J. A. ROGERS

HISTORIAN

EXCERPTS FROM SOME OF THE THOUSANDS OF COMMENTS AND LETTERS ON THE WORK OF J. A. ROGERS

Dr. W. E. B. Du Bois: “No man living has revealed so many important facts about the Negro as Rogers.”

In the Supreme Court of the United States, October Term, 1949, No. 25, in the printed Brief Amicus Curiae on behalf of the Civil Rights Committee of the National Bar Association, which dealt with jim-crow seating on the dining cars and which ended in victory, his “Sex and Race” was cited as an authority that the color-line in America had no scientific foundation. More than a page of the brief was devoted to supporting quotations from “Sex and Race.” (pp. 18-19.)

H. L. Mencken , world -famed author, and dean of American letters: “Immensely entertaining and even more instructive. There is something new on almost every page, and you present it with the utmost effectiveness … a very competent job.”

Carl Murphy, editor, Baltimore Afro-American: “As enthusiastic as a sixteen-year old is J.A. Rogers … His Sex and Race, was so hot he had to print it himself … Rogers is an authority on mixed families and backs it up with years of study in the libraries of Europe and America.

“I read Sex and Race several times a year, for, until he came along, I never knew that such world figures as Hannibal, Queen Nefertiti of Egypt, Gustavus IV of Sweden, Robert Browning (the poet), the wife of Garibaldi (the Italian patriot), and Disraeli (English Prime Minister) if they lived in America could be jim-crowed, because of their colored ancestors.

“Nowhere else in contemporary literature is told the story of the Black Virgin Marys worshipped in many shrines in Europe.

“I’m waiting for Rogers’ new book … He has infected me with his enthusiasm.”

Prime Minister Nnamdi Azikiwe of Eastern Nigeria: “You are among those who inspired me to take a very keen interest in the study of the African in history.”

Rose Wilder Lane, noted author, “Who’s Who in America,” says of “World’s Great Men of Color”: An omnivorous reader such as I am, has a habit of classifying books. Dismissing the quantities of trash of all categories, there remain the entertaining books, the currently informative books, some books of more permanent worth, a few indispensable ones, and rarely a new one that tentatively may be called great.

“Now here is a book of such magnitude that it overlaps all these categories and goes into none. For three months I have been reading it with unflagging interest, with delight, amusement, excitement, profit, admiration and increasing dismay, for I must tell you about this book and I don’t think I can.

“I have thought of comparing it to Plutarch’s Lives, but then it more nearly resembles the History of the Father of History; yet it is American and contemporary, too…

“The author of the book is as difficult to classify as his work. Mr. J.A. Rogers is an American and a self-made scholar. He is an historian of enormous erudition. He is an anthropologist of no small caliber, elected in 1930 to membership in the Paris Society of Anthropologist. He has lectured at the Sorbonne and other leading European universities. He is a linguist, a world traveler, a journalist, an author, and, I would judge from references in his writings, a connoisseur of antique art. This book is a product of more than thirty years research in the world’s libraries and museums, and of experience in many countries …

“I know no easier, more fascinating way to begin to acquire the world view, innocent of propaganda or bias, based on fact, which no American learns from schools or the daily press, than reading World’s Great Men of Color.” From the Economic Council Review of Books, June 1947.

Rev. George S. Singleton, Editor, Christian Recorder, Philadelphia, Pa.: ” I have read with avidity and profound interest your fascinating and scientific treatise, Sex and Race … You have made civilization and culture debtor to yourself. I can all the more appreciate what you have done because some years ago I taught anthropology and Negro history.”

Louis A. Potter: “As a teacher in the Philadelphia schools I realize fully how great a need your contribution will fill. Not only in Philadelphia but throughout the world in general we suffer from an abysmal lack of inspirational knowledge of our own. You bridge that gap in a grand manner.

“May I commend you for the effortless style that enables one to fairly flow through the book, making it possible thereby to devote one’s entire attention to the absorption of the mass of material without the necessity of constant interpretation.

” Wishing you great success in your tremendous effort…May it be the dawn of an ever increasing wave of knowledge that must necessarily cause every Negro to hold his head a bit higher and all others who read your book to view the Negro with a loftier perspective.”

Marcus Garvey’s Negro World “From Superman to Man” is the greatest book on the Negro we have ever read. It gives the young Negro the historical authority that his race founded great civilizations, has ruled over areas as large as all Europe and was prolific in statesmen, scientists, poets, conquerors, religious and political leaders, arts, crafts, industry and commerce when the white race was wallowing in barbarity or sunk in savagery and cannibalism. ‘From Superman to Man’ was recommended for reading in the original Constitution and By-Laws of the Universal Negro Improvement Association.”

Miss Z. Baber, Instructor, University of Chicago: “‘From Superman to Man is the best literature I have read on the subject. I am placing it on the required reading list for my classes.”

THE AUTHOR

J. A. Rogers has engaged continuously in research on race relations since 1915. Published himself his first book, “From Superman to Man” in 1917 after it was refused by the publishers.

Wrote and published his second book, “As Nature Leads”, in 1919.

Began writing for the Negro Press in 1920 and has been doing so since.

