Afro/Latino Magazine Issue #195
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Transcript of Afro/Latino Magazine Issue #195
Title:NAPOLEONICA LIBERTAD EQUINA Artist:Disey Zemog / Yesid Gomez Dimension:80" by 70" Media:Acrylic and 24 karats of gold leaf on canvas
CONTENTS CONTENTS
Pg4 Vote
Pg 6 Hispanic
Heritage
Month
Pg 6 Hispanic
Art Show
Pg 9Uncle
Nate
Pg 13 Un-
Justice System
Pg 17 bctv.
From the Publisher… The Longest Running Minority MagazineFrom the Publisher… The Longest Running Minority Magazine
WW elcome to the 195th
I ssue of Afro/Latino
Magazine. Here you will find
your source for Entertainment,
Local Business, and other areas
of interest in the Reading, Har-
risburg, Pottstown Lancaster Pa
area. Afro/Latino welcomes all
your Advertising needs. We of-
fer custom Advertising and
Graphic work. We offer product
placement and helpful ideas to
make your business grow. Utiliz-
ing our Extensive Network of
Websites, Print Publication, Pro-
motional Tools and Events is a
great way to increase your expo-
sure and drive traffic to your
business.
Afro/Latino is also a great way to make
all of your Personal Announcements such
as Birthdays, Anniversaries, Reunions,
Weddings, Birth Announcements and
much more! We are much more than
an Advertising
Magazine . We publish
helpful and knowledgeable information
to empower our communities. So, when
it comes to making the choice for your
Advertising...Stick with the Magazine that
is in your Commu-
nity and about your
Community
For For For Advertising: Advertising: Advertising:
484484484---256256256---725872587258 Bienvenido a los afro / hispano
Quiero darle las gracias por
echar un vistazo a nuestra
revista, si tiene alguna pregun-
ta acerca de la publicidad en
nuestra revista o sugerencias
con respecto al contenido,
por favor llámenos al 484-
256-7258
yle ayuda, Gracias
9/1/129/1/129/1/12 Issue 195Issue 195Issue 195
Look Us Up On Line , Afrolatinomag.com, ELook Us Up On Line , Afrolatinomag.com, ELook Us Up On Line , Afrolatinomag.com, E---mail [email protected], Earl Lucas Facebookmail [email protected], Earl Lucas Facebookmail [email protected], Earl Lucas Facebook
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Two weeks ago we had our first employee meeting here in council chambers. I had a chance
to introduce all the new members of the administration so ever yone in City Hall can put a
name to the new faces.
I used the opportunity to thank all the employees for all their hard work these last several
months and to commit to working with the administration on accomplishing all the goals we
have planned now that we have a full team in place.
♦ We have received overwhelming response to our PILOT and SILOT programs, and I would like to
thank all the nonprofits in the area for their response to these programs.
There have been over 36 SILOT programs completed and 25,377 volunteer hours logged. The clean-ups taking place
through the SILOT program is definitely making a difference in the cleanliness of our city.
♦ Congratulations to Carlos Garcia of the Reading Inner-City Boxing Club, who won the 189-pound title at the Ringside
World Championship Tournament held at the Expo Center, in Kansas City, Mo.
Carlos was the 2012 PA District Golden Gloves Champion and is the Reading Inner-City’s first world amateur champion!
The East Reading Boxing Club just had a very successful event and I’d like to recognize all the area boxing clubs, includ-
ing King’s Gym, who are doing significant work with our youth and giving them something constructive and positive to
do, and deserve the recognition for the great job they do with all the young men and women boxers.
♦ We continue with our neighborhood meetings. We held one Aug. 1 at St. Paul’s Lutheran Church. We had a good turn
out and received several good questions and heard several concerns, which we will address.
We will have our next neighborhood meeting tomorrow night in conjunction with the Centre Park Historic District
meeting at the Centre Park Historic District Headquarters on North Fifth Street.
Managing Director Carole Snyder and Fire Chief Hollinger will be there to meet the residents and hear their concerns.
♦ Last week the City of Reading was awarded a HUD 108 Loan for $1.5 million dollars and an accompanying BEDI
(Brownfield Economic Development Initiative) for $750,000 for the Ricktown neighborhood.
The HUD 108 funds will be used for the rehabilitation of units already in the Ricktown area to give local residents and
first-time homebuyers an opportunity to own their own home in a very exciting area of the city.
