Poems By Lamont Lilly: ‘Honor in the Ghetto’

http://www.workers.org/

By Lamont Lilly posted on August 3, 2017

panther men

they weren’t scared
of no police dogs.
they didn’t bow to no pigs
and wooden batons.
no fear of fire hoses
silver bullets and steel cuffs
they were different.

those negroes looked like men.
like BLACK MEN
who knew exactly
where they came from.

like BLACK MEN
who knew exactly
where they came from
and didn’t take no shit.
from nobody.
from nobody.

old black wall street

we don’t own
the convenience stores
in the ghetto.
we don’t own
the smoke shops
nail salons
and beauty supply spots.
we own the churches
the good word
and dreams deferred.
we own the pain
poverty and crime
against each other.
we own the
nickels and dimes
that allow others
to own us.
we don’t own
a goddamn thing
here anymore.
black wall street
has now become brooklyn
harlem, u street.
merely a shell
of their old selves.
gone.
merely a shell
of their old selves.
gone.

coup d’état

there can be no peace
until every child
has a hot meal

there can be no treaties
until we sit down
and negotiate the revolution.

not one hostage
shall be released
until you hang those
policemen.

until those judges
mayors and corrupt officials
are all buried
alive.

Copyright © 2017 by Lamont Lilly. All rights reserved.

Lamont Lilly was the 2016 Workers World Party U.S. vice presidential candidate. In 2015 he was an Indy Week “Citizen Award” winner for his activism and journalism. The selections presented are from his forthcoming book of poetry, Honor in the Ghetto. Contact the writer at llilly1@eagles.nccu.edu.

DETROIT Class August 5, 2017: Lenin’s State and Revolution (Livestream available)

LIVESTREAM: https://www.facebook.com/WWP.michigan/

Workers World Party Class

Lenin’s State and Revolution

Saturday, August 5, 5 PM (5920 Second Avenue, Detroit)

———-

Dinner followed by reading and discussion.

Class leaders: Kayla Pauli and Jamie Smedley

Join us Saturday, August 5 for our class on State And Revolution written by V.I. Lenin just a few months before the successful worker revolution in 1917 and published in 1918. Come to a discussion on what is the capitalist state, and why socialist revolution is the only solution to police brutality, prisons and the U.S. court system of justice for the rich and enslavement for the workers and oppressed.

Lenin notes that the capitalist state “is a power which arose from society but places itself above it and alienates itself more and more from it. What does this power mainly consist of? It consists of special bodies of armed men having prisons, etc., at their command.”

LIVESTREAM: https://www.facebook.com/WWP.michigan/

To read ahead:

https://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1917/staterev/preface.htm

https://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1917/staterev/ch01.htm

LENIN
V.I. Lenin

Madison, August 27: 9th Black Latino Unity Picnic / Noveno Picnic por la Unidad

Hosted by Festival de la Independencia de Mexico and UTI- Union de Trabajadores Inmigrantes

1602 S Park Street, Madison, 1-5 P.M.

An event for the whole community focused on the common struggle of Black and Latino Workers for better working, housing, employment and living conditions in our neighborhoods.
(Working) PROGRAM:
—————–
DJ Music:
DJ Latin Fresh
DJ Fabulust
Poetry:
Damion Catledge
Live Music:
Henrry la Voz Gemela de Juan Gabriel
Monis
Dances:
Ballet Folklorico de Maria Diaz

FOOD,MUSIC,children activities, INFORMATION AND UNITY .100% FREE AND FAMILY FRIENDLY

**********************************************************
Un evento para toda la comunidad enfocada en la lucha común de los trabajadores Latinos y Morenos por mejores condiciones de trabajo, vivienda, empleo y de vida en nuestros vecindarios.

(Tentativo) PROGRAMA:
—————–
Musica DJ:
DJ Latin Fresh
DJ Fabulust
Poesia:
Damion Catledge
Musica en Vivo:
Henrry la Voz Gemela de Juan Gabriel
Monis
Hip Hop
Danzas:
Ballet Folklorico de Maria Diaz

Comida,Musica, actividades infantiles, informacion y unidad. 100% gratis y familiar

Latino Black Unity Picnic Madison August 27 2017

Madison, August 19: AFRICAN FEST MADISON

Hosted by African N American fits

202 S Ingersoll Street, Madison, 11 A.M. – 9 P.M.

The event that bring out the diverse nature of madison and the near cities to celebrate african culture, food , music and it’s people. Let’s make this year the best those far bring your kids, friends and family and enjoy the best that africa has to offer and all its participants!!! Thanks in advance.

Milwaukee, August 5: Foro informativo de inmigración / Immigration Information Forum

Hosted by Voces de la Frontera

South Division High School, 1515 W Lapham, Milwaukee, 1-3 P.M. 

