Posts tagged Take a Knee Take a Stand
Shhh... A Surprise Gathering for Harry Belafonte

Join Me & The Gathering for Justice to Celebrate the 94th Birthday of the Iconic Harry Belafonte

Hosted by Tiffany Haddish& Charlamagne the God, and Benefiting The Gathering for Justice,
the Night Features Performances & Words by Common, Aloe Blacc, Tamika Mallory, Bernie Sanders, Chuck D., Danny Glover and Many More

I first met Harry Belafonte in the Spring of 2016, through our mutual friend and general A+ connector, freedom-fighter, and Broadway aficionado Ira Gilbert. Knowing I had produced and directed a string of events and commercials benefiting mostly non-profits, Ira wanted to get my thoughts on what Harry was starting to put together: a festival to get out the vote, encouraging people to stand up for justice, somehow seeing what was on the horizon unlike many of us truly did in the months leading up to the 2016 Presidential Election (does that require a trigger warning?) .

Harry had a great idea, and the gravitas to pull it off. Some people today are only familiar with Mr. B, as Harry is known to many, as the guy who sang Day-O. Here’s a short list of what some people don’t know, but really will benefit from knowing:

  • Harry is one of a few people to have the coveted EGOT, winning an Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony

  • He was one of the major funders of the civli rights movement

  • He was one of the first Black American performers to touch a white woman performer, which caused quite a stir in the early 1960’s

  • He was responsible for brokering the relationship between Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Bobby Kennedy

  • And in fact, he was one of the people responsible for much of the progress the civil rights movement saw in the 1960’s

  • He’s worked to heal conflicts globally ever since, from poverty to AIDS

  • He’s a REALLY. COOL. GUY.

Ira, Me, Harry

Ira brought me to my first meeting with Harry and his wife Pam, a smart, striking photographer, at one of the trios’ favorite restaurants in the Upper West Side. I had prepared a deck that encapsulated what was then called “STIR IT UP”. I was treated to stories, laughs, and an education, all over the course of a two-and-a-half-hour dinner. Harry, Pam & Ira liked what I had to offer, and we got started on producing the festival that eventually became Many Rivers to Cross. My role ultimately scaled down when other teams came on board, but I still got a chance to play a part in what was in many ways an incredible experience, and what could have been, in other ways, even better.

One of my favorite memories of this time was sitting in Pam & Harry’s living room, along with Susanne Rostock, a dear friend who is the editor-extraordinaire of Harry’s biopic “Sing Your Song”, and Brian Satz, Harry’s friend and music-coordinator/star-connector, going over music that was going to be in the show. At one point, either Brian or I introduced Harry to Spotify; Harry was treated to an AI-induced trip down memory lane, and we were treated to a solo concert from one of the greatest voices of all time.

So when Ira hit me up to let me know about the plans that Carmen Perez-Jordan had for this year’s birthday celebration, I jumped into the mix. I gotta say, it’s going to be incredible. The lineup is great, but the cause - the night benefits the Gathering for Justice, the org that Harry started in the early 2000’s and that Carmen has been leading since it’s inception - is so truly Harry Belafonte, in my humble opinion.

The team at the Gathering, The Justice League (the rapid response offshoot of the org), and the parties involved are all super professional and super CHILL. It’s evident this group is creating magic, and being witness to it, along with the conversations with icons of the movement like Danny Glover, Dr. Bernard LaFayette, Nane Alejandrez, Gus Newport and more are nothing short of awe-inspiring.

The Gathering for Justice started as The Gathering for the Elders in Epps Alabama in 2005. The first Gathering took place in Epps Alabama, when Harry gathered together the elders, met some resistance from the youth, and ultimately culminated in the birth of The Gathering for Justice, the incubator for movements like The Women's March, Free Meek Mill, The March for Our Lives Tour Across America, and many many of the movements that have helped catapult our country back to the front of the fight for Civil Rights for ALL. That first event and those since included those named above and many more. One of the most iconic moments from that first gathering is when Ruby Dee got up, demanding into the microphone

"Over the years I've come to places like this so, many, times. And I leave without an assignment! We need an assignment!"

long-since part of the battle cry to continually take action.