In 1924, ’25, and ’26 toured the North and South lecturing and selling “From Superman to Man” (4th Edition).

In 1925 went to Europe for research in the libraries and museums there.

In 1927 returned for research lasting three years. Went to North Africa.

In 1930 went on his own initiative to the coronation of Haile Selassie, who presented him with the Coronation Medal. The same year published his “World’s Greatest Men of African Descent.”

From 1930 to 1933 continued his researches in Europe.

In 1934 published his “100 Amazing Facts About the Negro” which went into 19 editions.

In 1930, 1935 and ’36 continued his researches in Egypt and the Sudan.

In 1935 published his “Real Facts About Ethiopia” and went the same year as war correspondent to Ethiopia for the Pittsburgh-Courier.

In 1940 began publication of his “Sex and Race” in three volumes.

In 1947 published his “World’s Great Men of Color, 3000 B.C. to 1946 A.D. in two volumes.

In 1950 returned to Europe for further research on his “Nature Knows No Color-Line,” an exposition of the Negro ancestry in the white race, which he published in 1952.

In 1956 and ’57 studied black-white relations in England, Germany and other European countries with American troops.

Also author of several pamphlets, among them The Ku Klux Spirit, and the Real Facts about Ethiopia.

All books have been published by the author.

In 1930 was elected to membership in the Paris Society of Anthropology. Is now member of the American Geographical Society; the Academy of Political Science; the American Association for the Advancement of Science; and the Association Populaire des Amis Des Musees of France.

World’s Great Mean of Color.

BOOKS BY J.A. ROGERS

  • Africa’s Gift to America
  • World’s Great Men of Color, Vols. I and II
  • Sex and Race, Vol I: The Old World
  • Sex and Race, Vol. II: The New World
  • Sex and Race, Vol. III: Why White and Black Mate in Spite of Laws and Social Opposition
  • From Superman to Man
  • 100 Amazing Facts About the Negro
  • Nature Knows No Color Line
  • Five Negro Presidents

From the book jacket of the Civil War Centennial Edition of “Africa’s Gift to America

MUSINGS BY JESS

THE OSTRICH AND THE DODO

Once upon a time about a million years ago, a verbal confrontation took place between an ostrich and a dodo bird. The dodo was lambasting the ostrich for the latter’s refusal to be aggressive when faced with adverse circumstances.

Said the dodo to the ostrich: “Ostrich, you big, foolish bird, don’t you know that sticking your head in the sand and being apathetic is no way to survive in this Dog-Eat-Dog world? You can’t go through life being a non-combatant.”

The ostrich looked at the dodo, smiled wryly, then poetically replied: “My dodo friend it may well be that what you say is true, let’s talk again in a million years or will that be too late for you?”

Jess A., 1980

OF DANDELIONS AND SPARROWS

The concept of “The Survival of the Fittest” suggests that those species and varieties that are strongest and are most adaptive will endure and flourish.

Is it not interesting that after having demonstrated evolutionary superiority, these species and varieties are despised and maligned, while those that are fragile and rare are cherished and prized?

Jess A., 1980

CULTURE GAP

You see

3 M’s

and

think of

Minnesota, Mining and Manufacturing

I see

3 M’s

and

think of

Medgar, Malcolm and Martin

Jess A., 1981

IRONY

Late one night, strange noises were heard coming from the basement. I got up to investigate. Cautiously I opened the basement door. The sounds appeared to be raucous laughter and merriment. I tipped down the stairs, one at a time. In a distant corner there was a small, faint light. Quietly approaching the activity I was able to distinguish roaches, crickets, grasshoppers, ants, flies, spiders and other insects laughing and guffawing, many seemingly close to delirium.

I looked closer and there I saw a newspaper clipping whose headline read:

“HUMANS FALL VICTIM TO KEPONE POISONING.”

(for the young, Kepone was the most popular insecticide in its day)

Jess A., 1981

PERCEPTIONS

SOME

HEAR

I – C – B – M

AND

THINK OF

LONG RANGE MISSILES;

OTHERS

HEAR

I – C – B – M

AND

THINK OF

FRIGID FECES.

Jess A., 1981

EXODUS

How come most of the

Cubans

leaving Cuba

that I see

look MORE like

Desi

and

not like me?

Jess A., 1981

DEPRESSION

More and More

I care

Less and Less

About

More and More

Jess A., 1981

DIMINISHED PASSION

I saw her ankle

and I longed to see more;

I saw her calf

and I longed to see more;

I saw her knee

and I longed to see more;

I saw her thigh

and I longed to see more;

I saw more

and I yawned.

Jess A., 2017

THE WITNESS

I DIDN’T DO IT;

IT WASN’T ME;

MAYBE HE DID IT,

BUT, I DIDN’T I SEE .

Jess A., 1989

POINT OF VIEW

The other day I noticed,

As I walked out of the door,

A lady of the evening

We usually call a WHORE.

At her side, glancing

Now this way, then the other,

There pranced a joyful toddler

Who lovingly called her MOTHER.

Jess A., 1976

DESIRE

They act as though they don’t want me to

Have It

So I guess I really ought to

Want It

Jess A.,2019

REQUIEM

The last man died last night.

He was Dependable, Trustworthy, Honest,

Loyal, Peace-loving, and Helpful.

