Revolutionist and activist Afeni Shakur-Davis will give a lecture at the University of Central Arkansas on Feb. 13 at Reynolds Performance Hall.
Shakur-Davis, former Black Panther and mother of hip hop artist and actor Tupac Shakur, is the founder of Amaru Entertainment/Records and the Tupac Amaru Shakur Foundation. Her lecture, “Road to Peace & Empowerment,” begins at 7:30 p.m. The event is free to the public, but tickets are required.
Tickets can be picked up at the Reynolds Performance Hall Ticket Office between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. Monday through Friday and one hour prior to the lecture. Tickets are limited to two per person.
The lecture is a part of UCA’s Black History Month program. The event is sponsored by the Student Government Association, Honors College, Residential Colleges, the History Department, the Office of the Provost, and the Division of Student Services.
Shakur-Davis joined the Black Panther Party in 1968 to help reopen the public schools in New York. In 1969, she was arrested for conspiracy against the United States government. Shakur-Davis defended herself against 156 charges and was acquitted of all charges. Her biography, Evolution of a Revolutionary, was published in 2005. The biography looks at her childhood in North Carolina, her life as a Black Panther, and her trial. The book was written by actress, singer and dancer Jasmine Guy. The biography was honored with a nomination by the NAACP Image Awards for Outstanding Literary Work – Non-Fiction Category.
Shakur-Davis founded the Tupac Amaru Shakur Foundation in 1997 in honor of her son, who was killed in September 1996. The foundation was formed as a way to bring quality arts training to young people. Students are given the opportunity to take courses on creative writing, vocal technique, acting, stage set design, dance, poetry and spoken word and the business of entertainment.
In 2000, Shakur-Davis partnered with MTV Films and presented the first and only feature documentary about the rap icon. Tupac: Resurrection was given a rare wide theatrical release in 2003, meeting with both tremendous critical and fan acclaim. The film was nominated for Academy Awards for Best Documentary Feature in 2005.
Comments (41)
Add commenti dont understand the lecture deal
Why is Jesse Jackson coming to Uca Feb 23? I am curious about this new Log Cabin lecture series. Black History month? The Black Panthers i thought they were the same as the KKK . Curious whos funding this.
First of all...
Let's not say dumb things...the black panther party did not go around killing white people...however the kkk cowards did!
oh really
The Panther's murdered police, members of the community and even fellow panthers. They were not good people. More importantly this woman gave birth too and failed in raising a man who was a rapist, who shot people, glorified violence, sexism and anti-culture.
Tupac is not art, he is barbarianism dressed in lipstick. Shame on UCA.
Not really
Show proofvwhere the Black Panthers did anything wrong but protect blacks from whites
from wikipedia
ViolenceFrom the beginning the Black Panther Party's focus on militancy came with a reputation for violence. They employed a California law which permitted carrying a loaded rifle or shotgun as long as it was publicly displayed and pointed at no one.[53] Carrying weapons openly and making threats against police officers, for example, chants like "The Revolution has co-ome, it's time to pick up the gu-un. Off the pigs!",[54] helped create the Panthers' reputation as a violent organization.
On May 2, 1967, the California State Assembly Committee on Criminal Procedure was scheduled to convene to discuss what was known as the "Mulford Act", which would ban public displays of loaded firearms. Cleaver and Newton put together a plan to send a group of about 30 Panthers led by Seale from Oakland to Sacramento to protest the bill. The group entered the assembly carrying their weapons, an incident which was widely publicized, and which prompted police to arrest Seale and five others. The group pled guilty to misdemeanor charges of disrupting a legislative session.[55]
On October 17, 1967, Oakland police officer John Frey was shot to death in an altercation with Huey P. Newton during a traffic stop. In the stop, Newton and backup officer Herbert Heanes also suffered gunshot wounds. Newton was convicted of voluntary manslaughter at trial. This incident gained the party even wider recognition by the radical American left, and a "Free Huey" campaign ensued.[56] Newton was released after three years, when his conviction was reversed on appeal. During later years Newton would boast to sociobiologist Robert Trivers (one of the few whites who became a Party member during its waning years) that he had in fact murdered officer John Frey.[22]
On April 7, 1968, Panther Bobby Hutton was killed, and Cleaver was wounded in a shootout with the Oakland police. Two police officers were also shot. Although at the time Cleaver claimed that the police had ambushed them, Cleaver later admitted that he had led the Panther group on a deliberate ambush of the police officers, thus provoking the shoot-out.[25][26]
From the fall of 1967 through the end of 1970, nine police officers were killed and 56 were wounded, and ten Panther deaths and an unknown number of injuries resulted from confrontations. In 1969 alone, 348 Panthers were arrested for a variety of crimes.[57] On February 18, 1970 Albert Wayne Williams was shot by the Portland Police Bureau outside the Black Panther party headquarters in Portland, Oregon. Though his wounds put him in a critical condition, he made a full recovery.[58]
In May 1969, party members tortured and murdered Alex Rackley, a 19-year-old member of the New York chapter of the Black Panther party, because they suspected him of being a police informant. Three party officers — Warren Kimbro, George Sams, Jr., and Lonnie McLucas — later admitted taking part. Sams, who gave the order to shoot Rackley at the murder scene, turned state's evidence and testified that he had received orders personally from Bobby Seale to carry out the execution. After this betrayal, party supporters alleged that Sams was himself the informant and an agent provocateur employed by the FBI.[59] The case resulted in the New Haven, Connecticut Black Panther trials of 1970, memorialized in the courtroom sketches of Robert Templeton. The trial ended with a hung jury, and the prosecution chose not to seek another trial.
