I often think of
Sister Charshee McIntyre who had great impact of all of us in the
Black Liberation Movement. I miss her dearly. I miss the late night
talks, advice, and consultation. I am sure that many other activists,
scholars, and leaders in our movement also miss her. Sister Charshee,
like Queen Mother Moore, was one of the Queen Mothers of our
movement.
On Saturday, May 15,
1999, the African Liberation Movement worldwide learned of the
passing into eternity, in New York, of our great Queen / Sister /
Mother, Dr. Charshee Charlotte Lawrence McIntyre.
Although Sister
Charshee was not a household name in the African Community, in this
country, she was one of our leading behind the scenes scholars,
leaders, organizers, and activists, who worked tirelessly for the
liberation of African and Native American people. Sister Charshee had
indigenous, Native American, lineage in her family.
Sister Charshee had
battled with the effects of Lupus and other illnesses for over twenty
years. Even though she was often in severe pain, she continued to
travel to important movement meetings, keep a busy lecture schedule,
researched vigorously, worked as a professor of Humanities and Chair
of the English Language Studies Program at the SUNY Old Westbury.
Dr. Sister McIntyre
was the first woman President of the African Heritage Studies
Association, founded by our recent ancestor, Dr. John Henrik Clarke.
She served on the Executive Board for many years and used this
position to help mentor numerous young researchers and scholars in
their development.
I attended her
Celebration of Life on Friday, May 21, 1999 at the St. James
Presbyterian Church in Harlem, New York. More than a thousand people
from all walks of life attended and participated in the celebration,
including her husband of 41 years, renown instrumentalist, Dr.
Makanda McIntyre and her two “perfect sons,” as she
called them, Kheil and Kaijee.
My esteemed
colleague and friend, the late Dr. Jacob Carruthers, who worked
closely with Sister Charshee over the years, was not able to attend
the celebration but wrote a beautiful and succinct statement that I
was able to present to the family.
Brother Jake, as we
call him, wrote, “In behalf of the Temple of the African
Community of Chicago and the Kemetic Institute, I wish to make our
tribute on the occasion of the transition of our beloved Sister and
fellow worker. Dr. Charshee Charlotte Lawrence-McIntyre, Maa Kheru
(The Voice is True). Sister Charshee was our Chief, a selfless leader
in our movement who contributed mightily, spiritually, and materially
to our projects.”
Continuing, Brother
Jake expressed that “Dr. Charshee McIntyre’s specialty
was promoting good will, friendship, love, and unity among the
various organizations and personalities in our movement. In this
regard, she was without peer. She promoted us all, often remaining in
the background, although her spirit was always at the forefront.”
In concluding,
Brother Jake made this profound point. “Charshee always exuded
the qualities of African Womanhood: an obedient daughter; a caring
sister; a devoted wife; and a loving mother. Whatever the measure,
she set the standard.”
One of Sister
Charshee’s great scholarly contributions was her book, Criminalizing A Race: Free Blacks During Slavery. Given the white
supremacy assault of the Criminal Justice System on African people in
this country, I think it would be a fitting tribute to Charshee to
read or re-read this most important book.
In our everyday
conversations in the African Community in America, the issue of
African males and the disproportionate number of them imprisoned in
America’s jails is frequently discussed.
Most of these
discussions center around the current problems of drugs, youth
violence, poor education, lack of economic opportunities, poor family
life, and lack of proper racial identity and cultural direction.
Often, the missing
aspect of these discussions is the historical context of the
foundation of the white supremacy Criminal Justice System and its
multi-million dollar Prison Industrial Complex.
Dr. McIntyre’s
book is a rare and profound African centered analysis of the
structural design of this nation that has produced the
disproportionate number of imprisoned Africans in America,
particularly African in America, males.
Without a clear
historical understanding of the continuous and growing trend of the
incarceration of African in America males, we will not be able to
counteract this long standing white supremacy public policy of this
country. Charshee’s book helps us understand this issue.
A key revelation in
Dr. McIntyre’s book is her explanation of the development of
America’s prison system and its immediate impact on Africans in
America. She points our, “To distinguish the prisons from
earlier jails and to suggest the essence of what the institution
should be doing these do-gooders coined a new name, penitentiaries,
implying that prisoners would be taught to be penitent regarding
their crimes.”
In this connection,
Dr. McIntyre asserted, “These do-gooders created penitentiaries
for the reformation of deviants.” They considered free Africans
in America a natural population for these new institutions that began
imprisoning African in America males as far back as 1790.
Those of us in the
National Black United Front/NBUF, and other Black Movement
organizations, have truly missed Sister Charshee. Her spirit is
guiding our work and she would be particularly proud of our work in
the Reparations Movement. Sister Charshee was a strong advocate of
Reparations for African people. Let us continue to lift up the spirit
of Sister Charshee and the millions of our other ancestors who
contributed so much. Hotep!
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