The last Man died last night.

He was Friendly, Courteous, Empathetic,

Thoughtful, Questioning and Creative.

He was Brave, Courageous and Just.

The last MAN died last night.

MALES remain in abundance

But

The last MAN died last night.

Jess A.,2019

ENLIGHTENMENT

Knowledge is the precursor to Understanding

and

Understanding makes Wisdom possible

Jess A.,2009

WASTE

Every Body comes with a brain

but

Everybody doesn’t choose to use theirs

Jess A.,2018

MORNING NEWS

CHIT CHAT

WEATHER

SPORTS

TRAFFIC

CHIT CHAT

COMMERCIAL

NEWS

COMMERCIAL

WEATHER

TRAFFIC

CHIT CHAT

WEATHER

SPORTS

NEWS

HAVE YOUR SMART SPEAKER TUNE IN FOR MORE NEWS AT NOON

Jess A.,2019

TRUMPING

WHEN CONSIDERING THE ISSUES OF

RIGHT AND WRONG

OR

WAR AND PEACE

WORLD VIEW AND IDEOLOGY

TRUMPS

GENDER AND PIGMENTATION

Jess A.,2016

QUERY

WHEN DID SPEECH MOVE FROM THE

DIAPHRAGM

TO THE

NOSE ?

Jess A.,2019

DANGEROUS COMBINATIONS

DRINKING AND DRIVING

GASOLINE AND OPEN FLAMES

WHITE SUPREMACY AND THE PROFIT MOTIVE

Jess A.,2018

Wasted Effort ?

You Can Lead A Man To Knowledge But You Can’t Make Him Think

Jess A.,2009

LETTER POWER

WHAT IF “L” HAD BEEN CHOSEN RATHER THAN “A”

AND THE NAME HAD BEEN

NALCP RATHER THAN NAACP

AND THE GOAL HAD BEEN

LIBERATION RATHER THAN ADVANCEMENT ?

(JUST A THOUGHT)

Jess A.,2017

WHERE’S THE LOGIC ?

BUYING WHAT YOU DON’T NEED WITH MONEY THAT YOU DON’T HAVE

Jess A.,2016

AMERICA

Why You Get Angry

When I Take a Knee

Don’t You Remember

You Took Me?

Jess A.,2017

AND WHEN YOU GET ANGRY AT MY TAKING A KNEE,

REMEMBER MY EXCEPTIONAL AMERICAN HISTORY.

I AM THE ORIGINAL

STOCK

THAT WAS

EXCHANGED

ON WALL STREET

AND THE WOUNDS FROM THE SHACKLES ARE STILL RAW AND PAINFUL.

Jess A.,2019

IMPOTENCE

How did it happen that the world’s population is being held hostage to the irrational behavior of one individual?

JESS A.,2017

GOD, THE TERRORIST?

Terror: Extreme fear

Terrorist: A person who uses or favors violent and intimidating methods of coercion.

According to THE BOOK, God employed famines, swarms of locusts, pillars of salt, floods, plagues, the murder of first-borns, etc….

…to persuade His CHOSEN PEOPLE to behave themselves.

If that ain’t terror ….

Jess A.,2019

THE ENLIGHTENED SLAVE

A MASTER, THREATENED BY WAR, SUMMONED HIS TRUSTED SLAVE AND SAID “TAKE THIS RIFLE AND KILL THE ENEMY.”

THE SLAVE SMILED, TOOK THE RIFLE AIMED AND FIRED .

Jess A,,2019


THE OTHER WAY AROUND

SH_ _ AIN’T NOTHING BUT

PROCESSED FOOD

AND

VICE VERSA

Jess A.,2017

LEAVING WELL-ENOUGH ALONE

RELIGION WAS FINE

UNTIL IT WAS ORGANIZED

Jess A.,2019

NEWSPAPERS

A LOT LESS NEWS,

A LOT MORE PAPER.

Jess A.,2019

WHATS IN A NAME ?

LOVE

HOPE

JUSTICE

C. LOVE

JESS HOPE

N. JUSTICE

CLARENCE LOVE

JESSE HOPE

NORMAN JUSTICE

GOOD MEN…ONE AND ALL

Jess A.,2019

THE DONALD

He GAVE YOU:

TAX CUTS

YOU GAVE HIM:

THE REPUBLICAN PARTY

Jess A.,2019

PATRIOTISM

PATRIOTISM IS THE LAST REFUGE OF SCOUNDRELS.

WHEN ALL ELSE FAILS:

WAVE THE FLAG and PLAY THAT SONG,

AND MOST NON-THINKERS WILL GO ALONG.

JESS A., 2019

De-ja-vu, All Over Again

FUN AND GAMES

SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT

THAT’S HOW EMPIRES END

Jess A., 2019

WHY?

Why did they begin making cars out of thinner and thinner steel

and then remove FUNCTIONAL front and rear bumpers ?

Jess A., 2019

SPEAKING OF HEROES

Un-Sung

and

Un-Hung

Jess A.,2019

Heavenly Cuisine

THE STANDARD FARE IS MILK AND HONEY

BUT, PERSONALLY, I PREFER

WELL-SEASONED COLLARD GREENS AND CORNBREAD.

