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In a message dated 14/06/01 17:33:22 Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

<< To All African (Black, African American, New Afrikan, Continental,
 Caribbean, Latino, etc.) Student Organizations and Leaders/Organizers
 
 PLEASE FORWARD THIS EMAIL!
 
 29 June marks the 60th birthday of Kwame Ture, formerly known as Stokley
 Carmichael.  You perhaps have heard of him and his work with the Nonviolent
 Action Group (NAG) at Howard University, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating
 Committee (SNCC), the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party (MFDP), the
 Lowndes County Freedom Organization (LCFO), the Black Panther Party (BPP),
 the Democratic Party of Guinea (PDG), the All-African People's Revolutionary
 Party (A-APRP), and a host of other movements and organizations in Africa,
 the African Diaspora and the world.
 
 For four decades, Kwame inspired, mentored and organized progressive and
 revolutionary students in every corner of Africa, the African Diaspora and
 the world.  He challenged them to work, study and struggle on behalf of
 African and all Oppressed Peoples; and to organize, organize, organize!  He
 made his transition to the ranks of the Ancestors on 15 November 1998 in
 Conakry, Guinea, his beloved homeland.
 
 On the occasion of Kwame's 60th birthday, the Kwame Ture Work-Study
 Institute and Library, the Alliance for Global Justice, the Black United
 Fund of Illinois and the National Black United Front invites all African
 Student organizations and leaders/organizers to attend a meeting from 29-30
 June 2001 at Bowie State University in Bowie, MD.  The purpose of this
 historic meeting is to provide African student leaders/organizers from every
 corner of Africa and the African Diaspora an opportunity to meet each other,
 to discuss how to build a militant and massive All-African student movement
 for the 21st century, and to plan an All-African Student Conference to be
 held in 16-18 November 2001.
 
 The tentative/suggested agenda includes:
 
 (a) Brief Welcome and Acknowledgement of Messages and Solidarity Statements.
 
 (b) MicroSoft Powerpoint Presentation titled:  "Did You Hear the Thunder? A
 Brief History of the Worldwide African Student Movement - 1900 to the
 Present."
 
 (c) Discussion about the issues and concerns that affect African people in
 every corner of Africa and the African Diaspora, and what African students
 must do to help address/resolve them.
 
 (d) Brief reports on the movement to free political prisoners and prisoners
 of war the struggles: to break the embargoes and travel bans against Cuba
 and Libya; to build the Student Sweat Shop Campaign and the Movement Against
 Environmental Racism; to demand Global Justice and to help build the
 demonstrations that are planned for 29-30 September 2001 against the
 military-police-prison-industrial complex, the World Bank, IMF and WTO; to
 free all political prisoners and prisoners of war in United States and South
 African jails; to help the Zimbabwean, Azanian (South African), Palestinian,
 Indigenous, Dalit, Irish, and all Oppressed Peoples return to and reclaim
 their land; to stop the "Drug War" and dismantle the prison industrial
 complex; to stop the US military exercises on Vieques Island in Puerto Rico;
 and other on-going actions and struggles.
 
 (e) Discussion about the role that African students can and must play in the
 struggle: (1) to demand that the transatlantic slave-trade, slavery,
 colonialism, settler-colonialism, segregation, apartheid and neo-colonialism
 be declared crimes against humanity without statue of limitations; (2) to
 demand that racism, racial discrimination, caste-based discrimination,
 gender-based discrimination, and related intolerance be declared gross
 violations of human rights; and (3) to demand that reparations and
 compensation be paid to the victims of these crimes against humanity and
 human rights violations, and to their descendants, collectively and
 individually.
 
 (f) Report on the 3rd UN World Conference against Racism (WCAR) that will be
 held in Durban, South Africa from 31 August to 7 September 2001, and the
 efforts to build an International Day of Action Against Racism (IDAAR 2001)
 on 31 August 2001.  Discussion about how students can participate in the
 Youth Summit in Durban, and how they can help build IDAAR 2001 on their
 campus.
 
 (g) Discussion about how best to organize an All-African student movement
 for the 21st century, and how to organize an All-African Student Conference
 on 16-18 November 2001.
 
 (h) Discussion of other agenda items and concerns.
 
 This historic Planning Meeting starts at 5:00 p.m. on 29 June 2001 and ends
 at 5:00 p.m. on Saturday, 30 June 2001.  All African students (Black,
 African American, New Afrikan, Continental, Caribbean, Latino, etc.), with a
 valid college ID, are invited to attend and participate.  Non-student and
 non-African organizations  and leaders/organizers are asked to enable and
 empower African students to attend and participate in this Planning Meeting;
 and to send messages of solidarity and support.  You can send your messages
 to  [EMAIL PROTECTED] .
 
 Registration is $50 per student, which covers overnight accommodations in
 the dormitory (two persons to a room) and four meals (dinner on Friday, and
 breakfast, lunch and dinner on Saturday). All students must register and
 confirm their attendance in advance (no later than 24 June 2001), in order
 to reserve housing and food.  The Registration Fee will be collected at the
 door.  To register, please email us your name, organization, address,
 telephone number, fax number, cell number and email address at
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]  We will send you a confirmation reply, and
 further information about the Planning Meeting, including the address for
 the PLanning Meeting.
 
 Students must provide their own transportation to and from Bowie, Maryland,
 which is 20 miles from Washington, DC.  The MARC train stops at Bowie State
 University, but does not run on Saturday.  It costs $7.50 round trip from
 DC.
 
 African Students are the Spark of the African Revolution.  Light the Fire!
 See you at 5:00 p.m. at Bowie State University on 29 June 2001.
 
 PLEASE FORWARD THIS EMAIL!
 