It is also intended for commercial mixed-use so that artists can use the ground level to showcase and sell their art while
living above. It’s our hope that a coffee shop or the like can also find its way into a bottom floor. The BEDI initiative can
be used for environmental remediation and housing/streetscapes.
♦ Last Friday, the Christmas Special was taped at Hope Lutheran Church. It is scheduled to air on CBS on Christmas Eve,
but there will be a special premiere screening here in Reading and we’ll keep you updated on when that date will be.
♦ This is the final week of the tax amnesty program. If someone has an outstanding per-capita tax bill or business-
privilege tax bill and completes the application by Friday, they will be accepted into the program.
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At the age of 60, after realizing that Abdul Rahman had lost most of his usefulness due to age, coupled with some pressure from the govern-
ment, championed by the then secretary of state Henry Clay, Thomas Foster eventually agreed to free Rahman on condition that he is sent
back to his home land. Eager to spread Christianity among Arabic speaking Africans, The American Colonization Society ofiered to help Ab-
dul Rahman raise funds to free his family in exchange for writing The Lord’s Prayer in Arabic. Researchers later found out that Abdul Rah-
man actually wrote Surah Al-Fatiha — which is the opening chapter of the Holy Quran.
Eventually Abdul Rahman and his wife Isabella were able to return to West Africa, but landed in Monroe (now Monrovia), Liberia, on March
18, 1829 instead of Futa Jallon in neighboring Guinea. Just four months after his arrival, Abdul Rahman contracted spells of fever and died at
the age of 67.
So the next time you see a black man anywhere in the West, have some respect for him, and instead of thinking that he is a former slave or
a descendant of a former slave, treat him as a man or woman who has endured the test of time and might just be a brother of sister of Abdul
Rahman.
One of the paradoxes of the trans-Atlantic slavery is that it caused some unintelligible
Westerners to think that the history of the black man began with the advent of slavery.
On the contrary, Africa and Africans had had large and formidable empires the size of
Rome and some even bigger. In fact, at the time when Europe languished in 500 years of
darkness — the so-called dark ages when intellectual and cultural pursuit stagnated — African empires and Kingdoms
flourished.
Between 750 and 1200 A.D. for example, Ghana Empire, blossomed as the “Land of Gold” for its role in the gold trade
under the leadership of a Manden speaking people known as the. And the Mali Empire which covered most of Africa south
of the Sahara flourished from 1200— 1500 A.D. Its powerfixl leader, Sundiata Keita — who rose from a royal slave and a
magician to a leader, has been credited in many quarters for uniting the Mali Empire. Then there was the Songhai Empire
(1350— 1600 AD) which was larger than Mali and was centered along the Niger River. Its city of Timbuktu became well
known as a center of Islamic learning, attracting scholars from around the world.
Thus the people we refer to in the west today as descendants of slaves are actually descendants of kings and princes who,
due to a combination of unfortunate circumstances, became slaves in the hands of some of the most heartless slave trad-
ers and owners history has ever known.
Prince Abdul Rahinan of Timbo in Futa Jallon is a case in point. Rahman’s story has been documented in a book, Prince
Among Slaves, by Terry Alford, and featured in a PBS documentary during 2008 black history month. This son of king Sori
of Futa Jallon was captured in 1788 while returning from a military expedition in which he commanded 2,000 men. His
maltreatment began immediately as his captors forced him to walk about
100 miles on foot. Compelled to leave his wife and child behind, Abdul Rahman embarked on his three month journey to
the cotton plantations of America that took him through The Gambia and finally to Natchez, Mississippi where slave own-
er Thomas Foster bought him.
After observing the ingenuity of his new slave, Foster put Abdul Rahman in charge of his cotton plantation, and after seven
years allowed him to marry Isabella, another slave woman with whom Rabman had five sons and four daughters.
During his twentieth year in captivity Abdul Rahman encountered an Irish physician named Dr. John Cox who immediately
recognized the prince and took it upon himself to endeavor to free him as a repayment of a personal gratitude he owed
the prince’s father who had saved him decades back in West Africa when the man was separated from his ship’s crew. Fos-
ter, however, refused every offer Dr. Cox made to buy Abdul Rahinan from him. The slave, who was very knowledgeable in
geography, astronomy, math, etc. in addition to his skills in the fields, was just too valuable to his economic welfare.
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