I GUESS IT’S JUST A CULTURAL THING.

Jess A.,2019

How Much?

HOW MUCH ENERGY IS CONSUMED IN THE PRODUCTION OF

TRASH ?

Jess A., 2019

I SOMETIMES WONDER

HAD I HAD SOMEONE TO STEADY THE LADDER, HOW HIGH WOULD I HAVE DARED TO CLIMB?

Jess A.,2019

MAKE ROOM

DON’T SCHEDULE YOUR LIFE SO TIGHTLY THAT YOU LEAVE NO SPACE FOR THE JOY OF SPONTANEITY.

Jess A.,2019

YOU KNOW IT,WHEN YOU HEAR IT

MALE BOVINE FECAL MATERIAL

a.k.a BULL SH_T

Jess A. ,2019

A TOKEN OF APPRECIATION

In Recognition Of All You’ve Done For Us Over The Centuries

THANKS

F rom U s C olored K ids to Y ou

(NO OFFENSE INTENDED)

Jess A. ,2020

THE BRITISH EMPIRE

—IN COLOR—

The British Empire brought education, technology, law and democracy to the four corners of the globe. It also brought prejudice, discrimination, cultural bigotry, and racism. With an unblinking eye, this three-part series examines the complexities, contradictions, and legacies of empire, both positive and negative.

Rare and often very early color film from major archives and private collections gives a front-row view of history in the making: the Partition of India, the birth of the state of Israel, the Suez crisis, the rise of black nationalism in Africa, the handover of Hong Kong, and more. Personal letters and diary excerpts describe the experiences of the rulers and the ruled.

Produced by a BAFTA- and Peabody-winning team and narrated by Art Malik (The Jewel in the Crown) , this fascinating series charts Britain’s imperial path from the zenith of the Raj to the disintegration of the empire and the multicultural future it faces today.

DVD FEATURES INCLUDE a 26 minute “making of” documentary that describes how the series was researched and developed.

(from the DVD case)

SiCKO

A Film By

MICHAEL MOORE

Academy Award-winning filmmaker Michael Moore (Fahrenheit 9/11) returns with this hilariously scathing indictment of America’s failing heath system. Combining powerful personal testimonies with shocking statistics, Moore pulls the curtain back on the greedy HMOs, drug companies and congressmen who keep us ill. Traveling to Canada, England, France and Cuba- where free universal heath care is the norm – he forces the question: Why can’t this happen in the U.S.? Timely and touching, “Sicko is the most broadly appealing of Mr. Moore’s movies. It is also the funniest.” ( Michael Philips. CHICAGO TRIBUNE)

(from the DVD case)

OTHER DVDs by MICHAEL MOORE

  • BOWLING FOR COLUMBINE
  • FAHRENHEIT 9/11
  • THE BIG ONE
  • CAPITALISM: A LOVE STORY
  • WHERE TO INVADE NEXT
  • FAHRENHEIT 11/9

COMPLICITY

HOW the North

PROMOTED, PROLONGED,

and PROFITED from

SLAVERY

Despite the presence of enslaved people throughout the North during the seventeenth, eighteenth, and early nineteenth centuries, their status as slaves has been largely erased. The words “slavery in the North” evoke ardent white abolitionists helping blacks to freedom along the Underground Railroad or gallant Union soldiers fighting for the emancipation of America’s enslaved.

But there were, in fact, thousands of captive people in New England, living and dying in slavery … a system that was cruel everywhere it existed, whether in Mississippi or Massachusetts.

__from Complicity

Slavery in the South has been documented in volumes ranging from exhaustive histories to bestselling novels. But the North’s profit from–indeed, dependence on–slavery has mostly been a shameful and well-kept secret … until now. In this startling and superbly researched new book, three veteran New England journalists demythologize the region of America known for tolerance and liberation, revealing a place where thousands of people were held in bondage and slavery was both an economic dynamo and a necessary way of life.

Complicity reveals the cruel truth about the Triangle Trade of molasses, rum, and slaves that lucratively linked the North to the West Indies and Africa; discloses the reality of Northern empires built on profits from rum, cotton, and ivory–and run in some cases, by abolitionists; and exposes the thousand-acre plantations that existed in towns such as Salem, Connecticut. Here, too, are eye-opening accounts of the individuals who profited directly from slavery far from the Mason-Dixon line–including Nathaniel Gordon of Maine, the only slave trader ever sentenced to die in the United States, who even as an inmate of New York’s infamous Tombs prison was supported by a shockingly large percentage of the city; Patty Cannon, whose brutal gang kidnapped free blacks from Northern states and sold them into slavery; and the Philadelphia doctor Samuel Morton, eminent in the nineteenth-century field of “race science,” which purported to prove the inferiority of African-born black people.

Culled from long-ignored documents and reports–and bolstered by rarely seen photos, publications, maps, and period drawings–Complicity is a fascinating and sobering work that actually does what so many books pretend to do: shed light on America’s past. Expanded from the celebrated Hartford Courant special report that the Connecticut Department of Education sent to every middle school and high school in the state (the original work is required reading in many college classrooms), this new book is sure to become a must-read reference everywhere.