[edit] Murder of Betty van PatterBlack Panther bookkeeper Betty van Patter was murdered in 1974, and although this crime was never solved, the Panthers, according to the magazine Mother Jones, were “almost universally believed to be responsible”.[60] David Horowitz became certain that Black Panther members were responsible and denounced the Panthers. When Huey Newton was shot dead 15 years later, Horowitz characterized Newton as a killer.[61] When Art Goldberg, a former colleague at Ramparts, alleged that Horowitz himself was responsible for the death of van Patter by recommending her for the position of Black Panther accountant, Horowitz counter-alleged that "the Panthers had killed more than a dozen people in the course of conducting extortion, prostitution and drug rackets in the Oakland ghetto." He said further that the organization was committed "to doctrines that are false and to causes that are demonstrably wrongheaded and even evil."[62] Former chairperson Elaine Brown also questioned Horowitz's motives in recommending van Patter to the Panthers; she suspected espionage.[63]
Cleaver?
Yeah, there is that local angle.
Well.........................................
"The Gray Panthers is an organization in the United States, which was founded in 1970 by Maggie Kuhn in response to her forced retirement at age 65.
As of 2005, the organization supported a single-payer healthcare system, as well as an increase in welfare payments, pacifism, "lifelong public education", the rights of workers, reproductive rights, abolition of the death penalty, legalization of same-sex marriage, the legalization of medical marijuana, and environmentalism through advocacy, education and action."
...
'The organization was initially known as the Consultation of Older and Younger Adults for Social Change. The group’s main goals included changing the mandatory retirement age and seeking an end to the Vietnam War. In 1972, they were nicknamed the Gray Panthers by a New York talk show producer. The name was later officially adopted by the group. As of 2010 the group operated under a system of participatory democracy, designed to allow all of their members a say in the group’s direction.
The national office of the Gray Panthers has been located in Washington, D.C. since 1990. Previous office locations included Philadelphia, PA.'
In 1992 former national Head Start administrator Jule Sugarman accepted the position of Interim executive director of the Gray Panthers, who were by then on the brink of insolvency, to help the group reorganize its by-laws, its board of directors, and its fund-raising activities.
Although their slogan was “Age and Youth in Action,” the group was seen by many as meeting the needs of only senior citizens.
The national Gray Panthers organization was a collection of local networks. The group gained official NGO (Non-governmental Organization) status at the United Nations in 1981. Seven Gray Panthers representatives participate in various UN committees and conferences.
The Gray Panthers celebrated their 40th Anniversary "Year of Activism" in 2010.
...
'Over the years the Gray Panthers have made use of various tactics, including advertising and guerrilla theater. In 1974, during a picket of two hundred nuns with wheelchairs and crutches outside the annual American Medical Association (AMA) conference, four Gray Panther members dressed as medics rushed to the conference’s main entrance to make a house call on “the sick AMA.” Another member dressed as “the sick AMA” was assisted by the “medics” from the entrance to a nearby ambulance. The medics attempted to resuscitate and examine his heart, but were distracted by pulling out wads of dollar bills."
...
'The Gray Panthers also took action against ageism. The Gray Panthers see aging as something to be considered positively. In the past, the Gray Panthers united with Ralph Nader's Retired Professional Action Group (RPAG) in order to monitor the hearing aid industry. The groups joined in 1973, the same year that RPAG released to the public, ‘’Paying Through the Ear," a report documenting acts of unscrupulous sales practices in the hearing aid industry. Furthermore, a national media watch task force was established by the Gray Panthers in 1973, designed to track ageist stereotyping. Their presence persuaded the National Association of Broadcasters to create guidelines for monitoring age discrimination in the media and to encourage sensitivity of the media in the matter.
The Gray Panthers advocated house-sharing and intergenerational living and affordable adequate housing for all. In addition, they supported expanding the number of subsidized rental units available to low-income persons.'
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gray_Panthers
interesting
and much less violent than the other panthers as noted above.
Target is one of this donors
Target is one of this donors its for Black History month. This news paper is rolling in the money from the democrat party they started the lectures going on at UCA. I think the New York times owns part of the cabin. Its hard to understand why a former crack addict and black panther member would be be good for Conway. There not coming here for free.
Visions of -- "People say I'm
Visions of --
"People say I'm no-good,
And crazy as a loon.
I get stoned in the morning,
I get drunk in the afternoon.
Kinda like my old blue tick hound,
I like to lay around in the shade,
An', I ain't got no money,
But I damn sure got it made.
'Cos I ain't askin' nobody for nothin',
If I can't get it on my own.
If you don't like the way I'm livin',
You just leave this long-haired country boy alone."
-- danced in their heads.
No matter what they say redneck ain't no disease.
"Haters Gonna Hate" -- that's all I'm saying and I ain't saying no more.