The Federation of Greene County Employees Federal Credit Union (FOGCE Federal Credit Union), based in Eutaw, AL, held its annual membership gathering as a Drop-By Meeting, on Thursday, December 16, 2021, from 9:00 am to 4:00 pm. Members visited the credit union’s office during that time period to sign-in and receive a gift bag with annual operational reports on the credit union, as well as various holiday treats. Forty-nine members participated in the Drop-By Meeting and were able to cast their ballots for board and credit committee elections. Ms. Darlene Robinson, Ms. Mollie Rowe and Mr. Rodney Pham were re-elected to the FOGCE Federal Credit Union Board of Directors and Ms. Arnelia Johnson and Mr. James Powell were re-elected to the Credit Committee. The members’ sign-in roster also served as the basis of selection for awarding door prizes. Board members scheduled individual volunteer time to meet and greet members assisting in maintaining the safe distance as members participated in the Drop-By Annual Membership Meeting. The credit union is obligated to hold an annual membership meeting, but the board of directors and staff recognized the responsibility of maintaining a safe environment for the credit union’s continued service to members. FOGCE manager, Mrs. Joyce Pham, secured various equipment on the premises as safety measures for staff and members. These include sanitation stations and plexiglass dividers in the lobby area, clerk and manager’s offices and in the boardroom. The mask requirement is also in place, and routine cleaning and sanitizing are conducted throughout the operational hours. The December FOGCE Board of Directors meeting followed at 4:00 p.m. at which time the board conducted its reorganization of officers. By acclamation, the body retained all its presiding officers: Carol P. Zippert as President; Darlene Robinson as Vice President; Mollie Rowe as Secretary and Jimmie Paster as Treasurer. The FOGCE Federal Credit Union is located at 112 Prairie Avenue, Eutaw, AL, across from the Thomas E. Gilmore Courthouse Square. Any one residing or working in Greene County can be eligible for membership.
On Monday, December 20, 2021 Greene County Sheriff Department issued a listing of the distributions for November, 2021, totaling $482,954.80 from four licensed bingo gaming facilities. The November distributions reported by the sheriff does not include the additional $71,000 from Greenetrack, Inc. distributed to the same recipients, independent of the sheriff. The bingo facilities distributing through the sheriff include Frontier, River’s Edge, Palace, and Bama Bingo. The recipients of the November distributions from bingo gaming include Greene County Sheriff’s Department, the cities of Eutaw, Forkland, Union, and Boligee, the Greene County Board of Education and the Greene County Hospital (Health System). Sub charities include Children’s Policy Council, Housing Authority of Greene County, Greene County Historical Society, the Greene County Library, Guadalupan Multicultural Services, Greene County Golf Course, Eutaw Housing Authority, REACH, Community Services of West Alabama, and This Belongs To Us. Bama Bingo gave a total of $113,019.88 to the following: Greene County Sheriff’s $60,502; City of Eutaw, $9,250; and the Towns of Forkland, Union and Boligee each, $3,875; Greene County Board of Education, $10,500, and the Greene County Health System, $12,500. Sub Charities each received $1,011.40. Community Service of West AL. $459.73 and This Belong to Us $91.95. Frontier (Dream, Inc.) gave a total of $113,020 to the following: Greene County Sheriff’s Department, $46,095; City of Eutaw, $9,250; and the Towns of Forkland, Union and Boligee each, $3,875; Greene County Board of Education, $10,500; Greene County Health System, $12,500. Sub Charities each, $1,011.40; Community Service of West AL. $459.73 and This Belong to Us $91.95 and Sheriff’s Supplement, $14,407.12. River’s Edge (Next Level Leaders and Tishabee Community Center Tutorial Program) gave a total of $118,288 to the following: Greene County Sheriff’s Department, $48,070; City of Eutaw, $12,543; and the Towns of Forkland, Union and Boligee each, $3,875; Greene County Board of Education, $10,500; Greene County Health System, $12,500. Sub Charities each, $1,027; Community Service of West AL. $467 and This Belong to Us $92 and Sheriff’s Supplement, $14,275. Palace (TS Police Support League) gave a total of $138,626.92 to the following: Greene County Sheriff’s Department, $65,182.92; City of Eutaw, $12,543; and the Towns of Forkland, Union and Boligee each, $5,254.50; Greene County Board of Education, $14,238 and the Greene County Health System, $16,950; Sub Charities each, 1,375; Community Service of West AL. $625 and This Belong to Us $125 and Sheriff’s Supplement, $2,199.50. In this current distribution report, three of the licensed bingo facilities contributed to the Sheriff’s Supplement, Frontier, River’s Edge and Palace..
