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SEQUENCE:18326641
CREATED:20061016T203200Z
DESCRIPTION:Support the growing movement for black reparations by participating in 
 African People's Solidarity Day ( APSD ), a teach-in and fundraiser taking 
 place in five U.S. cities this autumn and on November 4th & 5th in the Bay 
 Area. \n\nCalling on white people to participate personally in making 
 reparations to Africa and African people, APSD events will raise funds to 
 benefit African-led development programs for renewable energy, rainwater 
 harvesting and water purification in West Africa and economic development 
 institutions in media and publishing throughout the African world. APSD 
 will also support the organizing work to unify African people towards one 
 united Africa without the colonial borders which have divided and exploited 
 the continent for hundreds of years. \nAfrican People’s Solidarity Day is 
 sponsored nationwide by the African People’s Solidarity Committee, 
 promoting white solidarity with black power and the black reparations 
 demand for nearly three decades.\n\nAPSD events in the Bay Area 11/4-11/5 
 will feature presentations by leaders, activists and authors 
 including:\n\nOmali Yeshitela, world-renowned leader, theoretician and 
 dynamic speaker, Chairman of the African People’s Socialist Party. Born 
 in the U.S., Yeshitela was a field organizer with the Student Non-Violent 
 Coordinating Committee (SNCC) during the Civil Rights Movement and went on 
 to found the Uhuru Movement, rebuilding the African liberation movement 
 after its military defeat at the hands of the U.S. government 
 counterinsurgency in the late 1960s. He is currently working to build the 
 African Socialist International to unite Africa into a single nation under 
 the leadership of the African working class and poor peasantry.\n\nLuwezi 
 Kinshasa, African Socialist International Coordinator exiled from 
 Congo.\n\nSbusiso Xaba, President of the Pan African Youth Congress of 
 Azania (South Africa), focused on organizing youth to end the colonial 
 legacy of illiteracy, poverty, disease and exploitation. Raised in rural, 
 poverty-stricken KwaZulu-Natal Province, Xaba has organized against land 
 evictions and led the student organization at the University of 
 Johannesburg, before earning degrees in Technology and Applied 
 Science.\n\nAisha Fields, Phd physicist coordinating the Uhuru Movement’s 
 renewable electricity and water purification projects in west Africa. In 
 2005, Fields served as a member of the American Physical Society’s U.S. 
 delegation to the World Conference on Physics & Sustainable Development. 
 She also serves on the Education Committee of the National Society of Black 
 Physicists and is a leading advocate for the development of sustainable 
 energy to serve the communities of Africa.\n\nRobert C. Smith, author of 
 The American Racial Divide and Professor of Political Science at San 
 Francisco State.\n\nPierre LaBossiere, Haitian activist, founder of the 
 Haitian Action Committee.\n\nPenny Hess, Chairwoman of the African 
 People’s Solidarity Committee. Responding to the call for white 
 solidarity from the African liberation movement, Hess has worked under the 
 leadership of the Uhuru (African freedom) Movement for 30 years, organizing 
 campaigns and building fundraising institutions in the white community to 
 support the African freedom struggle. A thorough researcher, she authored 
 the book, Overturning the Culture of Violence, documenting the development 
 of capitalism through slavery and genocide and revealing the role of white 
 workers in colonial exploitation. \n\nChildcare will be available on both 
 days. For more information, call 510.625.1106.\n\n\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2006/10/16/18320731.php
SUMMARY:African People's Solidarity Day
LOCATION:The Women's Building\n3543 18th St.\nSan Francisco, CA
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2006/10/16/18320731.php
DTSTART:20061105T180000Z
DTEND:20061106T010000Z
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