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Ewuare Osayande

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Name
  
Ewuare Osayande


Role
  
Poet

Ewuare Osayande Ewuare Osayande author of Whose America MOONSTONE ARTS CENTER

Books
  
Blood luxury, Black Anti-Ballistic Missives

Osayande: Blessed are Black Lives - MLK 2017


Ewuare Xola Osayande is an African-American poet, political activist, author and lecturer. He is the founder of Talking Drum Communications, co-founder and director of POWER (People Organized Working to Eradicate Racism), and creator of Project ONUS: Redefining Black Manhood. He has written 14 books and given more than 500 lectures in locations ranging from prisons to Harvard University. Currently, he is Anti-Oppression Coordinator with Mennonite Central Committee.

Contents

Biography

Ewuare X. Osayande was born in Camden, New Jersey. He became a committed social justice activist and organizer while a student at Fairleigh Dickinson University. Following the 1990 fatal shooting of Phillip Pannell Jr., a 14-year-old African American shot by a white policeman in Teaneck, New Jersey, Osayande organized protests and raised awareness about racially motivated police brutality. For over a decade, he has continued to analyze American culture and to educate people of all races about the history and current reality of racism and other forms of oppression.

This work continues with POWER, an organization Osayande co-founded with Jacqui Simmons. POWER offers anti-racist workshops including "Resisting Racism I: Understanding Race/Racism," "Resisting Racism II: Self-Determination & Accountability," "People of Color Empowerment," and "Battle for the Ballot." These educational programs are all modeled upon the theories of anti-racist activist Wanda Lofton (1950–2002).

Early in Osayande's career as a writer, Gwendolyn Brooks met him, read his poetry, and encouraged him to keep writing, to self-promote, and to get published. As a result, Osayande founded Talking Drum Communications in order to publish his own books. He is a prolific author, having produced 14 books in 16 years. Osayande is still appreciated and supported by world-renowned authors in the African American canon: in 2007, Amiri Baraka wrote the introduction to Blood Luxury.

Achievements, awards and honors

  • (2006) Walt Whitman Arts Center's Vanguard Writer's Award
  • (2005) Keynote Speaker, The Damascus Road Anti-Racism Conference
  • (2005) Keynote Speaker, The Men Stopping Violence National Conference
  • (2004) Keynote Speaker, The Global Climate Control Conference at Harvard University
  • (2002–04) First Poet-in-Residence, African American Studies Program, Rutgers University
  • (2000–03) National Coordinator, Black Radical Congress "Education Not Incarceration" campaign
  • Publications

  • (2008). Misogyny & the Emcee: Sex, Race & Hip Hop
  • (2006). Art at War: Revolutionary Art Against Cultural Imperialism
  • (2005). Blood Luxury
  • (2005). Free the Land: Revisioning Environmentalism
  • (2004). Are White Christians Anti-Racist, or do They Just Want to be Forgiven
  • (2003). Black Anti-Ballistic Missives: Resisting War/Resisting Racism
  • (2001). 9/11: Riots in the Sky
  • (2001). Caught at the Crossroads Without a Map
  • (2000). Crucifixions in the Street: Race, Rap & Religion
  • (1999). So the Spoken Word Won't Be Broken: The Politics of the New Black Poetry
  • (1997). Gangsta Rap is Dead
  • (1996). Akoben: A Call to Action, Responding to the Ramifications of Racism in Black America
  • (1993). Kwanzaa: A Biblical Perspective (co-authored with J. E. Price)
  • (1992). Malcolm X: The Man or the Image
  • Poems and essays in other publications

  • (2007). Men Speak Out: Profeminist Views on Gender, Sex and Power
  • (2007). The Revolution Will Not Be Funded: Beyond the Non-Profit Industrial Complex
  • (2007). This Poem is Sponsored By: A Collection of Critical Poetry by Corporate Watch
  • (2007). What Lies Beneath: Katrina, Race and the State of the Nation
  • (2003). "War Is the Enemy of the Poor: King Spoke the Truth About War. We Must Do the Same Today." The Other Side January 1, 2003. Vol 39; Issue 1, p. 36 (3).
  • References

    Ewuare Osayande Wikipedia