Wednesday, December 30, 2015

Two Articles: Race, Injustice, Politics and Genocide


Pardon me Beloveds~

This will sting, as the physician says when he gives a shot. 

I've been trying so hard to make you smile and uplift your heart in the midst of such ongoing distress and pain....I feel that these two articles are worthy my diverting from that effort. And I do kiss the sting with a great music selection at the end from the reggae posse, Third World.

We must imagine and think beyond the appearance these articles portray so we can capture new possibilities to change the current physical reality in our communities and world. 

Whether we are moved to leave America, or remain within her boundaries, our own transformation is critical and mandatory. For America's headlines these days tell the story of a current and ongoing American policy with subsequent procedures which purposefully deny African-Americans of their right to the fullness of life. No matter what anyone else thinks or says, we know that wherever we choose to live, we are meant to be a part of a harmonious environment, be prosperous and to thrive and flourish.

Imagine if American judicial observers, philosophers, and academicians were looking outward, and observing the history, statistics and phenomenon which occur here daily, in another nation. They would surely declare that genocide against that targeted segment of the population was being waged there. 

I say, that genocide is being perpetrated by systemic unequal application of the law and the justice system resulting in criminal convictions and mass incarcerations of disproportionate numbers. It is further being enforced in the communities of U. S. cities by national law enforcement procedures of street execution, carried out by local police jurisdictions. This policy is protected by laws that allow murdering police officers to go free. (click this link How the Law Protects Police Who Kill )

The fight of descendants of Africans enslaved in America to enjoy citizenship equality has been the source of change which has deeply benefited this nation and brought American society closer to reflecting the words of it's illustrious Constitution. Our efforts to simply live fulfilling our potential, and creating space for our talents, genius and abilities to be expressed, has inspired millions over the globe to sing our song which declared our determination to 'Overcome'. 

Children of the First people of Earth, we have continuously been humanities' example of Nature's truest principles. Our very existence here today proves that we are Master Survivors demonstrating Nature's inherent impetus: which loves to live, is strong and when uninhibited will constantly move towards greater freedom and expressions of beauty and wholeness. We embody an unlimited Intelligence, which we can sense and which will always lead us to strive to be all that we are meant to be here on Earth.

In this time, dig deep Beloveds. Let your senses feel 'beneath the surface' for understanding. Seeing clearly is important to any success, so clarity about 'what is' at the heart of these matters is the first objective. Clarity arises when one takes time and practices being still, quiet and listening inwardly. 

The answers are within YOU. The means to transform self and situations are within your Heart's imagination. And as Third World sings to us....YOU'VE GOT THE POWER.

lovu,
Kendke
red highlighting is mine






Credit Oliver Munday

Tamir Rice of Cleveland would be alive today had he been a white 12-year-old playing with a toy gun in just about any middle-class neighborhood in the country on the afternoon of Nov. 22, 2014.

But Tamir, who was shot to death by a white police officer that day, had the misfortune of being black in a poor area of Cleveland, where the police have historically behaved as an occupying force that shoots first and asks questions later. To grow up black and male in such a place is to live a highly circumscribed life, hemmed in by forces that deny your humanity and conspire to kill you.

Those forces hovered over the proceedings on Monday when a grand jury declined to indict Officer Timothy Loehmann in the killing and Timothy McGinty, the Cuyahoga County prosecutor, explained why he had asked the grand jurors to not bring charges. Mr. McGinty described the events leading up to Tamir’s death as tragic series of errors and “miscommunications” that began when a 911 caller said a male who was “probably a juvenile” was waving a “probably fake” gun at people in a park.

The fact that those caveats never reached Officer Loehmann — who shot the child within seconds of arriving on the scene — was more than just an administrative misstep. It reflects an utter disregard for the lives of the city’s black residents. That disregard pervades every aspect of this case and begins with the fact that the department failed to even review Officer Loehmann’s work history before giving him the power of life and death over the citizens of Cleveland. Had the department done so, it would have found that Officer Loehmann had quit a suburban police department where he had showed a “dangerous loss of composure” during firearms training and was found to be emotionally unfit for the stress of the job.

Officer Loehmann joined a police department that itself had acquired a well-documented reputation for wanton violence and for shooting at people who posed no threat to the police or others. In a particularly striking event, documented by the Justice Department last year, officers mistook the sound of a car backfiring for a gunshot. They chased down and fired at the vehicle 137 times, killing two occupants who turned out to be unarmed.

The lengthy Justice Department report shows clearly why the black community viewed the Cleveland police as dangerous and profoundly out of control. In May, the Police Department entered an agreement with the Justice Department, enforceable by the courts, under which it is to adopt sweeping reforms.