ANNE FARROW, JOEL LANG, and JENNIFER FRANK are veteran journalists for the Hartford Courant, the country’s oldest newspaper in continuous publication. Farrow and Lang were the lead writers and Frank was the editor of the special slavery issue published by Northeast, the newspaper’s Sunday magazine.

From the book jacket

THE DOCTRINE of DISCOVERY

Five Hundred Years Of Injustice

by Steve Newcomb

When Christopher Columbus first set foot on the white sands of Guanahani island, he performed a ceremony to “take possession” of the land for the king and queen of Spain, acting under the international laws of Western Christendom. Although the story of Columbus’ “discovery” has taken on mythological proportions in most of the Western world, few people are aware that his act of “possession” was based on a religious doctrine now known in history as the Doctrine of Discovery. Even fewer people realize that today – five centuries later – the United States government still uses this archaic Judeo-Christian doctrine to deny the rights of Native American Indians.

Origins of the Doctrine of Discovery

To understand the connection between Christendom’s principle of discovery and the laws of the United States, we need to begin by examining a papal document issued forty years before Columbus’ historic voyage. In 1452, Pope Nicholas V issued to King Alfonso V of Portugal the bull Romanus Pontifex, declaring war against all non-Christians throughout the world, and specifically sanctioning and promoting the conquest, colonization, and exploitation of non-Christian nations and their territories.

Under various theological and legal doctrines formulated during and after the Crusades, non-Christians were considered enemies of the Catholic faith and, as such, less than human. Accordingly, in the bull of 1452, Pope Nicholas directed King Alfonso to “capture, vanquish, and subdue the saracens, pagans, and other enemies of Christ,” to “put them into perpetual slavery,” and “to take all their possessions and property.” [Davenport: 20-26] Acting on this papal privilege, Portugal continued to traffic in African slaves, and expanded its royal dominions by making “discoveries” along the western coast of Africa, claiming those lands as Portuguese territory.

Thus, when Columbus sailed west across the Sea of Darkness in 1492 – with the express understanding that he was authorized to “take possession” of any lands he “discovered” that were “not under the dominion of any Christian rulers” – he and the Spanish sovereigns of Aragon and Castile were following an already well-established tradition of “discovery” and conquest. [Thacher:96] Indeed, after Columbus returned to Europe, Pope Alexander VI issued a papal document, the bull Inter Cetera of May 3, 1493, “granting” to Spain – at the request of Ferdinand and Isabella – the right to conquer the lands which Columbus had already found, as well as any lands which Spain might “discover” in the future.

In the Inter Cetera document, Pope Alexander stated his desire that the “discovered” people be “subjugated and brought to the faith itself.” [Davenport:61] By this means, said the pope, the “Christian Empire” would be propagated. [Thacher:127] When Portugal protested this concession to Spain, Pope Alexander stipulated in a subsequent bull – issued May 4, 1493 – that Spain must not attempt to establish its dominion over lands which had already “come into the possession of any Christian lords.” [Davenport:68] Then, to placate the two rival monarchs, the pope drew a line of demarcation between the two poles, giving Spain rights of conquest and dominion over one side of the globe, and Portugal over the other.

During this quincentennial of Columbus’ journey to the Americas, it is important to recognize that the grim acts of genocide and conquest committed by Columbus and his men against the peaceful Native people of the Caribbean were frequently used by Christian European conquerors in the Americas to justify an incredibly brutal system of colonization – which dehumanized the indigenous people by regarding their territories as being “inhabited only by brute animals.” [Story:135-6]

The lesson to be learned is that the papal bulls of 1452 and 1493 are but two clear examples of how the “Christian Powers,” or “different States of Christendom,” viewed indigenous peoples as “the lawful spoil and prey of their civilized conquerors.” [Wheaton:270-1] In fact, the Christian “Law of Nations” asserted that Christian nations had a divine right, based on the Bible, to claim absolute title to and ultimate authority over and newly “discovered” Non-Christian inhabitants and their lands. Over the next several centuries, these beliefs gave rise to the Doctrine of Discovery used by Spain, Portugal, England, France, and Holland – all Christian nations.

The above is excerpted from a longer article entitled “The Legacy of Fifteenth Century Religious Prejudice

…..

Popular historian Thomas Cahill: well known for his many books including …How the Irish Saved Civilization, Heretics and Heroes, Mysteries Of The Middle Ages, Sailing The Wine-Dark Sea, Desire of the Everlasting Hills, and others, writes that the European explorers would read a standard text aloud to the curious natives who came out to see the arriving visitors. Of course, the natives could not have understood what was being read. Cahill provides an example of one such text:

“Of all these nations God our Lord gave charge to one man, called Saint Peter, that he should be lord and superior of all the men in the world, that all should obey him … and he gave him the world for his kingdom and jurisdiction.

“Wherefore, as best we can, we ask and require that you consider what we have said to you … that you acknowledge the Church as the Ruler and Superior of the whole world.

