December 22, 2024

Idavox Archives

Archived articles originally found on the One People's Project website.

AMIRI BARAKA, REST IN POWER!

Amiri BarakaA literary titan and a true son of Newark has gone to the ancestors. We are proud to have known him.

NJ.com

Amiri Baraka, the longtime activist and former poet laureate of New Jersey died today, officials confirmed. He was 79 years old.

Baraka was placed in intensive care at Beth Israel Medical Center last month for an unknown reason, but a spokesman for his son’s mayoral campaign said his condition was improving late in December.

Newark Mayor Luis Quintana said Baraka will be sorely missed.

“I went to visit him at the hospital about two weeks ago,” Quintana said by phone. “He was more than poet he was a leader in his own right. He’s going to be missed and our condolences go out to his family today.”

Quintana recalled Baraka’s role in the 1969 Black and Puerto Rican convention, a landmark political meeting that resulted in the election of Ken Gibson, Newark’s first black mayor.

“We’re going to remember him always for his contributions to Newark, New Jersey and America,” Quintana said. “In this time of pain, the citizens of Newark and I are with him.”

Baraka had long struggled with diabetes, but it was not immediately clear what the cause of death was.

A Newark native and resident formerly known as Leroi Jones, Amiri Baraka has published dozens of poems, essays and works of non-fiction. In 1963 Amiri Baraka wrote “Blues People,” an in-depth history of music from the time of slavery throughout the various incarnations of blues and jazz, with integrated social commentary. The book’s 50th anniversary was recently celebrated during an event at the New Jersey Performing Arts Center.

In 1964, Baraka published the book of poetry, “Dead Lecturer” that marked a significant transition in his career. Also written under the name Leroi Jones, the book featured more traditional poems but also laid the groundwork for the more radical, experimental work that would come to define his later career.

“He was able to put music into the work, even reading the work,” said Maria Maziotti Gillan, a poet and the director of the Poetry Center at Passaic County Community College. “Mostly he was able to capture an audience when he spoke. He was a able to capture an audience through his poetry but also through what he had to say.”

Kenneth Gibson, Newwark’s first African American mayor said Baraka was the spiritual leader that helped enfranchise Newark’s black and Hispanic community in the city’s

“He was really a man ahead of his time in many ways,” Gibson said by phone. “He was a spiritual leader of the group that we put together to develop the black and Puerto Rican convention.”

Gibson and Baraka were close allies when Gibson was elected mayor in 1970 but Gibson said governance was not something Baraka took to easily.

“He was much more artistic than political and that was his nature,” Gibson said. “But I never lost respect for him and he never lost respect for me.”

Gibson said despite his outspoken nature, Baraka “kept a lot of things internal,” but added, “He was a visionary. A visionary is sometimes misunderstood and sometimes they are understood, but he was in a class by himself.”

Baraka was the state’s second poet laureate for a short time in 2002 and 2003.

In 2002, Gov. James E. McGreevey called for Baraka’s resignation as New Jersey’s Poet Laureate after a Jewish group condemned “Somebody Blew Up America.” The poem, written shortly after 9/11, included a passage claiming thousands of Israelis knew there was going to be an attack and stayed home from work — an Internet rumor not based in fact.

In typical fashion, Baraka defended his free speech and wrote an essay entitled, “I will not apologize, I will not resign.”

Newark City Council President Mildred Crump, a longtime friend of the Baraka family, said the world lost one of its pre-eminent literary figures today.

“Not only has New Jersey, but the United States of America, has lost a great human being. He was a legend in his own lifetime,” Crump said. “It is such a loss, such a great loss.”

Crump said Baraka’s condition had been improving, and he was breathing on his own when she last visited him on Sunday. The Baraka family has been lining Beth Israel Medical Center for weeks, according to Crump.

“He fought a good fight. I was there the first night he went into the hospital,” Crump said. “I was there when he was breathing on his own, I was there Sunday.”

Crump said her first association with Baraka came in the 1970s, when he led the charge to build Kawaida Towers, a planned 100-acre housing project that was meant to embody the Black Power movement that Amiri had long been a champion of.

“That’s when he became my hero,” Crump said.

Burning a Confederate Rag

Shot by Daryle Lamont Jenkins, This took place on June 17, 2000 in Newark, NJ, and was organized by People’s Organization for Progress. About 50 people participated in the rally, including poet Amiri Baraka (who at one point brings a “Trash Can of History” over to the rag to place it in after it is burned) and some people later identified to be members of the Klan watched from a car in a parking lot across the street. They never got out their car.

This was in response to the then-controversy of South Carolina’s flying of the Confederate Rag atop of their statehouse dome. Other Southern States that had, like South Carolina, flown the flag in protest of the Civil Rights Act, had since brought them down. South Carolina refused to do so, launching a boycott of the state. In July 2000, two weeks after this video was shot, the flag was finally taken down amid pressure.

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