The American Rescue Plan, passed by Congress in early 2021 and signed by President Biden on March 11, 2021, contained sections 1005 and 1006, which promised debt relief and other assistance to Black, Indigenous and other People Of Color (BIPOC) farmers.
Section 1005 contained provisions for $4 billion of debt relief for all BIPOC direct loan borrowers from USDA’s Farm Services Agency and also relief for BIPOC USDA-FSA borrowers with guaranteed loans with commercial lenders. All farm loan balances as of January 1, 2021 were to be forgiven and farmers could apply for new loans, without penalty. Section 1006 contained another $1 billion for technical assistance to BIPOC farmers; support for 1890, 1994 and Spanish-speaking college and university scholarship programs; and other beneficial provisions.
This relief was to go to 19,000 borrowers, 3,900 Black farmers, as a response to the lack of COVID and other relief given to the nation’s BIPOC farmers by the Trump Administration and also to remediate decades of discriminatory treatment by USDA’s lending agencies.
USDA, in early 2021, began sending out letters to BIPOC farmers advising them of their loan balances at the first of the year and asking them to confirm the amounts to be forgiven and advising other farmers who thought they were eligible for relief to submit their requests as well. Conference calls and zoom calls were held with farm advocates to explain the program.
These letters raised hopes of BIPOC farmers nation-wide that some measure of justice for years of neglect and discrimination was forthcoming from USDA, as part of coronavirus relief. Many farmers began adjusting farm plans, planting schedules, livestock breeding and other steps to respond to the promised debt relief.
White farmers, encouraged by right-wing legal assistance organizations, began suing USDA and its Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack, saying the debt relief offered in Section 1005 of the ARPA was unconstitutional and had “discriminated against white farmers”, who had experienced similar economic hardships as BIPOC farmers. One of these right-wing think tanks was headed by Mark Meadows, Trump’s Chief of Staff and Stephen Miller, Trump’s immigration adviser, who develop the plan to separate children from their parents and place children in cages at border detention centers.
In all, white farmers filed lawsuits in twelve different Federal District Courts from Wisconsin to Texas. Initially a judge in Wisconsin gave the plaintiffs a victory in a temporary restraining order to stop USDA from providing this debt relief to BIPOC farmers. A Federal judge in Jacksonville Florida issued a permanent injunction against the program. The judge in the Fort Worth, Texas case of Miller vs. Vilsack, made the case a class action lawsuit for “all white farmers” in June 2021 and continued the injunction against the program’s implementation.
The hopes of BIPOC farmers for debt relief from USDA were dashed by these “white farmer lawsuits” which were motivated by denying any special or compensatory treatment to Black and other people of color under U. S. laws. Many legal experts advised that this was a preemptive strike against any steps toward reparations for BIPOC people, even in a case where there was clear, overwhelming and documented evidence of decades of past discrimination by the USDA, a federal agency.
The Rural Coalition, Intertribal Agriculture Council, Latino Farmers and Ranchers, and some eighty other groups, assisted by the Southern Poverty Law Center, filed an amicus brief against the claims of white farmer organization, including affidavits from eight individual BIPOC farmers showing continuing instances of discrimination by USDA over the past five decades until the immediate present. The brief also highlighted the damage to BIPOC farmers by enjoining USDA from distributing the ARPA debt relief assistance, authorized by Congress in response to the coronavirus pandemic.
