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Friends of a pregnant woman killed by Hurricane Matthew carry her coffin through the rubble that remains of their homes in Jeremie, Haiti, on Oct. 7. – Photo: Dieu Nalio Chery, AP

Haiti needs us now! Donating to the Haiti Emergency Relief Fund (HERF) puts every dime in Haitian hands

On Oct. 4, Hurricane Matthew slammed into Haiti, killing at least 1,000 people and leaving thousands without shelter or food. The hurricane has devastated the city of Les Cayes and many villages in the Southwestern part of the country. The torrential rains and winds have also hit the capital, Port-au-Prince. With massive flooding comes the increased danger of water-borne diseases, particularly cholera, which has already reached epidemic proportions. We ask that all friends of Haiti donate as much as you can to the Haiti Emergency Relief Fund.

Behind Enemy Lines

Nationwide epidemic of suicide in solitary: Solitary confinement is murder!

Oct 16, 2016
“Stop isolating suicidal people” was a major message delivered by hundreds of protesters who traveled from around California to the infamous California Institute for Women (CIW) state prison near Los Angeles to protest conditions that have caused a spate of suicides and for a vigil in remembrance of recent victims. – Photo: California Coalition for Women Prisoners (CCWP)

This year at Holman in Atmore, Alabama, there have been five suicides in its segregation unit – more suicides or homicides than in its population. The latest was a mentally ill young man in his 20s. The conditions in the Administrative Segregation housing wings at the H.H. Coffield Unit located at Tennessee Colony, Texas are horrible, and these conditions have driven prisoners to suicide, approximately 13 deaths just this year! We need the broadest exposure of this horrifying trend.

Michigan prisoners rise up!

Oct 15, 2016
kinross-correctional-facility

Not since the 1980s, when the state of Michigan simultaneously ratcheted up “tough on crime” laws and eliminated good time credits, have Michigan’s prisons been so overcrowded and seething with so much discontent. Crammed into overcrowded prisons, underfed, denied proper medical care and programming while forced to work for declining slave wages as commissary prices rise, no wonder Michigan prisoners are rising up! The only question is, Why did it take so long?

More guards quit Alabama’s Holman Prison as Justice Dept. prepares to investigate Alabama prisons

Oct 8, 2016
Cell phones enable prisoners to break the media ban and reveal conditions and events in prisons, the most censored places in the U.S. FAM is showing the way.

At Holman Prison in Atmore, Alabama, only two officers reported for work for the second shift Saturday, Oct. 8. Officers confess being fed up with Gov. Robert Bentley’s putting their very lives in jeopardy simply to further his political agenda of institutionalizing Alabama with plans for new state-of-the-art prisons. The officers at Holman are walking off the job and refusing to come back to work after filing grievance after grievance concerning the ill treatment of prisoners, overcrowding and forced slave labor.

Free Alabama Movement Peace Summit turns chaos into community

Oct 2, 2016
On April 9, 2016, supporters holding a rally outside Holman Prison to draw attention to Free Alabama Movement’s campaign to end prison slavery placed a banner on top of the sign identifying “W.C. Holman Correctional Facility.”

Despite scant media coverage, the largest prison strike in history is entering its third week. Retaliation is rampant, both against the organizers in prison and against the Bay View for spreading the word. The Free Alabama Movement that started the prison-strikes-to-end-slavery campaign is defeating a violent divide-and-conquer scheme to turn prisoner against prisoner with a Peace Summit, reminiscent of the Agreement to End Hostilities in California, which this month is entering its fifth year of keeping the peace.

San Francisco County Jail’s incompetent medical care provider lets prisoners die

Oct 1, 2016
D’Juan Barrow

I’m incarcerated in 850 Bryant, CJ4 of the San Francisco County Jail, and my health is failing. Due to the lack of sunlight, like a plant I’m withering away. I’m having kidney problems, and I’ve had to have two spinal surgeries since I’ve been here, in three and a half years. I’m mentioning this because I’m only 35 years old! And also because the medical care provider that is contracted here is severely incompetent. They have a history of letting inmates here die.