“But if you do not do this, and maliciously make delay in it, I certify to you, that with the help of God, we shall powerfully enter into your country, and shall make war against you in all ways and manners that we can, and shall subject you to the yoke and obedience of the Church and of their Highness; we shall take you, and your wives, and your children, and shall make slaves of them, and as such shall sell and dispose of them as their Highnesses may command; and we shall take away your goods, and shall do you all the mischief and damage that we can, as to vassals who do not obey, and refuse to receive their lord, and resist and contradict him: and we protest that the deaths and losses which shall accrue from this are your fault, and not that of their Highnesses, nor ours, nor of these cavaliers who accompany us.”

ESTABLISHING A NEW MENTALITY

THE NEED TO ESTABLISH A NEW MENTALITY IS BECOMING MORE AND MORE EVIDENT.

THE CURRENTLY ESTABLISHED MENTALITY:

“THE ESTABLISHMENT”

WHICH WAS BIRTHED BY COLONIALISM AND THE “DOCTRINE OF DISCOVERY” AND WHOSE PRIMARY PRINCIPLES WERE WHITE SUPREMACY AND THE PROFIT MOTIVE NEEDS TO BE JETTISONED,

AND A NEW MENTALITY BASED ON :

MUTUAL RESPECT and COOPERATION

NEEDS TO BE ESTABLISHED!

JESS, 2019

A GREAT DAY IN HARLEM

A Film by Jean Bach

The Story and Sounds Behind the Most Famous Photo in the History of Jazz!

HARLEM MORNING

By Whitney Balliett

Around ten o’clock on a morning in mid-August of 1958, an extraordinary group of jazz musicians began gathering outside a row of brownstones on 126th street. between Fifth and Madison Avenues. They had been invited by Esquire to have their picture taken for a special jazz issue, scheduled for January of 1959. Fifty-eight musicians turned up. They included New Orleans, New York, Chicago, Kansas City and bebop musicians – the whole glorious jazz schmear as it existed in the late fifties in New York. There were megastars (Count Basie, Coleman Hawkins, Lester Young, Roy Eldridge, Dizzy Gillespie and Gene Krupa); future stars (Gerry Mulligan, Thelonious Monk, Sonny Rollins, Charles Mingus, Art Farmer, Art Blakey and Horace Silver); former Ellingtonians (Rex Stewart, Lawrence Brown, Tyree Glenn, Oscar Pettiford and Sonny Greer) and former Basieites (Buck Clayton, Dicky Wells, Jimmy Rushing, Vic Dickenson, Jo Jones and Emmett Berry); great teachers and shapers (Mary Lou Williams, Luckey Roberts, Willie the Lion Smith, Red Allen and Zutty Singleton); indispensable journeymen (Milt Hinton, J.C. Higginbotham, Joe Thomas, Stuff Smith, Wilbur Ware, Chubby Jackson, Hank Jones and J.C. Heard); an Eddie Condon contigent, minus its leader (Pee Wee Russell, Miff Mole, Bud Freeman, Max Kaminsky and George Wetting); one American woman singer (Maxine Sullivan) and one English woman pianist (Marian McPartland); a ringer (an unknown musician from Buffalo named Bill Crump); and one mess-up (Willie the Lion), who, bored with waiting in the hot sun, had wandered off when the chosen shot was taken, leaving a noticeable gap next to Luckey Roberts. The youngest musician, at twenty-eight, was Eddy Locke, and the oldest, at seventy-one, was Roberts.

It had been the notion of Robert Benton, then the art director of Esquire, to include a batch of new photographs of jazz musicians for the January issue. He brought in Art Kane, a young hotshot freelance art director, and Kane suggested that a group photograph be taken in Harlem, the cradle of New York jazz. He also offered to take the picture himself, even though he’d had almost no experience as a photographer. The word went out on the jazz grapevine, and the musicians began trickling in on time, despite the heavy duty of being anywhere but in bed at ten in the morning, (Jazz musicians are night creatures; a musician at the shoot said he was astonished to discover that there were two ten o’clocks in each day.) Because they are peripatetic, jazz players sometimes don’t run into one another for years at a time; as the crowd swelled, so did the milling, the pressing of the flesh, the hugs and the how-ya-beens. Kane started shooting anyway. Milt Hinton, a fine amateur photographer, handed his wife , Mona, his 8mm movie camera and told her to aim it and press the button. He himself began taking stills; so did a student of Willie the Lion’s named Mike Lipskin. Eventually, the crowd formed a ragged line on the sidewalk between two high brownstone stoops. Then, with Kane pleading and shouting from across the street, part of the group, led by Red Allen, rose up onto the stoop, in between, so that the assemblage resembled an upside-down “T.” Count Basie, tired of standing, sat on the curb, and twelve kids, mostly from the neighborhood, sat next to him, forming an emphatic line under the picture. Some of the musicians were coatless and in sports shirts, but most wore ties and jackets. Some were even in dark suits, and seven had hats on. Except for a few nervous Young Turks like Johnny Griffin, Mingus, Sahib and Rollins, everyone looked pleased and relaxed about being where he was. Dizzy Gillespie, standing at the far right with his legs crossed, is sticking his tongue out at his one-time idol, Roy Eldridge, who is directly in front of Gillespie and has turned his head awkwardly toward him. Gillespie, the irrepressible, had obviously just called, “Hey, Roy!”