The Federation of Southern Cooperatives/Land Assistance Fund, with the help of the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights, filed a motion to intervene in the Miller vs. Vilsack case to better directly represent the concerns of Black farmers in pushing for the implementation of Section 1005. On December 8, 2021, Federal District Judge, Reed O’Connor, denied the Federation’s motion to intervene and suggested that the organization file an amicus brief on behalf of its farmer members.
When it became clear that these white farmer lawsuits had significant support and might prevail, the Rural Coalition and other advocacy groups approached the Congressional Agriculture Committees and sponsors of Sections 1005 and 1006, for legislative remedies that might override the injunctive impact of the lawsuits blocking needed debt relief for BIPOC farmers.
After consulting with Ag Committee staff and the offices of Senators Cory Booker (D-NJ), Raphael Warnock (D-GA), Ben Ray Lujan (D-NM) and Kristen Gillibrand (D-NY), these Senators, with the House Ag Committee’s concurrence, sponsored a section of the Build Back Better Act, to help provide debt relief for economically distressed farmers and ranchers that offered USDA Farm Service Agency debt relief. These provisions were structured to include all of the BIPOC farmers, who would have received relief under the Section 1005 of the ARPA, with a limitation of $150,000 in total loan relief.
The Build Back Better Act, was passed by the House of Representatives in December and sent to the U. S. Senate, where it has been the subject of negotiations between President Biden and Senators Joe Mansion and Krysten Sinema. The Senate hopes to pass a version of Build Back Better in the new year of 2022, which we hope will include the expanded USFA debt relief provisions. This will restore many of the promised debt relief provisions for BIPOC farmers, albeit a year later.
There are many reasons to support the Build Back Better Act, which includes many of President Biden’s improvements in the nation’s social safety net for working people. The Act also includes long delayed debt relief for BIPOC and other economically challenged USDA borrowers. We urge the Senate to pass this important legislation, which will fulfill the promises made to BIPOC farmers.
Martin Luther King III gives remarks during the NNPA’s Legacy Awards Gala at the National Harbor in Prince George’s County, Md. on June 23, 2017. (Freddie Allen/AMG/NNPA)
Rev. Martin Luther King III
By Stacy M. Brown, NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent
Rev. Al Sharpton, Martin Luther King III, and more than 800 faith leaders from various religions are demanding that President Joe Biden and Senate Democrats immediately push through voting rights legislation.
“We cannot be clearer: you must act now to protect every American’s freedom to vote without interference and with confidence that their ballot will be counted and honored,” the faith leaders wrote in the letter released on Thursday, December 23, 2021.
“Passing comprehensive voting rights legislation must be the number-one priority of the administration and Congress,” they wrote.
In addition to Sharpton and King, those signing the letter included a mix of Christian, Muslim, and Jewish faith leaders. Rev. Aaron Frank of Horseheads, New York, Rabbi Abby Cohen of Portland, Oregon, Rabbi Abby Michaleski of the Beth Israel Congregation, Rev. Abhi Janamanchi of Bethesda, Maryland, Rabbi Abram Goodstein of the Congregation Beth Sholom, and Rev. Adam Russell Taylor.
King and his wife, Arndrea Waters King, organized the leaders and wrote the letter. The African American Christian Clergy Coalition joined them, Bend the Arc: Jewish Action and Faith in Public Life, and others joined.
The Congressional Black Caucus has pushed legislation, including two voting rights bills blocked by the GOP.
“This year, American democracy faced extraordinary challenges, from the violent insurrection on the U.S. Capitol to over 30 anti-voting bills pushed through state legislatures, intentionally designed to silence Black, Brown, Indigenous, immigrant, low-income, LGBTQIA+, people with disabilities, and elderly and young voters,” the faith leaders wrote.