Gov. Brown vetoes bill that prevents California jails from eliminating in-person visitation for children and families
Un-ban the Bay View!
My life in solitary confinement
Former prisoners are leading the fight against mass incarceration
Your tax dollars make Ameri­ca a nation of 8 million slaves
Celebrating the 75th birthday of Soledad Brother George Lester Jackson, Sept. 23, 1941-Aug. 21, 1971
Leonard Peltier: On solidarity with Standing Rock, executive clemency and the international Indigenous struggle
Strike the punishment clause from the 13th Amendment
Is the serious humanitarian crisis developing at Holman Prison an ADOC ploy to build more prisons?
Sept. 9 prison strike was HUGE and is continuing
George Jackson University supports the historic Sept. 9 strike against prison slavery
How Free Alabama Movement birthed the Sept. 9 nationwide protest, workstrike, boycott and demonstrations
Why we’re about to see the largest prison strike in history
New Afrikan Community Parole, Pardon and Clemency Review Board – Mission Statement
Prisoners call for a national strike on Sept. 9, the anniversary of Attica

News & Views

Alprentice ‘Bunchy’ Carter ‘would have rode with Nat Turner’

Oct 12, 2016
Black Panther Party Deputy Minister of Defense Bunchy Carter

Oct. 12 is the birthday of one of the most talented and promising young men martyred in the massive state repression against the Black Panther Party for Self Defense, Alprentice “Bunchy” Carter. Unlike Huey P. Newton, Bobby Seale, Eldridge Cleaver and George Jackson, Carter has almost been forgotten from the history of Africans in America except for diehards. Carter, then 26 (born Oct. 12, 1942), was assassinated on Jan. 17, 1969 in a Campbell Hall classroom at UCLA in Los Angeles.

Bay View Voters Guide

Oct 10, 2016
bay-view-voters-guide-1116-paul-henderson-london-breed-stevon-cook-shanell-williams-lateefah-simon

For the Nov. 8 election, the last day to register to vote is Oct. 24, weekend voting at City Hall begins Oct. 29, and on Election Day, polls are open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. You can take this guide into the voting booth. To learn more, visit sfgov.org/elections or call 415- 554-4375. The Bay View welcomes your comments; email publisher@sfbayview.com or call 415-671-0789. Any additions or alterations will appear here on sfbayview.com and in the November Bay View paper.

Rwanda Day San Francisco: Bay View journalists get the boot

Oct 6, 2016
Having been ejected, Ann and Jeremy had to resort to a broadcast to watch the Rwanda Day speeches. This is Rwanda President Paul Kagame.

Rwanda Day-San Francisco was a bad day for identity politics. Rwandan President Paul Kagame stepped to the podium and said that he was happy to be in San Francisco because it’s so diverse, seeming not to understand that his guest speaker, Rev. Rick Warren, champion of the 2008 Prop 8 ballot measure banning same sex marriage, wouldn’t appeal to San Francisco’s diverse population.

Alfred Olango, from US-backed persecution in Uganda to police execution in US

Oct 2, 2016
Alfred Olango

The El Cajon police shooting of Alfred Olango is one of the most recent police shootings of an unarmed Black man to make national and international headlines and inspire Black Lives Matter protests. Olango and his family fled war and persecution by the government of Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni, who has ruled Uganda with an iron fist since 1986. KPFA’s Ann Garrison filed this report.

Alfred Olango, killed by California cop, dreamt of opening family restaurant

Oct 1, 2016
Alfred Olango

He overcame a childhood of hunger in war-torn parts of Africa and came to America with the dream of opening a restaurant with his family. That dream ended with the death of Alfred Olango, 38, who was killed on Tuesday in El Cajon, California, when two officers responding to a report of a mentally ill man shot Olango after they said he pulled an unidentified object from his pants pocket and appeared to move into a “shooting stance.”

Let’s re-ignite the movement to free Mumia Abu-Jamal!
A salute to the Black Panthers – at home and abroad!
Treasure Island residents choking on toxic dust released into high winds as Navy excavations fast-track island redevelopment
First Oakland cop arraigned in underage sex scandal
London Breed: San Francisco victorious in the fight for landmark affordable housing policies
Why I am on the Women’s Boat to Gaza
Shanell Williams: Make City College free again! Vote YES on Prop W
Dr. Leopold Munyakazi deported to Rwanda
The lesser threat: The White Panther Party, illegal FBI wiretaps and FISA
Haiti’s Fanmi Lavalas and the Black Panther Party­
Community welcomes agreement to reexamine radiation risk at Hunters Point Shipyard
Richmond mayor took money from landlord PAC before he voted ‘no’ on eviction moratorium
God bless Charlotte: Clergy believe protester killed by police – UPDATED
An arrest is made in the quadruple homicide of young African-American sons in the Fillmore
Is the U.S. government dumping guns in the hood?