Kane took a hundred and twenty exposures, and the final selection duly appeared as a double-page spread in Esquire. It caused a small sensation and soon became a permanent part of jazz arcana. The image also stuck in the head of a pretty, witty, famous New York blonde named Jean Bach. Born in Chicago and raised in Milwaukee, Bach has been a passionate jazz fan since she was eighteen and began hanging out with Duke Ellington and Roy Eldridge. In 1941, she married an Eldridge imitator, Shorty Sherock, and spent seven tumultuous years travelling with Sherock’s group. (“It was a strange band,” she once said. “It had a floating Basie-type rhythm section and an Italianate trumpet section that played a little sharp and real loud.”) Then she got a divorce, moved to New York, married a TV producer named Bob Bach and, in time, began producing the Arlene Francis show on WOR radio. She retired in the eighties, and several years ago she began brooding about Art Kane’s picture. The surprising result is a brilliant, funny, lissome documentary film called A GREAT DAY IN HARLEM. It’s about the taking of the picture, and it’s also about mortality, loyalty, talent, musical beauty and the fact that jazz musicians tend to be the least pretentious artists on earth.

Jean Bach lives in Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney’s old studio on Washington Mews, and the other day she sat in her living room and talked about her film. “I kept asking myself how all these fabulous musicians had got together on somebody’s brownstone stoop in Harlem to have their photograph taken. All I knew was that a man named Art Kane had taken it and that it had run in Esquire. I started asking musicians I’d run into who were in the picture how it had come about, and I’d generally get the hazy, gee-I-can’t-remember-man answers. One day I noticed that only a dozen or so of the fifty-seven people in the picture were still with us, and the electric light went on. It was time for me to interview the survivors, and maybe film the interviews, for the record.”

Bach talked to her friend Bill Harbach, who had made some short films, and he put her onto a film person named Kemper Peacock, who found her a cameraman named Steve Petropoulos. Before she knew it, she had fifty or sixty hours of interviews. She talked to Johnny Griffin and Art Farmer, both of whom live in Europe, at New York gigs, and she filmed Bud Freeman in a retirement place in Chicago. She finally caught up with the elusive Art Blakey in “his gorgeous West Side apartment.” She shot Gerry Mulligan in his house in Connecticut, and she did several interviews in her living room, placing each musician in a different part of the room to fool the viewer. Sahib Shahab died two weeks after she talked to him, and Blakey three months later, and since then Freeman, Gillespie, Buck Clayton, Max Kaminsky. Lester Young, Coleman Hawkins, Basie and Eldridge have gone. Then Milt Hinton told Bach’s friend Charles Graham about Mona’s 8mm film, and she decided to somehow combine that footage, if it still existed, with the filmed interviews-in other words, to make a movie. Bach asked her friend Kathryn Altman, Robert Altman’s wife, for advice, and she suggested that Bach get in touch with a producer named Matthew Seig, who works with Altman. Seig said yes, and when Mona Hinton’s film was finally found, in Milts basement in Queens, Seig told Bach that it was time to rent a studio and hire an editor. They hired Susan Peehl, who edited the fine 1993 Billie Holiday documentary Lady Day: The Many Faces of Billie Holliday, and put her in a studio apartment over on Third Avenue, where she lived the picture night and day for the next year and a half. Seig also came up with the brilliant idea of using footage from the Sound of Jazz television show, which aired just six months before the Harlem shoot and included many of the same musicians.

Bach went on, “Then I discovered the joys of getting permissions from music publishers to use their music. There are twenty-three songs, or pieces of songs, in the picture, and to date they have cost well over a hundred thousand dollars. I realized early on that I couldn’t swing all the costs myself, and I applied to every foundation that exists, and all I could hear was the sound of pocketbooks snapping shut across the country. I finally got a grant from a baby friend in Milwaukee. She and her husband have the Jane and Lloyd Pettit Foundation.”

The film was first released in 1995, and it has been praised worldwide. “So far, I’ve only had one real demurrer,” she said. “And it came from Artie Shaw. We’re old friends, and when we had lunch on the Coast a little while ago I asked him what he thought of the picture, and he said, ‘Jean, do you want me to be polite, or do you want me to be honest?’ I said the latter, and he had all these niggling criticisms, and then I realized what was really bothering him. In the film, sweet Bud Freeman speculates that in a hundred years Pee Wee Russell might prove to be more highly thought of than Benny Goodman. What rankles Artie is that Freeman said Goodman. If he had said Shaw, Artie would have just laughed and said something like, ‘Oh, Pee Wee.'”

Susan Peehl’s quicksilver editing of A GREAT DAY mixes interviews (she sometimes cuts rapidly back and forth between two musicians talking about the same subject, to give the impression that they are conversing with each other), archival footage, sequences from the astonishing Sound of Jazz, Mona Hinton’s film, Hinton’s and Mike Lipskin’s stills and more than a dozen of Art Kane’s alternative shots. She mixes these last in such a way that the musicians move and talk and gesticulate: you are on 126th Street in 1958. She also gives us miniature portraits of Thelonious Monk playing (his feet flapping like flounders on the floor beneath the piano) and doing one of his impromptu dances and of Lester Young in his famous black porkpie hat, his flat eyes peering out of his pale, flat face. Near the end of the film, there is a calm, and Art Farmer says, “We don’t think about people not being here. If we think about Lester Young, we don’t think, well, Lester Young was here, but he’s not here any more. Lester Young is here period. Coleman Hawkins is here. Roy Eldridge is here. They are in us, and they will always be alive.” Farmer has a dark, heavy voice, and he makes you shiver.