“During this season of giving and community, we are painfully aware that the promise of American democracy is thwarted by systemic racism and a system that works for the few at the expense of the public good.”
The letter continued: “It will continue on this path without prompt, substantive federal action. During the Civil Rights era, prominent leaders were driven by their faith to fight for equality. This is why we continue the push for voting rights today – our faith teaches us that each one of us deserves dignity and freedom.
“We cannot be clearer: you must act now to protect every American’s freedom to vote without interference and with confidence that their ballot will be counted and honored. Passing comprehensive voting rights legislation must be the number-one priority of the administration and Congress.
“Nothing – including the filibuster – should stand in the way of passing the Freedom to Vote Act and the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act, both of which have already passed the House and await Senate action and leadership.
“The communities we represent will continue to sound the alarm until these bills are passed. While we come from different faiths, we are united by our commitment to act in solidarity with the most vulnerable among us.
“On Martin Luther King Jr. Day in January, we will accompany Martin Luther King III, Arndrea King, Yolanda Renee King, and voting rights advocates across the country to honor Dr. King’s legacy by calling for Congress and the President to restore and expand access to the ballot for all voters. It’s time to stop lamenting the state of our democracy and take action to address it.
“As Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., so valiantly said in his Give Us The Ballot address, “the denial of this sacred right [to vote] is a tragic betrayal of the highest mandates of our democratic tradition.”
“That is why this Martin Luther King Day, we will not accept empty promises. Congress must serve the nation and future generations by immediately passing voting rights legislation.”
By Stacy M. Brown, NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent
President Biden on Tuesday, December 21, announced new actions aimed at protecting Americans and helping communities and hospitals battle Omicron. Among the actions are plans to distribute 500 million free at-home rapid COVID-19 tests beginning in January, which the White House called another attempt to double down on the spread of the new variant. According to health officials, Omicron now accounts for about 75 percent of all cases. The President’s announcement builds on the robust plan he announced earlier this month to get people maximum protection ahead of the winter and prepare for rising cases driven by the new variant. “We know how to protect people from severe illness, we have the tools needed to do it, and thanks to the President’s Winter Plan, already 73 percent of adult Americans are fully vaccinated – up less than 1 percent before the President took office – and we are getting about 1 million booster shots in arms each day,” The White House said in a Fact Sheet. Vaccines are free and readily available at 90,000 convenient locations, and there’s clear guidance on masking and other measures that help slow the spread of COVID-19, officials stated. Further, the administration said federal emergency medical teams are ready to respond to surges nationwide. “Our vaccines are the most powerful tools we have – they work to protect people from serious illness and death, and boosters provide people optimal protection,” administration officials remarked. The Fact Sheet continued: “While cases among vaccinated individuals will likely increase due to the more transmissible Omicron, evidence to date is that their cases will most likely be mild. In contrast, unvaccinated individuals are at high risk of getting COVID-19, getting severely ill, and even dying. “[The President’s] actions will mitigate the impact unvaccinated individuals have on our health care system, while increasing access to free testing and getting more shots in arms to keep people safe and our schools and economy open.” Included in the President’s actions are: • Increased Support for Hospitals. • Deploying Additional Medical Personnel. • Mobilizing an Additional 1,000 Troops to Deploy to COVID-Burdened Hospitals. • Deploying Federal Medical Personnel Available to States Immediately. • Expanding Hospital Capacity. • Activating FEMA Response Teams to Help States and Hospitals Add Capacity Now. • Providing Ongoing Support to States to Help Hospitals Create and License More Beds. • Deploying Hundreds of Ambulances and Emergency Medical Teams to Transport Patients to Open Beds. • Providing Critical Supplies. • Pre-Positioning Critical Supplies from the Strategic National Stockpile. • Deploying Ventilators to States. • Robust Access to Free Testing. • Standing up New Federal Testing Sites. • Distributing Free, Rapid Tests to Americans. • Utilizing the Defense Production Act to Further Accelerate Production. • Expanding Capacity to Get Shots in Arms. • Standing Up New Pop-Up Vaccination Clinics. • Deploying Additional Vaccinators. • Allowing Flexibility to Surge Pharmacy Teams. • Continuing to Scale Pharmacy Capacity
Nearly 9 in 10 Black students attending historically Black colleges and universities favor debt cancellation, according to a study conducted by education and lending advocacy groups.
