The
National Black United Front (NBUF)
is preparing for the Thirty-first Annual National
Convention to be held in Kansas
City, Missouri from July 22-24, 2010 at the African Centered
Education Collegium Campus, 6410 Swope Parkway. The theme of this
year’s convention is “Unity & Peace vs. Conflict
& Violence.”
Dr.
Lance Williams Khepra, Assistant Director and Professor
of the Jacob H.
Carruthers Center for Inner City Studies of Northeastern Illinois University in
Chicago, Illinois
will give the opening presentation on Thursday,
July 22, 2010 at the National Town Hall Meeting. Dr. Williams
Khepra is a nationally recognized expert on youth violence
and its relationship to the Hip Hop Generation. Doors will
open at 6:00 p.m. and the Town Hall Meeting will begin at
7:00 p.m.
Under
the dynamic leadership of the new NBUF Chairperson, Brother
Kofi Taharka of Houston,
Texas, the new Vice Chairperson of
Organizing and Training, Brother Salim Adofo, and with the
assistance of NBUF National Secretary, Toriono Granger and
National Treasurer, Sandra Dean, NBUF continues to be a
major participant in the Black Liberation Movement.
The National Black United Front,
over a thirty-one year period, has related to, and organized around,
numerous issues that have impacted on the African World
Community. Whether it was combating the numerous cases of
police brutality in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles,
and other urban centers, NBUF was there. Whether it was fighting to save people from the death
penalty in Texas and Chicago, NBUF was there.
NBUF has constantly challenged the racist and white
supremacists public policy positions of the Criminal Justice
System and to that end our Prison Correspondence Program
keeps us in contact with our sisters and brothers behind
the walls throughout America.
NBUF
was at the forefront of the Free South Africa Movement and
played a leading role in forcing economic sanctions against
South
Africa’s Apartheid regime. Our picketing
of entertainers who were on the South African Entertainers
Hit List for performing in South Africa,
against the will of the movement in South Africa,
brought great public attention to the plight of our brothers
and sisters in that region of the world.
Our work with the New Jewel Movement in Grenada
was significant. Whether it was the Summer Work Study Project, working on the runway at the airport or volunteering in the schools,
NBUF was there.
In our international work, the Commission on Women’s Issues of NBUF organized a delegation of NBUF sisters who attended the United Nations World Conference on Women,
held in Nairobi, Kenya in July 10-19, 1985. The NBUF sisters made a significant
contribution at this conference by networking with African
women from all over the world and presenting a paper on
“The Presence of African Women in America.”
NBUF was there for Jesse Jackson’s presidential runs
in 1984 and 1988, and the successful
mayoral bids of African in America
in Chicago,
New York, St, Louis, Kansas City, and Houston in the 1980s.
NBUF participated in other electoral campaigns for
seats in Congress and state offices in several districts
around the country. In fact, one
of our own, Rev. Jew Don Boney
won a council seat in Houston, Texas. NBUF member,
Lee Barnes successfully won a school board seat on the same
board in Kansas
City, Missouri.
NBUF
played a key role in the efforts to organize the African
American Leadership Summit in 1994. NBUF members were key organizers in the historic Million Man March in
October of 1995.
On the education front, over the past twenty years, NBUF
has been, and continues to be, the key grassroots
organizers in the African Centered Education Movement. Our
World African Centered Education Plan is a model for addressing
the various areas of education.
As a response to revelations that the CIA was involved
in the explosion of crack / cocaine in the African Communities
in America
in the summer of 1996, NBUF launched a historic Genocide Petition Campaign Against the United
States Government. This Genocide Petition Campaign produced
over 200,000 signatures and in May 1997,
the NBUF-led delegation traveled to the United Nations Human
Rights Center in Geneva,
Switzerland
and presented these petitions and other evidence on behalf
of African people in America.
Out of our successful Genocide Campaign,
NBUF collaborated with the December
12th Movement that organized the Durban 400 to participate
and helped successfully lobby the United Nations World Conference
Against Racism (WCAR) to declare, in the summer of 2001,
that the Trans Atlantic Slave Trade and Slavery were Crimes
Against Humanity.
As a follow-up to our successful participation in
this conference, NBUF continued to collaborate with the December 12th Movement in organizing
the Millions For Reparations Rally that was held August
17, 2002 in Washington, D.C. where over 50,000 African people attended from 38 states,
67 cities, and which was viewed by millions on CSPAN.
In the spring of 2003, as NBUF National Chairman,
I requested that Minister Louis Farrakhan convene a meeting
of the key reparations organizers,
activists, researchers, scholars, and spiritual workers. This meeting occurred in July 2003 at the Salaam
Restaurant in Chicago
and out of that meeting the NDABA Movement unfolded.
On September 13, 2003, NBUF joined the Millions For Reparations Rally at the United Nations
in New York and helped to link the Reparations Movement with the Pan African
struggle worldwide. The NDABA Movement meetings were convened
in October 2003 in Jackson, Mississippi and in March 2004 in Houston, Texas. This process greatly helped strengthened
unity in the Reparations Movement in America.
Through the NDABA Movement process, I proposed the
establishment of a Reparations Petition Campaign that was
adopted by the NDABA forces with the goal of securing one
million signatures by the fall presidential election.
Since our inception, NBUF has consistently sponsored a variety
of cultural programs throughout the United States, including our Frontlines Album Project, our sponsorship of annual Kwanzaa Programs, and African Liberation Day activities. This has been a major part
of NBUF’s work.
Through our Frontline Newsletter,
Front Page Newspaper, NBUF’s website, e-mail, letters, phone calls, and the traditional grapevine,
NBUF communicates with the world.
Most
importantly, in our organizing efforts, NBUF
has maintained strict financial independence,
and has recently become a certified organization with the
National Black Federation of Charities,
an arm of the National Black United Fund,
Inc. We are now able to receive donations through payroll
deduction from people in the federal workplace throughout
the world.
We encourage everyone to attend this year’s historic
NBUF Convention. For more information
call: 773.493.0900, 773.718.1153, or 816.333.7700; email:
[email protected];
or visit the website at www.nbufront.org.
BlackCommentator.com Columnist, Conrad W. Worrill, PhD, is the National
Chairman of the National Black United Front (NBUF). Click here
to contact Dr. Worrill. |