From the accompanying booklet in the DVD case

In August 1958,in front of a Harlem brownstone, first-time photographer Art Kane assembled 57 of the greatest jazz stars of all time and snapped a picture that would live forever. Narrated by Quincy Jones, this “irresistible” (Kevin Thomas, Los Angeles Times), Academy Award-nominated documentary (1995) examines the fascinating lives of the musicians who showed up that day to make history. Through remarkable interviews with nearly 30 jazz greats (including Dizzy Gillespie, Sonny Rollins and Art Blakey), home movies shot by Milt and Mona Hinton, and rare, archival performance footage, A GREAT DAY IN HARLEM tells the story behind a legendary photograph that is still alive and kicking – and jammin’!

From the back of the DVD case





THE MYTH OF EQUALITY

by KEN WYTSMA

Uncovering the Roots of Injustice and Privilege

IS PRIVILEGE REAL OR IMAGINED ?

Issues of race and equality have come to the forefront in our nation’s consciousness. Depending on who you are or what you look like, you and your neighbor may have very different experiences in economic opportunity or public safety. What are the root causes of these inequities?

Ken Wytsma opens our eyes to realities we may have never realized were present in our society. He reveals what he has discovered about privilege as he has engaged with today’s race-related issues. And he helps us come to a deeper understanding of the reconciling role we are called to play as witnesses of the gospel.

Named by Publishers Weekly as one of the five best religion books of 2017.

“A wake-up call to Christian communities nationwide.”PUBLISHERS WEEKLY

“KEN WYTSMA is the kind of leader who offers real solutions toward social integration and racial reconciliation….The Myth of Equality is a genuine contribution for those of us looking for ways forward.”

SCOT McKNIGHT/Northern Seminary

KEN WYTSMA is a white evangelical man from a conservative white evangelical world, and he is doing his homework on race….shared with humility, grace, and an unrelenting commitment to truth.”

LISA SHARON HARPER/author of The Very Good Gospel

“The Myth Of Equality is written so skillfully that it’s easy to miss how much it accomplishes….I predict that there will be more who are convinced and inspired by the patient, passionate, and nondefensive way in which Wytsma makes his case . It’s a book that someone had to write.”

NICHOLAS WOLTERSTOFFR / Yale University

From the cover

AFTER TRUMP…WHAT?

PRESIDENT TRUMP IS THE RESULT OF, NOT THE CAUSE OF OUR DIS-SATISFACTION WITH THE NATIONAL GOVERNMENT. IF THE CAUSES OF OUR DIS-SATISFACTION ARE NOT ADDRESSED AND CORRECTED, AFTER PRESIDENT TRUMP’S EXIT THE CAUSES OF OUR DISCONTENT WILL REMAIN.

  • THE ELECTORAL COLLEGE NEEDS TO BE ABOLISHED. ITS ONLY REASON FOR BEING IS TO OBSTRUCT THE POPULAR WILL OF THE PEOPLE.
  • THE METHOD BY WHICH CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICTS ARE DETERMINED SHOULD BE IN NEUTRAL HANDS- SO THAT GERRYMANDERING CAN BE AVOIDED.
  • THE NUMBER OF REPRESENTATIVES NEEDS TO BE EXPANDED. THE U.S. IS ONE OF THE MOST UNDER REPRESENTED DEMOCRACIES IN THE WORLD. WE HAVE 435 REPRESENTATIVES FOR A POPULATION OF 325,000,000 PEOPLE. THAT EQUATES TO ONE REPRESENTATIVE FOR EVERY 700,000 CITIZENS. NO OTHER DEMOCRACY IS SO UNDER REPRESENTED.
  • VOTER SUPPRESSION SHOULD BE TREATED AS A FELONY AND ANYONE FOUND GUILTY OF IMPEDING IN ANY WAY A CITIZEN’S RIGHT AND ABILITY TO VOTE SHOULD BE PUNISHED BY FINE AND INCARCERATION.
  • CAMPAIGN FINANCE REFORM SHOULD BE IMPLEMENTED AND THE LENGTH OF CAMPAIGNS SHOULD BE SHORTENED. WITH THE CURRENT STATE OF TECHNOLOGY THE NEED FOR TWO YEAR CAMPAIGNS IS LUDICROUS.
  • ELECTION DAY SHOULD BE MADE A NATIONAL HOLIDAY OR MOVED TO THE WEEKEND TO INCREASE VOTER PARTICIPATION.
  • A WAY SHOULD BE FOUND TO INCREASE THE NUMBER OF VIABLE POLITICAL PARTIES TO BROADEN THE CHOICES AVAILABLE TO THE CITIZENS.
  • MILITARISM AND PERPETUAL WAR SHOULD BE ADDRESSED.

FAILURE TO ADDRESS THESE PRE-TRUMP FAULTS WILL RESULT IN A POST-TRUMP ERA OF CONTINUED DIS-CONTENTMENT