The next Gathering, the one happening this Sunday, February 28th, 2021, will be unlike those previous; a world entrenched in an epidemic where, once again, communities of color are disproportionately left to bear the brunt of brutality; a world that continues to uprise against oppression because there are still too many injustices to fight; a world that is on the tipping point of great and radical change, or, scarily, the polar opposite. This will also include many of the new change-makers in front-line-activism, entertainment and sports.

So join me in celebrating Harry Belafonte, a man who is credited with being one of the major reasons the civil rights movement of the 1960’s had the impact it did, and the organization he founded to create and fulfill the agenda of sustaining justice for all.

THIS LINEUPPPPPP….

ME + Activism: Then, Now & Moving Forward

A Brief Overview of What This Section of My Site Entails

I grew up within a family of outspoken and justice-fighting love, from picketing in front of our church, to working with Habitat for Humanity,  to learning about the horrors of domestic violence from my mother, who was an activist in that world. The value of fighting for others was instilled in me from birth. As a matter of fact, I’m pretty sure my mom was picketing with the teachers union when I was in utero. 

My work over the past twenty years has been no different. It’s included creating staged arts projects to combat homelessness, meth-addiction, and racism, to working with Civil Rights Icons to create large-scale music festivals.

It has been global, working to free villages in India from slavery and to provide an education for the kids in those villages, as well as close-to-home, fostering, and soon adopting my own children from the foster-care system.

As I continue to work in wellness, I’m more focused than ever on creating change in the world. While I’ll continue to share #getrealgood Meditations, Parenting, News & Food, I’m excited to add to my work by amplifying Black and ally-voices in the movement, celebrate activists who are creating change and expand this website and my work into leaning-in to learning, growing, and continuing a journey of activism and anti-racism.

TAKE A KNEE | TAKE A STAND

An act of Solidarity | The actions to Support It

BLACK LIVES MATTER.

If you disagree with that statement, please let me know, and I will make it take time to have a conversation with you as to why that statement is true, now, always.

YOU CAN TEXT ME AT (310) 359-0438

I’d love to take a few moments to help you understand how I, as a white man of privilege, have learned to understand the vital importance of ending racism, ending police brutality, getting justice for the - and preventing yet another - murder of Black Americans and LatinX Americans and immigrants living in this country. And I’d be grateful to help you start on your journey of growing into anti-racism.

In an effort to help White and Non-Black POC better understand the oppression felt by and the fight led by Black, Indigenous Persons of Color (BIPOC), and in light of recent amplification of 401 years of systemic racism, white supremacy, and murder, a group of us have created the portal/platform TAKE A KNEE | TAKE A STAND.

Endorsed by The Gathering for Justice, and built with guidance from Black voices both in and out of the movement, the site encourages people to #TakeAKnee - reflecting in solidarity to honor Black voices and to remember the lives of those lost to racism and police brutality, and #TakeAStand, getting into action to make daily efforts to end racism, police brutality, and violence & bias.

#TakeAStand is how we provide visitors to the platform the opportunity to get into action, categorizing the plethora of actions, organizations, literature, podcasts, articles and opportunities to create change from the leaders in large-scale and grassroots Black-led and Ally-led organizations. From The Gathering for Justice, Black Lives Matter and Until Freedom, Tamika Mallory’s organization, to The Okra Project for the Black Trans Community to books by Ibram X. Kendi and Jennifer L. Eberhardt, we believe this portal is a great start to a resource for people who want to take action, and perhaps don’t know where to turn.

Our social media campaign encourages people to reflect for 8:46 while taking a knee, in honor of George Floyd. Then take a picture of your action, posting it on Instagram, Facebook or Twitter, and comment or include the specific actions you’re taking to end racism, tagging @takeakneetakeastand, and including #TakeaKneeTakeaStand as a hashtag.

And because this is about the movement, not just the moment, and we’re in it for the marathon, not just the mile, we provide accountability in the form of text-message reminders, with daily or weekly reminders to take action to grow into anti-racism and demand change in your world and in the world. You can even challenge your friends to take part in your journey.

So please take a moment and take a look, then #TakeAKnee and #TakeAStand