Eighty-seven percent of respondents strongly support debt cancellation while more than 90% of Black borrowers support policies that address institutional funding disparities and family wealth gaps that leave Black HBCU graduates with higher student loan debt than their white peers, according to the survey and focus groups conducted by UNCF, the Durham-based Center for Responsible Lending and UNC Center for Community Capital.
A panel of stakeholders that included U.S. Rep. Alma Adams of Charlotte; NAACP CEO Derrick Johnson; federal student aid senior advisor Ashley Harrington and Robert Stephens, policy director at Voices for Progress discussed findings of the study and research on a virtual forum.
“The history of HBCUs is one of triumph over adversity. Our institutions have had to overcome historic underfunding compared to (predominantly white institutions), and they’ve endured the legacy of Jim Crow,” said Adams, a Democrat who is founder and co-chair of the Congressional Bipartisan HBCU Caucus. “Unfortunately, the student loan debt crisis also plays an outsized role in the lives of HBCU students, many of whom are the first in their family to fill out the FAFSA form. Families of color are more likely to borrow and to borrow more and in higher amounts to finance their education. While the $1.7 trillion student debt crisis impacts 44 million families nationwide, the burden falls heavily on Black students. That is why I support canceling burdensome debt for our students. It’s not only the right thing to do, it’s also good public policy.”
The study, which was funded by Lumina Foundation, compared the financial experiences of current and former Black HBCU students with their Black peers at PWIs, as well as with their white peers.
Among the survey’s findings:
• Black colleges extended themselves to supporting their students during COVID-19. Thirty-one percent of Black students at HBCUs received emergency aid from school, compared to about 21% of Black students at PWIs and 18% of white students.
• Black borrowers receive and provide financial assistance from or to their families. Research found that HBCU students typically graduate with substantially higher debt than their peers at non-HBCUs, which suggests they share financial resources with their families during college, by both receiving financial support and by giving it, at times.
• Food insecurity is an issue on college campuses. Student borrowers report skipping meals because there wasn’t enough money for food, including 44% of Black students at HBCUs and 29% at PWIs.
• Black women receive less financial support from family during their college matriculation compared to Black men and tend to struggle more to repay debt.
• Black respondents report overwhelming support for $50,000 across-the-board student loan forgiveness. Eighty-five percent of Black borrowers indicated strong support for student loan cancellation and more than nine out of 10 respondents favor the elimination of interest payments for all student loans. They also back increasing state funding for HBCUs, increasing the amount of Pell Grant, and cancellation of debt for people who were defrauded by their schools. “There is a large gap between how black students experience student debt vs. how the rest of the world understands student borrowers and their ability to get to repayment status,” said Nadrea Njoku, interim director at UNCF’s Frederick D. Patterson Research Institute. “Black students often need to use borrowed funds to help their families — not to just complete their educations as intended. “This delays their ability to not only complete their degrees, but it creates a vicious cycle they may not escape from needing to work and help their families while at the same time needing to finish an education that would ultimately benefit them and their families.”
Joint policy recommendations by UNCF and CRL include wiping out student debt across the board; increasing federal funding for HBCUs; increasing the amount of the Pell Grant; improving income-driven repayment programs; reduce interest, eliminate interest capitalization and cancel origination fees on federal student loans.
“The recommendations made by the students included in this study help move the focus of college financing from getting a college education with an unwarranted lifetime financial burden that cripples students and their families to a place where students receive the freedoms and social mobility they were seeking from the start,” Njoku said. “These students come from underserved backgrounds and need to be at the forefront of the line to cancel the burdensome debt.”