The Police Department’s disregard for life was fully evident in the way the officers behaved after shooting Tamir. A surveillance video shows them standing by the child for four minutes without giving medical assistance, which was finally provided by an F.B.I. agent who happened to be in the neighborhood. Officer Frank Garmback, Officer Loehmann’s partner, nonetheless tackled the wounded boy’s 14-year-old sister as she tried to rush to his side. One can only imagine her suffering as she watched in handcuffs from the back seat of the squad car while her brother lay bleeding on the ground.

In addition to portraying the killing as a result of a tragic misunderstanding, prosecutors have also suggested the officer’s decision to kill Tamir was shaped by the fact that the surrounding neighborhood had a history of violence and that the boy appeared to be older than 12 because he was big for his age.

These arguments sidestep the history of violent, discriminatory police actions that led up to this boy’s death. They also have the reprehensible effect of shifting the responsibility for this death onto the shoulders of this very young victim.


I don't know much about this journalist, but he raises some real issues with the Obama Presidency, which I happen to agree with.

Obama’s Haunting Legacy

A two-term presidency spent on running away from Black America.


Credit: Jeff Glagowski - www.flickr.com

Takeaways

  • Barack Obama has spent much of his presidency running away from the fact that he is a black man.
  • Barack Obama: a two-term black president who did very little for people of his own color.
  • Obama’s election gave white America an ounce of comfort about its “liberalism.” But what has it given black America?
  • The U.S. political culture is great at celebrating “events” and crises, but very poor at tackling structural issues.
  • Obama will leave office knowing that LBJ did more for blacks than the first black man elected to the Oval Office.
Barack Obama has spent much of his presidency running away from the fact that he is a black man. Perhaps he did so because he genuinely believes the harmonious vision he preached at the 2004 convention. Perhaps he sought to assuage the fears of people bound to hate him either way.

Whatever the reason, it seems the last thing he wanted to become known for is that he would be the one President in recent memory who did something meaningful for young black men.

In fact, it could be said that Obama – the 2008 presidential campaign notwithstanding – has spent much of his time running away from African-American issues. He and his campaign handlers were afraid that it just wasn’t a “cool” issue that would sit well with most voters at election time.

Turning a Blind Eye

But even after he was reelected in 2012, his approach did not change. Meanwhile, African-Americans continued to experience the challenges facing many U.S. communities, especially young males, in a much more acute fashion.

Even if the sitting U.S. President finally felt liberated and were to tackle this particular topic now, it wouldn’t matter any longer. He is a “lame duck,” which is a nice term to say that his political influence is vanishing fast.

Unfortunately for Obama, the understandable rage especially of young black men has come to haunt him — yet again. This time, it wasn’t “just” in a suburb of St. Louis in the middle of the country. It happened in the city of Baltimore, the next largest city close by the U.S. capital.

The writing had been on the wall all along. Anybody who has ever driven through the destitute, blighted areas of large parts of downtown Baltimore in broad daylight had to wonder about this powder keg.

But rather than tackling the underlying issues head on, the president was busy running away from his race.

U.S. opinion leaders, whenever things flared up in the banlieues of Paris, have often reflexively claimed that France’s problems with its minority youths could not happen here in the United States.

Well, it has – and it just did again. True, the situation is not exactly comparable. In the French case, the frustration that boils over from time to time is largely that of the children of mid-20th century immigrants.

In contrast, in the U.S. case, it is the offspring of people that have been here for hundreds of years. Advantage: France.

Clinton Culpability

The Clinton family is slowly coming to terms with its own role and responsibility in the steady deterioration of the situation of young urban blacks. Bill Clinton’s policies in the 1990s pushed mass incarcerations, often even for petty crimes.

That may have conveniently curried favor with white “law and order” voters after the crisis years of the 1980s, but it did nothing to address the underlying problems, joblessness and lack of investment and training.

These incarceration policies also had the “benefit” of creating jobs in structurally weak rural areas (like Arkansas), where prison guards became about the only growth industry. (And, in a crueler twist, many states exploited a legal loophole allowing them to “employ” low-level convicts for a fraction of minimum wage, further hollowing out the local economies.)

Perversely, these policies also created true equality between black and white in one regard – about the same total number of prisoners are whites and blacks, even though the latter account for less than 13% of the overall population.
chart criminal justice system
Graphic Credit: Washington Post
America, anno 2015, thus finds itself near the end of the reign of a two-term Black president who did very little for people of his own color.

