seen from Türkiye
seen from China

seen from South Africa
seen from China

seen from Russia

seen from Sweden
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Israel
seen from Brazil

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
"we [the Black Panther Party] realize that United States imperialism will not allow us to separate and live side- by-side with United States imperialism...Our central task is to overthrow the ruling circle, who will not permit self-determination to exist in the world....
Israel was created by Western imperialism and maintained by Western fire power. The Jewish people have a right to exist as long as they solely exist to down the reactionary expansionist Israeli Government. Our situation is similar in so many ways; we say, that morally perhaps, the Jewish people can make a case for separatism and a Zionist state based upon their religion for self-defense. We say, morally, perhaps we could accept this, but politically and strategically we know that it is incorrect."
-Huey Newton, chairman of the Black Panther Party, "On the Middle East: September 5, 1970," https://archive.org/stream/the-huey-p.-newton-reader/To%20die%20for%20the%20people_%20the%20writings%20of%20Huey%20P.%20Newton_djvu.txt
Betty Jenkins
Our final post for Women’s History Month 2017 comes again from Lorna Peterson, Emerita Associate Professor, University at Buffalo. The photo above was provided by family and printed on memorial service program and online obituaries; see The Oberlin News Tribune from Feb. 23 to Feb. 24, 2017 (accessed March 16, 2017)
Betty Jo Lanier Jenkins February 27, 1936 - November 11, 2016
Raised on Historically Black College and University campuses (HBCUs) as well as two years in Monrovia, Liberia by her professor and diplomat father and librarian mother, influenced by a Quaker education in Iowa, and educated at a Seven Sisters college and an Ivy League university both in New York City, Betty Jo Lanier Jenkins lived an outstanding librarian career that encompassed the transitions of the United States civil rights era.
With the enactment of civil rights legislation in the 1960s, the development of public policy to implement the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Voting Rights Act of 1965 was challenged by competing philosophies of integration versus black separatism within the black community. One response to that challenge was the establishment of a consortium and research institute of social scientists called MARC, Metropolitan Applied Research Center. Founded by psychologist Dr. Kenneth B. Clark, an aim of the institute was to provide a non-partisan forum for discussion between black and white politicians at city, state, and federal levels regarding the issues, policies and programs most relevant to the officials' constituents and communities. Central to the MARC institute and its work was the library, and the head of that library was Betty L. Jenkins. Building the collection and directing the library influenced Ms. Jenkins’s own research and publication output. Her contributions to understanding race relations in the United States, as well as in American librarianship, are unique and foundational.
Born February 27, 1936, in Harris County, Texas, to professor, college administrator, and diplomat Ralphael O’Hara Lanier and librarian Garriette Lucile Green(e) Lanier, Betty was raised on the campuses of Texas State University for Negroes (now Texas Southern University), Hampton Institute (currently Hampton University), and other HBCUs along with her younger sister, Patricia. The family lived in Monrovia Liberia from 1946-1948, where her father was U.S. Minister to Liberia.
Educated for high school at the Quaker Scattergood Friends School in West Branch, Iowa, she developed a lifelong respect for Quaker principles, although she did not become a member of the Religious Society of Friends. She began her first college year at Grinnell College in GrinnelI, Iowa, and then transferred to Barnard College in New York City, where she earned a BA degree in history. Following the baccalaureate degree, she entered and graduated from the MS program in Library Service at Columbia University and later earned a MA in American history from New York University.
As part of her duties at MARC and at the request of the Hastie Group, Betty Jenkins, along with Susan Phillis, compiled and published the annotated bibliography Black Separatism in 1976. The bibliography is organized by two parts. Part 1 concerns separatism vs. integration within a historical perspective, citing and annotating materials from 1760-1953 and then followed by the twenty years since Brown v Board of Education. Part 2 lists citations concerning the institutional and psychological dimensions regarding identity, education, politics, economics, and worship within the context of segregation and desegregation. Works that concern redressing racial inequities are also documented in Part 2 of the bibliography.
Betty Jenkins was a bibliographer and scholar librarian who published, presented, and created exhibits that documented the black experience in America. Works by Betty Jenkins include but are not limited by the following: • a bibliographical essay written with Donald Franklin Joyce, “Aiming to publish books within the purchasing power of a poor people”: Black-owned book publishing in the United States, 1817-1987,” Choice February 1989, vol. 26, pages 907-913; • solo authored and groundbreaking critical race biography of Ernestine Rose: “A white librarian in black Harlem,” Library Quarterly; July 1990, Vol. 60, pages 216-231; and • Kenneth B. Clark: A bibliography, MARC 1970, 69 pages.
With assistance from the City College of New York (CCNY) Libraries, these additional contributions by Betty Jenkins are identified: • CCNY issue of The Campus February 19, 1991: "Leading City College Black Faculty Discuss their Progress and Achievements at CCNY," which is based on an event partly organized by Betty Jenkins; • Principal Investigator for a National Endowment for the Humanities grant to host a conference and create conference proceedings for "We Wish to Plead our Own Cause": Black-Owned Book Publishing in the United States 1817-1987 held May 1988 at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture of NYPL; • One of the curators of the CCNY Libraries Cohen Library Atrium exhibit "Parallel Worlds: African Americans in Harlem and Paris in the 1920s" February-June 2001.
As well as working for various libraries in the CCNY system, Betty Jenkins also worked at Howard University. Through her careful scholarship of bibliography, mounting exhibits, and writing a librarian biography within a context of race conflict and cooperation, Betty L. Jenkins preserved and interpreted the history and lives of Americans, particularly black Americans.
References
I can’t identify with any form of Separatism in a political sense. I think the concept is abhorrent. Speaking personally, interaction with diverse groups of people has been critical to my self-development, understanding and appreciation of the world, and ability to interact with other people as individuals, and ultimately political separatism is incompatible with a global society (well my ideal of a global society anyway)
http://www.splcenter.org/get-informed/intelligence-files/ideology/black-separatist
You can be racist against white people, even the Southern Poverty Law Center says so.
can we bring back the black separatist movement cuz these crackers ain't getting it and I'm tired of they asses
"In a throwback to the J. Edgar Hoover-era COINTELPRO investigations targeting civil rights and anti-war activists, the FBI is now training its agents to be on the lookout for "Black Separatist" terrorists, according to FBI training materials released today by the ACLU. These new disclosures, obtained through Freedom of Information Act litigation, are the latest in a growing flood of FBI training materials that include factually flawed and biased information..."