Desmond Tutu, South Africa’s Nobel Peace Prize-winning activist for racial justice and LGBT rights and retired Anglican Archbishop of Cape Town, has died, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa announced Sunday. He was 90. An uncompromising foe of apartheid — South Africa’s brutal regime of oppression against the Black majority — Tutu worked tirelessly, though non-violently, for its downfall. The buoyant, blunt-spoken clergyman used his pulpit as the first Black bishop of Johannesburg and later Archbishop of Cape Town, as well as frequent public demonstrations to galvanize public opinion against racial inequity both at home and globally. Tutu’s death on Sunday “is another chapter of bereavement in our nation’s farewell to a generation of outstanding South Africans who have bequeathed us a liberated South Africa,” Ramaphosa said in a statement. “From the pavements of resistance in South Africa to the pulpits of the world’s great cathedrals and places of worship, and the prestigious setting of the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony, the Arch distinguished himself as a non-sectarian, inclusive champion of universal human rights.” Tutu died peacefully at the Oasis Frail Care Center in Cape Town, the Archbishop Desmond Tutu Trust said in a statement on Sunday. Tutu had been hospitalized several times since 2015, after being diagnosed with prostate cancer in 1997. In recent years he and his wife, Leah, lived in a retirement community outside Cape Town. The Nobel Peace Prize in 1984 highlighted his stature as one of the world’s most effective champions for human rights, a responsibility he took seriously for the rest of his life. With the end of apartheid and South Africa’s first democratic elections in 1994, Tutu celebrated the country’s multi-racial society, calling it a “rainbow nation,” a phrase that captured the heady optimism of the moment. Nicknamed “the Arch,” Tutu was diminutive, with an impish sense of humor, but he became a towering figure in his nation’s history — comparable to fellow Nobel laureate Nelson Mandela, a prisoner during white rule who became South Africa’s first Black president. Tutu and Mandela shared a commitment to building a better, more equal South Africa. In 1990, after 27 years in prison, Mandela spent his first night of freedom at Tutu’s residence in Cape Town. Later, Mandela called Tutu “the people’s archbishop.” Upon becoming president in 1994, Mandela appointed Tutu to be chairman of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which uncovered the abuses of the apartheid system.
Tutu campaigned internationally for human rights, especially LGBT rights and same-sex marriage. “I would not worship a God who is homophobic and that is how deeply I feel about this,” he said in 2013, launching a campaign for LGBT rights in Cape Town. “I would refuse to go to a homophobic heaven. No, I would say, ‘Sorry, I would much rather go to the other place.’” Tutu said he was “as passionate about this campaign [for LGBT rights] as I ever was about apartheid. For me, it is at the same level.” He was one of the most prominent religious leaders to advocate for LGBT rights. Tutu’s very public stance put him at odds with many in South Africa and across the continent, as well as within the Anglican church. South Africa, Tutu said, was a nation of promise for racial reconciliation and equality, even though he grew disillusioned with the African National Congress, the anti-apartheid movement that became the ruling party in 1994 elections. His outspoken remarks long after apartheid sometimes angered partisans, who accused him of being biased or out of touch. Tutu was particularly incensed by the South African government’s refusal to grant a visa to the Dalai Lama, preventing the Tibetan spiritual leader from attending Tutu’s 80th birthday celebration, as well as a planned gathering of Nobel laureates in Cape Town. South Africa rejected Tutu’s accusations that it was bowing to pressure from China, a major trading partner. Early in 2016, Tutu defended the reconciliation policy that ended white minority rule amid increasing frustration among some South Africans who felt they had not seen the expected economic opportunities and other benefits since apartheid ended. Tutu had chaired the Truth and Reconciliation Commission that investigated atrocities under apartheid and granted amnesty to some perpetrators, but some people believe more former white officials should have been prosecuted.
