Category Archives: Day in the Life

Dr. John Hope Franklin is now among the ancestors

Dr. John Hope Franklin passed in the morning of March 25, 2009. The word seem to ring out instantly that he had made his transition. We have John W., Karen and the entire Franklin family in our prayers.

In this picture I am together with Brother John, the Dean of Historians of the African American experience, in New Orleans some 20 years ago. We were attending the Southern Historical Association’s annual meeting. I was in graduate school and just beginning to see myself as a member of the historical “profession.” It was great to meet the grand master of the game. A few years later when I was in my first full-time teaching appointment as Benjamin Banneker Honors Instructor of History at Prairie View A&M University I co-authored a grant with Dr. Jewel Prestage to bring him to Texas to speak to our students. The grant was funded and the next year we brought him to campus. He gave a brilliant speech, but in the Q&A afterwards one of the students (who had studied with me and my colleague Dr. Imari Obadele) asked him about the historical argument for black reparations. He was negative and dismissive of the matter in that way he can do so sternly. A decade later, however, I saw Dr. Franklin for the last time in Tulsa, OK, not long after his last book Mirror to America had come out. By that time he was a champion for the fight for reparations for living descendants of the Tulsa (Black Wall Street) Holocaust of 1921 that wiped out his own father’s law practice and claimed so many other lives and property. It showed me his capacity to revise his thinking and develop his political horizons. Nuff Rispek Dr. Franklin — may your spirit continue to inspire us all and future generations in the struggle “from slavery to freedom.”

Opening Night of 2009 Jubilee

SELMA, AL–I arrived 2:30-ish in Birmingham and MC met at the airport. After about 45 minutes of good catch-up conversation I was in Tuscaloosa at Dr. J’s place. We only had time enough to pack up her SUV and head out to Selma. We arrived in Selma just before 7PM, but Tabernacle Baptist Church was already standing room only in the main sanctuary. The crowd of several hundred was present to see and hear the keynote speaker Dr. Jeremiah Wright.

Rev. Wright has recently become known as “Obama’s Pastor: God Damn America, U.S. to Blame for 9/11” because of Barack Obama’s 2008  presidential campaign and the way the opponents and haters of the Chicago politician attempted to media assassinate them both. He is, of course, so much more than that. After going through traditional mass meeting preliminaries we were able to hear Dr. Wright speak for himself and he was nothing short of brilliant.

The Civil Rights Movement in 3 Days @ Smith College

dsc08246.JPGThe Hampshire Educational Collaborative invited the Du Bois Department to present to teachers from across the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in its Emerging America: Teaching American History (TAH) Program “From Agrarian Colonies to World Leader:  How American Institutions Endure through Change.” We offered colloquium presentations on the Civil Rights Movement, 1940-1970, at Smith College’s Seelye Hall in Northampton, MA. We addressed the teachers over three days with lecture and discussion in morning sessions with follow-up sessions in the afternoon on pedagogy and curriculum design. I coordinated the week-long colloquium and kicked off discussion on the first day focused on the state of the field regarding the legal history of the Civil Rights Movement or CRM, with a special focus on the 19th century background that is essential to properly framing the intense movement period of 1940 to 1970.emtlecturing.jpgOn the next day Ekwueme Mike Thelwell discussed his experience with teaching the CRM at UMass Amherst over the past fifteen years after the eminent James Baldwin launched the course for the De Bois Department. He also answered questions regarding Ready for Revolution: The Life and Struggles of Stokely Carmichael (2003). The memoir, which Thelwell helped Kwame Ture to write and brought to completion after he died, was assigned reading for the teachers participation in the colloquium and part of an extensive bibliography, chronology, and other materials provided to the teachers. It was also part of a focus that day on the CRM as lived history, that is in the way that it shaped and was shaped by people’s actual lives.On the final day of the colloquium Bill Strickland followed my institutional and policy oriented  discussion of the CRM with an analysis of the differences and the common ground of the CRM as lead by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Black Power Movement as inspired by Malik Shabazz or Malcolm X.Feedback from teachers about the colloquium was very positive. I look forward to doing more public service and consulting work along these lines. 

Edward “Boome” Frank, III — Rest Now Brother

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Edward “Boome” Frank, III
August 10, 1956 – June 15, 2008

Funeral service will take place Saturday, June 21, 2008
10:30AM Rosary
11:00AM Service at Our Mother of Mercy Catholic Church
  3390 Sarah Street – Beaumont, Texas 77705-3098
Burial service will follow at Live Oak Cemetary

Your expressions of sympathy can be sent to:
Ms. Winona St. Julian Frank
4545 Abraham Street
Beaumont, TX 77705

In lieu of flowers, gifts in the name of Edward Frank can be sent to:
Our Mother of Mercy Catholic Church
3390 Sarah St. Beaumont, Texas 77705-3098