ENGLISH BELOW

Foro Informativo: Las últimas actualizaciones sobre inmigración

¿Qué pasa con la policía de Milwaukee?
¿Qué hay de nuevo sobre DACA?
¡Alto a la ley antiinmigrante AB190!
¡Sí a licencias de conducir!
Taller “conozca sus derechos”

sábado • 5 de agosto • 1pm
Escuela preparatoria South Division
1515 W Lapham Blvd • Milwaukee
Info: 414-643-1620
———-
Information Forum: The latest updates on immigration

What’s new with the Milwaukee Police immigration policy?
What’s happening with DACA?
Stop the anti-immigrant bill AB190!
Restore driver’s licenses for immigrants!
Know Your Rights workshop

Saturday • August 5 • 1pm
South Division High School
1515 W Lapham Blvd in Milwaukee
Info: 414-643-1620

Madison, August 3: Voces Madison Solidarity Party

1133 Rutledge Street, Madison, 5:30 P.M.

As a descendant of immigrants (Becca) and the daughter of undocumented immigrants (Jenny), we strongly oppose the current administration’s hateful anti-immigrant policies, practices, and rhetoric. We’ve joined with others in our community to respond to attacks on immigrant families by helping Voces de la Frontera and Centro Hispano, two important Latino organizations, hire a full-time immigration and workers’ rights organizer in Madison.

Members of Madison’s Jewish community and our allies have already raised one year’s salary for a Madison organizer. Co-hosts Jenny Pressman, Becca Krantz, Don Katz, and Mary Lang Sollinger are holding the next fundraiser to help fund the organizer’s second year. Our goal is to raise $30,000 – half the needed $60,000 – and we have personally committed to contributing $12,000 to match the first $12,000 raised!

Join us for tasty appetizers, desserts, and beverages at Jenny’s beautiful home and garden to learn from Latino/a community leaders how crucial your support is. Bring your family, your appetite, and, yes, your checkbook. But most of all, bring your desire to stand up for what is right.

MISSISSIPPI auto workers on road to historic union vote TODAY, Aug 3-4!

2. Read more about Nissan’s bullying of the workers, and their fierce courage to keep organizing!

3. Sign the Petition today! 

4. Check out this power VIDEO of Nina Turner and Our Revolution has recorded in support of the Nissan workers organizing. She gave a powerful speaker at the March on Mississippi earlier this year. 

5. SUPPORT ON SOCIAL MEDIA BY POSTING THESE MESSAGES:

Nissan workers need your support now more than ever. #DoBetterNissan https://goo.gl/3xAx1j 
 
Stand with Nissan workers before it’s too late, sign the petition. #DoBetterNissan https://goo.gl/3xAx1j 

, stop your nasty intimidation campaign against your Canton, MS plant workers & give them a fair union vote.
 
Today, Nissan workers will vote in a historic union election. Stand with them. #DoBetterNissanhttps://goo.gl/3xAx1j 
 
The battle for workers’ rights is heating up in MS. Let Nissan workers know you have their back. #DoBetterNissanhttps://goo.gl/3xAx1j 

swa charlotte

TAKE DOWN RICHMOND’S CONFEDERATE STATUES

Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney has set up a Memorial Avenue Commission to examine what to do with the Confederate statues on Monument Avenue – but he already has said the statues should stay where they are, just with some added “context,” like signage. The Richmond (Virginia) Defenders have been calling for the statues to come down since 2006, when they held a press conference on the 200th anniversary of the birth of Robert E. Lee at the Lee statue with King Salim Khalfani of the Virginia State Conference NAACP. The commission began its work July 31, 2017 and will hold public meetings on Aug. 9 and Sept. 13 to get community input. On July 29 an Open Letter was sent to the commission and to local, national and international news media. The letter demanded that taking down the statues be one of the options to be considered; that opponents of the statues be added to the commission; and that the commission invite New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu to speak at the first public hearing to speak about why his city has taken down its Confederate monuments. Opposition has been reported on by national media such as NBC News, Washington Post, Washington Times, WTOP (D.C.), San Francisco Chronicle, Star Tribune (Minneapolis) and the New Orleans Advocate, as well as the Richmond TImes-Dispatch and Channel 12 news. We encourage everyone to be at both public hearings and demand that these white-supremacist tributes to the slavery-defending Confederacy be taken down.  Feedback is also being accepted online at monumentavenuecommission.org.

Hundreds attend UNAC’s ‘STOP THE WARS AT HOME & ABROAD’ conference in Richmond

More than 300 activists registered for the “Stop the Wars at Home & Abroad!” conference hosted June 16-18 by the United National Antiwar Coalition (UNAC) at the Greater Richmond Convention Center. They came from 29 states, the District of Columbia and 11 other countries. The conference brought together leaders in domestic struggles like Fight for $15; defense of immigrants, Muslims and LGBTQ rights; and opposition to the Atlantic Coastal Pipeline along with longtime opponents of U.S. wars abroad. Many people said the gathering also had the largest number of Black leaders at any anti-war conference in memory. On the final day, more than 100 people marched from the convention center to Richmond’s African Burial Ground to declare their support for the Community Proposal for a nine-acre Shockoe Bottom Memorial Park. All plenary sessions, some workshops and the gathering at the African Burial Ground were videoed and can be viewed on the conference website: www.unacconference2017.org. UNAC’s report on the conference can be read HERE. UNAC was founded in 2010 on the basic principles of opposition to all U.S. wars and interventions, support for the right of oppressed peoples to self-determination and independence from the two major capitalist parties. The Richmond gathering was UNAC’s fourth national conference and the first to be held in the South. The organizing was coordinated by the Defenders, a founding member of UNAC.