Desmond Mpilo Tutu was born on Oct. 7, 1931, in Klerksdorp, west of Johannesburg, and became a teacher before entering St. Peter’s Theological College in Rosetenville in 1958 for training as a priest. He was ordained in 1961 and six years later became chaplain at the University of Fort Hare. Moves to the tiny southern African kingdom of Lesotho and to Britain followed, with Tutu returning home in 1975. He became bishop of Lesotho, chairman of the South African Council of Churches and, in 1985, the first Black Anglican bishop of Johannesburg. In 1986, he became the first Black Archbishop of Cape Town. He ordained women priests and promoted gay priests. Tutu was arrested in 1980 for taking part in a protest and later had his passport confiscated for the first time. He got it back for trips to the United States and Europe, where he held talks with the UN secretary general, the Pope and other church leaders. Tutu often conducted funeral services after the massacres that marked the negotiating period of 1990-94. He railed against Black-on-Black political violence, asking crowds, “Why are we doing this to ourselves?” In one powerful moment, Tutu defused the rage of thousands of mourners in a township soccer stadium after the Boipatong massacre of 42 people in 1992, leading the crowd in chants proclaiming their love of God and themselves. After Mandela became president in 1994, he asked Tutu to head the truth commission to promote racial reconciliation. The panel listened to harrowing testimony about torture, killings and other atrocities during apartheid. At some hearings, Tutu wept openly. “Without forgiveness, there is no future,” he said at the time. The commission’s 1998 report lay most of the blame on the forces of apartheid, but it also found the African National Congress guilty of human rights violations. The ANC sued to block the document’s release, earning a rebuke from Tutu. “I didn’t struggle in order to remove one set of those who thought they were tin gods to replace them with others who are tempted to think they are,” Tutu said. Asked once how he wanted to be remembered, he told The Associated Press: “He loved. He laughed. He cried. He was forgiven. He forgave. Greatly privileged.” Tutu is survived by his wife of 66 years and their four children.
Shown L to R: Joycelyn Steele, Juvenile Officer Courtnei Cook, District Judge Lillie Jones-Osborne, Marcus Steele, SPOT student Marcus Steele III, Greenetrack CEO Luther Nat Winn, Jennifer Watkins, Emma Jackson and Dr. Carol P. Zippert, Policy Council Members.
The Greene County Children’s Policy Council is always looking for ways to improve the lives of children in Greene County. The Greene County Children’s Policy Council current project is to install “Little Free Outdoor Libraries” in designated areas throughout Greene County. Studies have shown that books in the hands of children have a meaningful impact on improving literacy. The more books in or near the home, the more likely a child will learn and love to read.
On last week the Policy Council held ribbon cutting ceremonies at six (6) sites throughout Greene County. The current libraries are located at the Eutaw City Park, Greene County Children’s Policy Council Resource Center, Carver Circle, Boligee Park, Steele’s Barber Shop, and the Forkland Youth Center. The Policy Council will be placing (10) additional libraries throughout the County within the next few months. These libraries are registered and will appear on the “Little Free Library” World map. The libraries will be maintained and stocked continually by students who are involved in the Council’s mentoring program. This project will not only teach the students about responsibility but also the value of community service.
According to Judge Lillie Jones-Osborne, Chairman of the Greene County Children’s Policy Council, this project was made possible by a donation from GreeneTrack and Mr. Luther ‘Nat’ Winn. She encourages parents and students to visit a “Little Outdoor Library” and pick up a free book to take home and read.