A Shallow Legacy

The stain on Barack Obama’s record historically will be that he used the race issue as an attribute to get elected – and then did his best to forget about it.

His recent remark about the events in Baltimore, referring to “thugs and criminals,” on the face of it is of course true on some level. Some of the black rage manifested itself in criminal acts. And he did question the police actions. But his words seem narrowly designed to show his indignation and pretty much leave it there.

In the end, this president is a perfect reflection of the mainstream media, à la CNN.

The media decamped into downtown Baltimore for a few days of breathless reporting (and may even try for a Pulitzer-garnering feature series), before the cavalcade simply marches on.

It always happens that way. The U.S. political culture is great at celebrating “events” and crises, but very poor at tackling structural issues. Not enough excitement in that – unless it translates into building out the national security state. That’s a profitable venture for many companies, generating lots of Congressional appropriations.

Urban crises, or so it seems, are thus good for bouts of media titillation, but not for any serious efforts to tackle them.

It is a true shame that Obama will leave office knowing that Lyndon B. Johnson, a white man from very conservative Texas did more for black people half a century ago than the much advertised first election of a black man to the Oval Office.

The latter event, often described as historic, was certainly good for Barack Obama. It also gave white America an ounce of comfort about its “liberalism.” But what about black America? Aside from pure symbolism, nothing much.


Sunday, December 20, 2015

Rest in Peace Dedan Gills

One of my dearest and oldest friends made his transition this morning. I dedicate this song to his eternal Spirit. His is a Life which has been so well lived. Loved by the full range of humanity, he was devoted to seeing the best in us. 

I'm not able to write about him right now...... Below I've included two blog posts that featured his poetry. Beyond that, I'll let Whitney's sweet voice, remind us about who we are to each other, in the circle of Love that surrounds us. 
lovu, Kendke


 This is for you Dedan~

Lyrics:
(Clap your hands y'all, it's alright...)
If tomorrow is judgment day (Sing Mommy)
And I'm standing on the front line
And the Lord asks me what I did with my life
I will say I spent it with you
If I wake up in World War III
I see destruction and poverty
And I feel like I want to go home
It's okay if you're coming with me
'Cause your love is my love
And my love is your love
It would take an eternity to break us
And the chains of Amistad couldn't hold us
'Cause your love is my love
And my love is your love
It would take an eternity to break us
And the chains of Amistad couldn't hold us
If I lose my fame and fortune
And I'm homeless on the street
And I'm sleeping in Grand Central Station
It's okay if you're sleeping with me
As the years they pass us by
We stay young through each other's eyes
And no matter how old we get
It's okay as long as I got you baby
'Cause your love is my love
And my love is your love
It would take an eternity to break us
And the chains of Amistad couldn't hold us
'Cause your love is my love
And my love is your love
It would take an eternity to break us
And the chains of Amistad couldn't hold us
If I should die this very day
Don't cry, 'cause on Earth we weren't meant to stay
And no matter what the people say
I'll be waiting for you after the judgment day
'Cause your love is my love
And my love is your love
It would take an eternity to break us
And the chains of Amistad couldn't hold us
'Cause your love is my love
And my love is your love
It would take an eternity to break us
And the chains of Amistad couldn't hold us


Wednesday, March 26, 2008


Spring Inspired

Mendocino, California in Spring

Today's blog features a poem by Dedan Gills. He writes that he was moved to write it after reading our blog last week, while he and his Beloved were on retreat. We're glad to've been a small part of his creative inspiration. But being an old friend, I also know, that his joy really springs forth, from the fact that Spring is his favorite time of the year.

You can truly feel it thru his words~
Kentke


Spring Bling - It's the Real Thing

By Dedan Gills










Sunshine rising
Morning bliss
Dew drops glistening
Gentle kiss
Golden flowers
Honey bees
Silent dawns
Singing trees
Song birds sing
Nature’s Grace
Thank You God
Sacred place.





Mendocino Coast




Sunday, April 11, 2010


If It's Spring, it's Time for Poetry by Dedan Gills


Long time friend Dedan Gills has been writing poetry for some time. In 2008 he brightened our blog with his poem welcoming the season of Spring, from the Northern California coast of his retreat home.

A lot of traveling, and the co-founding of Growing a Global Heart (http://growingaglobalheart.weebly.com/) with his wife Belvie Rooks meant that we didn't receive a Spring poem in 2009. However, fortunately for us, he didn't forget us this year.

Enjoy these two poems he's written celebrating Spring 2010. The first poem, was written as the season was just making it's appearance. Stirred by all that the season arouses within Life, the second poem reflects Dedan's primal response.

