Black Power Talks
Speeches and interviews with leaders of today’s worldwide African liberation struggle. On reparations, building the African nation, combatting police violence, community control of education, health care, African women, the U.S. counterinsurgency, neocolonialism and winning freedom and independence for African people everywhere. Featuring African People’s Socialist Party Chairman Omali Yeshitela, Luwezi Kinshasa, Dr. Aisha Fields, Kalambayi Andenet, Akilé Anai, Yejide Orunmila and more.
Episodes
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Thursday Apr 16, 2020
The People’s War Radio Show, Episode 3 “Support our brothers and sisters in prison”
Thursday Apr 16, 2020
Thursday Apr 16, 2020
Reverend Edward Pinkney is featured on this third episode of WBPU FM’s new weekly radio program covering the coronavirus pandemic from the perspective of the African working class worldwide.
Rev. Pinkney is a longtime leader of the Black Autonomy Network Community Organization, working for economic and social justice in Benton Harbor, MI, a 90% African city located between Detroit and Chicago.
Rev. Pinkney has a history of fighting parasitic capitalism in defense of the human and civil rights of the working class people in cities throughout Michigan, taking on the water shutoffs and emergency manager laws that eliminate democracy and turn public assets like water over to the corporations.
He is a strong and active advocate for the release of prisoners serving unjust or inordinately long sentences.
On this show Rev. Pinkney discussed the health emergency facing prisoners across the U.S., drawing on his personal experience and personal connections inside the prison system.
He discusses the impact of the coronavirus on the African populations of Detroit, Flint and throughout the state of Michigan.
He also shares his views on the impact of corporate take-overs and gentrification of long-time African cities like Detroit and calls for the development of African-owned and controlled businesses and neighborhoods.
Hosted by Ticharwa Masimba and Matop Nyungu, the People’s War Radio Show features guests covering all aspects of the current crisis - providing health and medical tips and resources, economic survival information, analysis of the political and international impact, how to prepare for the future and organize for community self-reliance and self-help.
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Thursday Apr 09, 2020
Thursday Apr 09, 2020
African People’s Socialist Party Chairman Omali Yeshitela is the guest on this second episode of WBPU FM’s new weekly radio program covering the coronavirus pandemic from the perspective of the African working class worldwide.
Over the past five decades, Chairman Omali has initiated campaigns to defend the democratic rights of the African community, to organize and raise up African women, to mobilize opposition to U.S. wars and to popularize the demand for reparations to African people.
He’s built the worldwide Uhuru Movement and the African Socialist International with branches in the U.S., Europe, the Caribbean and on the continent of Africa.
In this episode of the People’s War Radio Show, Chairman Omali explains the roots of the alarming rates of African deaths from COVID-19, exposes the corporate agenda for profiting from the virus and describes the work of Project Black Ankh in providing African-controlled emergency relief services.
Hosted by Ticharwa Masimba and Matop Nyungu, the People’s War Radio Show features guests covering all aspects of the current crisis - providing health and medical tips and resources, economic survival information, analysis of the political and international impact, how to prepare for the future and organize for community self-reliance and self-help.
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Saturday Apr 04, 2020
The People’s War Radio Show - Episode 1 "What you need to know about COVID-19"
Saturday Apr 04, 2020
Saturday Apr 04, 2020
WBPU FM radio, “Black Power 96.3 FM” has launched a weekly radio program to cover the coronavirus pandemic from the perspective of the African working class worldwide.
The People’s War Radio Show features guests covering all aspects of the current crisis - providing health and medical tips and resources, economic survival information, analysis of the political and international impact, how to prepare for the future and organize for community self-reliance and self-help.
This first episode features guest Dr. Aisha Fields who discusses the anticipated impact of the coronavirus on the African community, dispels the myth that black people are immune and offers practical tips for protection against infection and building one’s immune system.
Dr. Fields is a physicist who has dedicated her skills for the development and empowerment of African people. She is the International Director of the All African People’s Development and Empowerment Project (AAPDEP), a non-profit organization whose mission is to “collectivize the vast skills of Africans around the world in order to establish community based development projects that improve the quality of life for African people everywhere while promoting self-reliance and self-determination as key to genuine, sustainable development.”
AAPDEP has organized renewable energy, water purification, farming, healthcare and ecological sanitation projects in West and Southern Africa, and community gardens in Washington, D.C.; Houston, Texas and Huntsville, Alabama. AAPDEP’s “Project Black Ankh,” a worldwide African emergency response organization, is currently mobilizing volunteers to conduct health education and community support efforts to combat COVID-19. Project Black Ankh was initiated during the Ebola crisis in Sierra Leone and was employed to assist Africans trapped in flood waters in Houston during Hurricane Harvey where emergency aid was denied to the black community.
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Wednesday Jan 15, 2020
Turn imperialist wars into wars against imperialism!
Wednesday Jan 15, 2020
Wednesday Jan 15, 2020
Opening remarks by Chairman Omali Yeshitela to the 10th annual conference of the Black is Back Coalition for Social Justice, Peace and Reparations, held November 3, 2019 in Washington, D.C.
The Black is Back Coalition (BIBC) is an activist organization that organized for self determination for African people with working groups on healthcare, police brutality and political prisoners.
It emerged during the first term of U.S. president Barack Obama in an effort to give voice to black community demands and interest.
The Coalition has held Electoral Schools in various cities to train community members to field candidates who can advance a "National Black Political Agenda for Self-Determination."
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Saturday Jun 29, 2019
Reparations Now! The Study has been done!
Saturday Jun 29, 2019
Saturday Jun 29, 2019
Today the demand for reparations is being debated on the streets of the U.S., in the media, in Congress and by U.S. presidential candidates. How did reparations become a household word? The demand for reparations to African people goes back to the days of slavery and has long been advocated by historians and activists. In 1982 the African People’s Socialist Party (APSP) organized and conducted a World Tribunal on Reparations for Black People. Since then, the APSP and the Uhuru (Freedom) Movement have held 11 more Tribunals in cities across the country gathering evidence and testimony to support the Reparations claim. They have taken to the streets in protest marches demanding reparations. They have built non-profit businesses and political campaigns winning voluntary reparations contributed from individual white community members.
Burning Spear Media has just re-released this 30-minute radio documentary that was produced on the 1982 Reparations Tribunal, shortly after it was held in NYC. It features excerpts from statements by the People's Advocate Chairman Omali Yeshitela, and moving testimony from Afeni Shakur, member of the NYC Panther 21 and mother of the rapper Tupac; Leonard Jeffries, a former professor of Black Studies at the City College of New York; Mafundi Lake, former political prisoner held in Alabama’s notorious Atmore-Holman prison; Job Mashariki, Black Veterans for Social Justice; Akil Al-Jundi, prisoner advocate and survivor of the 1971 Attica massacre; Professor Del Hunter, Medgar Evars College and Ebun Adelona, black community health care advocate
For more information and additional material on the reparations issue, contact Burning Spear Media at 727-824-5700 or visit theburningspear.com.