Culture Currents

Upcoming Events

 » Full event list and descriptions
October 17, 2016
Defiant Haiti Needs Our Solidarity… As the U.S. plots to steal yet another Haitian Election 6:00 pm Global Exchange, 2017 Mission St. near 16th Street BART, 2nd floor, San Francisco Information, discussion & community! Monday Night Forum!!

Occupy Forum is an ... more>>
October 18, 2016
Public Workshop on San Francisco Residential Refuse-Collection Rates 4:00 pm City Hall, Room 418, San Francisco Recology, the San Francisco refuse collection and processing company, has ... more>>
October 18, 2016
Community Tuesdays at Radio Africa & Kitchen -- dinner for $10 5:00 pm Radio Africa & Kitchen, 4800 Third St., San Francisco You’re invited to “break bread” with us in the ... more>>
October 18, 2016
Middle East Children's Alliance presents: Electronic Intifada Director Ali Abunimah 7:00 pm First Congregational Church of OAKLAND, 2501 Harrison St., Oakland COST: $10.00 - $100.00, sliding scale.

Ali Abunimah is a Palestinian-American journalist ... more>>

‘Already a Legend’: Soaking up game with young rap legend G-Val

Oct 14, 2016
G-Val

G-Val, born and raised in Bayview, is an artist who spits dope lyrics that young children in inner city communities, especially Bayview, can look up to. G-Val is not just an artist; he is a dream. His smile and positive attitude causes him to be loved by his community and communities nationwide. Check out what G-Val has to say about staying focused and committed to being successful and making it out the hood …

Troubled legacy: a review of Nate Parker’s ‘Birth of a Nation’

Oct 14, 2016
Nat Turner (Nate Parker) and his rebel force at the armory in Jerusalem face an armed militia.

Perhaps the reason why Nat Turner is almost completely buried within documented and oral histories is connected to the fear his rebellion caused in the Southampton and by extension the Southern antebellum community. Nate Parker’s “The Birth of a Nation” visits this story as Donald Trump draws a white male constituency very much in keeping philosophically with the angry mob who tear the flesh from the iconic Prophet Nat Turner’s body.

We don’t heel, we kneel!

Oct 12, 2016
This stunning mural honoring Colin Kaepernick recently appeared at 22nd and Telegraph in Oakland.

What Colin Kaepemick has done is not only courageous but long overdue. The game plan, henceforth, should be to turn that momentum into a nationwide movement. Yes, the best way to show solidarity and support for Colin Kaepemick is to emulate his heroic act. Stand for something bigger than “self.” You can accomplish this by taking a knee. Let’s see who has the heart, character and courage to kneel for change.

Wanda’s Picks for October 2016

Oct 10, 2016
To mark the 50th anniversary of the 1966 Hunters Point Uprising, Aliyah Dunn-Salahuddin (in the colorful dress), chair of the African American Studies Department at City College, who was born and raised in Hunters Point, organized two commemorative events. The second, exactly 50 years after the police murder of Matthew “Peanut” Johnson on Sept. 27, 1966, which sparked the uprising, included a march down Third Street, the main street in Bayview Hunters Point; here they are on the block where the Bay View lives. The intent of both events was to honor Peanut and all who have been lost over the past 50 years. – Photo: Katrina Williams

This Maafa Commemoration Month we continue to lift “A Love Supreme” as we organize a defense against state violence. Congratulations to Professor Aaliyah Dunn-Salahuddin, whose community vigil and program honored the lives of the Bayview Hunters Point revolutionaries killed 50 years ago when the community rose up after SFPD killed Matthew “Peanut” Johnson and more recently when the community turned out after SFPD killed Mario Woods.

First Tuesdays Spoken Word at Radio Africa Kitchen tonight: ‘Bringing Ideas to Life’

Oct 4, 2016
Come to Radio Africa Kitchen every first Tuesday and meet Karwanna Dyson and Terrell Irving, founders of Big Mouth Productions. Talk with them about what they can do to promote your business or project to boost its success.

Big Mouth Productions is presenting a cultural event for everyone in the community to come together and have a pleasurable time. A recent First Tuesdays Spoken Word event I attended was filled with an abundance of positive energy and great people. The event takes place this evening and every first Tuesday of the month at 7:30 p.m. at the Radio Africa Kitchen restaurant, located on the corner of Third and Oakdale in the heart of Bayview Hunters Point.

‘Kicks,’ debut film by East Bay native Justin Tipping
Nathaniel Mason Jr., pillar of the community
#7: Seventh Son
Dameion Brown is Othello in Marin Shakespeare Company production
Original Good in East Palo Alto
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