Bigger By Any Other Name
Bigger Thomas, although a fictional character, haunts the imagination of white folk. Richard Wright’s Native Son, where we meet Bigger Thomas, was published in 1940. Benjamin Mays, in eulogizing the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. 28 years later after … Continue reading
Posted in Black Shadows and Through the White Looking Glass, crime, ezwwaters, James Baldwin, Justice Chronicles, Lest We Forget, Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, Murder, race, raising black boys, Streets of Rage
Tagged Aaron the Moor, Bigger Thomas, Frantz Fanon, James Baldwin, Malcolm X, Native Son, Othello the Moor, Richard Wright, Shakespeare, The Black Wall Street, Titus Andronicus
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