 Thank you!
 <<Bob Brown>>
 Bob Brown
 Director
 Kwame Ture Work-Study Institute and Library
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] - email
 (773) 377-5001 x7053 - voicemail/fax
 
  >>




______________________________________________________________________
To unsubscribe, write to [EMAIL PROTECTED]


To All African (Black, African American, New Afrikan, Continental,
Caribbean, Latino, etc.) Student Organizations and Leaders/Organizers

PLEASE FORWARD THIS EMAIL!

29 June marks the 60th birthday of Kwame Ture, formerly known as Stokley
Carmichael.  You perhaps have heard of him and his work with the Nonviolent
Action Group (NAG) at Howard University, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating
Committee (SNCC), the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party (MFDP), the
Lowndes County Freedom Organization (LCFO), the Black Panther Party (BPP),
the Democratic Party of Guinea (PDG), the All-African People's Revolutionary
Party (A-APRP), and a host of other movements and organizations in Africa,
the African Diaspora and the world.

For four decades, Kwame inspired, mentored and organized progressive and
revolutionary students in every corner of Africa, the African Diaspora and
the world.  He challenged them to work, study and struggle on behalf of
African and all Oppressed Peoples; and to organize, organize, organize!  He
made his transition to the ranks of the Ancestors on 15 November 1998 in
Conakry, Guinea, his beloved homeland.

On the occasion of Kwame's 60th birthday, the Kwame Ture Work-Study
Institute and Library, the Alliance for Global Justice, the Black United
Fund of Illinois and the National Black United Front invites all African
Student organizations and leaders/organizers to attend a meeting from 29-30
June 2001 at Bowie State University in Bowie, MD.  The purpose of this
historic meeting is to provide African student leaders/organizers from every
corner of Africa and the African Diaspora an opportunity to meet each other,
to discuss how to build a militant and massive All-African student movement
for the 21st century, and to plan an All-African Student Conference to be
held in 16-18 November 2001.

The tentative/suggested agenda includes:

(a) Brief Welcome and Acknowledgement of Messages and Solidarity Statements.

(b) MicroSoft Powerpoint Presentation titled:  "Did You Hear the Thunder? A
Brief History of the Worldwide African Student Movement - 1900 to the
Present."

(c) Discussion about the issues and concerns that affect African people in
every corner of Africa and the African Diaspora, and what African students
must do to help address/resolve them.

(d) Brief reports on the movement to free political prisoners and prisoners
of war the struggles: to break the embargoes and travel bans against Cuba
and Libya; to build the Student Sweat Shop Campaign and the Movement Against
Environmental Racism; to demand Global Justice and to help build the
demonstrations that are planned for 29-30 September 2001 against the
military-police-prison-industrial complex, the World Bank, IMF and WTO; to
free all political prisoners and prisoners of war in United States and South
African jails; to help the Zimbabwean, Azanian (South African), Palestinian,
Indigenous, Dalit, Irish, and all Oppressed Peoples return to and reclaim
their land; to stop the "Drug War" and dismantle the prison industrial
complex; to stop the US military exercises on Vieques Island in Puerto Rico;
and other on-going actions and struggles.

(e) Discussion about the role that African students can and must play in the
struggle: (1) to demand that the transatlantic slave-trade, slavery,
colonialism, settler-colonialism, segregation, apartheid and neo-colonialism
be declared crimes against humanity without statue of limitations; (2) to
demand that racism, racial discrimination, caste-based discrimination,
gender-based discrimination, and related intolerance be declared gross
violations of human rights; and (3) to demand that reparations and
compensation be paid to the victims of these crimes against humanity and
human rights violations, and to their descendants, collectively and
individually.

(f) Report on the 3rd UN World Conference against Racism (WCAR) that will be
held in Durban, South Africa from 31 August to 7 September 2001, and the
efforts to build an International Day of Action Against Racism (IDAAR 2001)
on 31 August 2001.  Discussion about how students can participate in the
Youth Summit in Durban, and how they can help build IDAAR 2001 on their
campus.

(g) Discussion about how best to organize an All-African student movement
for the 21st century, and how to organize an All-African Student Conference
on 16-18 November 2001.

(h) Discussion of other agenda items and concerns.

This historic Planning Meeting starts at 5:00 p.m. on 29 June 2001 and ends
at 5:00 p.m. on Saturday, 30 June 2001.  All African students (Black,
African American, New Afrikan, Continental, Caribbean, Latino, etc.), with a
valid college ID, are invited to attend and participate.  Non-student and
non-African organizations  and leaders/organizers are asked to enable and
empower African students to attend and participate in this Planning Meeting;
and to send messages of solidarity and support.  You can send your messages
to  [EMAIL PROTECTED] .

Registration is $50 per student, which covers overnight accommodations in
the dormitory (two persons to a room) and four meals (dinner on Friday, and
breakfast, lunch and dinner on Saturday). All students must register and
confirm their attendance in advance (no later than 24 June 2001), in order
to reserve housing and food.  The Registration Fee will be collected at the
door.  To register, please email us your name, organization, address,
telephone number, fax number, cell number and email address at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]  We will send you a confirmation reply, and
further information about the Planning Meeting, including the address for
the PLanning Meeting.

Students must provide their own transportation to and from Bowie, Maryland,
which is 20 miles from Washington, DC.  The MARC train stops at Bowie State
University, but does not run on Saturday.  It costs $7.50 round trip from
DC.

African Students are the Spark of the African Revolution.  Light the Fire!
See you at 5:00 p.m. at Bowie State University on 29 June 2001.

PLEASE FORWARD THIS EMAIL!

Thank you!
<<Bob Brown>>
Bob Brown
Director
Kwame Ture Work-Study Institute and Library
[EMAIL PROTECTED] - email
(773) 377-5001 x7053 - voicemail/fax



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