As soon as news spread of the passing of acclaimed feminist theorist and activist bell hooks this week, tributes to her transformative legacy started pouring in. Especially among feminist thinkers, activists and academics who have followed her work, the impact of hooks’ work seems immeasurable. “For me, bell hooks was a towering voice in American academia and intellectual life,” said Myriam J.A. Chancy, chair in the humanities department at Scripps College and author of “What Storm, What Thunder.” “She made certain concepts on the subjects of race, feminist, gender, class and love accessible to a public beyond academia while being unrelenting in her advocacy for Black people and particularly for Black women in the pursuit of a better, more just society for everyone.” In 1981, hooks published her first major book, “Ain’t I a Woman? Black Women and Feminism” where she grounded her feminist theory in the struggles of Black women specifically. In the groundbreaking text, hooks highlights the wounds of Black female slavery and how they affect Black women in the present. This work was and continues to be affirming to Black women across the world, as hooks provided language to describe their marginalization and ways of thinking to combat it. For Chancy, “Ain’t I a Woman?” carved a path toward her own writing in the field of Caribbean women’s literature. As a Haitian Canadian woman, coming across hooks’ work gave Chancy the language to understand her experiences of racism and sexism and helped her recover the value of her own Haitian identity and as a member of the African Diaspora. “Her work is transformative because it speaks in a vital and personal way about the need to treasure Black lives, history and culture while investing in the decolonization of our institutions in the U.S., which have benefited from the devaluation and exploitation of Black lives,” Chancy said.
A prolific writer, hooks published 40 books, which have been translated into 15 languages, reaching a global Black diaspora with her messages of resistance, feminist revolution and love. The Black Brazilian writer and artist Vinícius da Silva translated hooks’ book “Salvation: Black People and Love” into Portuguese and studies her work within Brazilian academia. Da Silva said hooks built an immense legacy around critical pedagogy, love, feminist theory, cultural and art criticism, and several other themes that cut across her body of work. “Since I started studying hooks’ work, I have learned the power of critical consciousness, of feminism as a project for social justice, and of understanding the systems of domination so that through revolutionary mutuality, as she says, we can collectively transform society,” da Silva said. “Receiving the news of her passing, with the understanding that death is not the end, means understanding that hooks now becomes an ancestor, someone who will continue to guide us through adversity.” Da Silva’s scholarship is dedicated to understanding and expanding hooks’ scholarship on Black feminism and revolutionary love. An expert on her work and how it reverberates across borders, da Silva said the most important teaching hooks leaves behind for movements of liberation is her perspective on revolutionary love. “For me, one of hooks’ most important views, present in ‘Writing Beyond Race,’ is the notion that every movement for social justice is based on the ethic of love,” da Silva said. “And it is important to always say that the love of which hooks speaks is a political category, not a shallow mobilization of romantic affections. In this sense, I think that much of her contribution to political movements, especially Black movements, is in the notion that mutuality is revolutionary and that it is only made possible through love.” hooks’ contributions to feminist theory and activism influenced generations of women, men and nonbinary people who seek to abolish gendered violence, misogyny and sexist discrimination. hooks pioneered the use of feminism as a lens in the analysis of pop culture, and convinced many of her readers that feminism is for everybody. Marina Watanabe, senior social media editor for Bitch Media, a feminist magazine that critiques pop culture, said hooks helped her understand the importance of education and writing as essential components of feminist liberation. “I don’t consider myself an activist in the traditional sense, but bell hooks helped me understand the importance of education and writing as essential components of feminist liberation,” she said. “We need as much feminist education as possible in as many formats as possible so that it can become truly accessible to everyone. So even though I’m not a traditional activist or grassroots organizer and I’m not Judith Butler, I can still engage in feminist advocacy work in ways that suit my skills and interests.” Watanabe said she went into her current career because of hooks’ “Feminism Is for Everybody,” which was foundational to how she engages in feminist advocacy work. When Watanabe started reading hooks in her late teens and early 20s, it helped her name instances of injustice and discrimination she was experiencing. “It was the most formative time for my politics and understanding of the world,” Watanabe said. “I had all these inklings about injustice and discrimination, but hooks’ writing finally helped me articulate my feelings and experiences. I’m not exaggerating when I say that bell hooks changed everything for me. I will never be able to thank her enough.” For Chancy, hooks showed the importance of writing Black women into history and visibility. “She taught us that one voice speaking for and among the many can make a difference,” Chancy said. “Simply put, her legacy is that there is no liberation without the liberation of Black women.”