We sincerely thank Dedan, for sharing these with us. Do visit the website of Growing a Global Heart, and learn of the efforts to foster healing work in our world that the organization promotes.
Kentke




Spring



Born of the dark of winter’s gloom
To dazzle naked tree into bloom
To kiss the raindrops into morning dew
To change the old into life anew
To wake the urge of seasons desire
To warm the days with sun’s distant fire
Gentle winds the songbirds sing
Beautiful colors all shades of green
I dance in the shadows and joys of Spring
©Dedan Gills








SEASON EROTIQUE
From the dead of Winter’s gloom
Oh Spring my elusive beauty
You come to me cloaked in gossamer gowns of flowing pink and white blossoms swirling in the exuberant winds of March
Shaking loose the pedals of my desire revealing your succulent and nubile nipples swollen with the eager craving
To touch the blissful throb of my rising joy once more.

Bejeweled in the dazzling radiance of morning dew
As swift as the robin’s wing
And sudden as the gentle kiss from the lips of Aprils breeze
You arrive to stun my longing heart with your season’s desire.

The lone wolf howls its solemn cry in the glow of the pale of the May moon rise
As you spread the thighs of your splendor ravishing my very soul with dancing flames of passion and gentle
sighs of raging fire.

Climaxed by the searing heat of summer
That once again has come to steal the mystic beauty of my ephemeral love away
I weep my annual song of sadness in the shadow of Autumn’s languid days
As the harvest of my deferred dreams of you dissipate into the bleak wisdom of Winter’s sonorous and frosty snore.

With each dark day my heart goes yearning with thoughts of you Once more returning
As the years pass by the winds grow colder
My bones now weak as I grow older
Each year you come your kiss so sweet forever younger
Each time we meet my love for you…Grows ever stronger

©Dedan Gills/Spring 2010

Saturday, December 19, 2015

NOW PLAYING: My Revelations~This Week's Film Titles

White People's Personal Angst, and Black People's Global Misery


The films this week at the Independent Theaters in Northern Californiaaught my attention for the story that their titles and subject matter tell. Below I share what  appears to be the perspective of what's important, of interest and entertaining to contemporary Western culture. Because some of these films are produced outside of the U.S., I differentiate between Western culture and what's popular with general American filmgoers. 

Led by the release of a new Star Wars film, which has been long awaited by fans of the franchise, the titles and topics of the films sweeping America this weekend tell a grossly different story. That is because American audiences prefer films of fantasy (sci fi, vampires), romantic or silly (almost slapstick) comedies, or those which allow them to be nostalgic about their myths of greatness, ~ to stories and themes that raise questions and require them to think. 

That's my take. What's yours? Love to hear your views. I'm not commenting on or recommending the films themselves. Just noticing their subject matter and titles, and wondering what a visitor from another planet would think of the human beings of Earth, if they read what's presented below.

lovu,
Kendke

NOW PLAYING


~

  • CAROL

    CAROL
    Cate Blanchett and Rooney Mara star as women from different backgrounds who find themselves feeling a forbidden attraction in 1950s Manhattan.
     
    THE DANISH GIRL 
    THE DANISH GIRL


  • YOUTH







    YOUTH
    A poignant tale of how we each find our own passion in life, starring Michael Caine, Harvey Keitel, Rachel Weisz, Jane Fonda and Paul Dano.
  • SPOTLIGHT
    Tense investigative thriller about a team of Boston Globe reporters investigating allegations of abuse in the Catholic Church. Michael Keaton and Mark Ruffalo star.






  • MACBETH
    A fearless Scottish general (Michael Fassbender), haunted by a prophecy and his own ambition, uses murder to gain the power of the throne.
  • BEASTS OF NO NATION

    BEASTS OF NO NATION

    Idris Elba stars in the gripping tale of a child soldier torn from his family to fight in the civil war of an African country.

Monday, December 14, 2015

Multiculturalism is a sham, says Angela Merkel

The Washington Post

World Views



The speech that followed, however, may have surprised supporters of her policies: Multiculturalism remains a sham, she said, before adding that Germany may be reaching its limits in terms of accepting more refugees. "The challenge is immense," she said. "We want and we will reduce the number of refugees noticeably."


Although those remarks may seem uncharacteristic of Merkel, she probably would insist that she was not contradicting herself. In fact, she was only repeating a sentiment she first voiced several years ago when she said multiculturalism in Germany had "utterly failed."


"Of course the tendency had been to say, 'Let's adopt the multicultural concept and live happily side by side, and be happy to be living with each other.' But this concept has failed, and failed utterly," she said in 2010.
 

Image result for time names merkel person of the year
Time Magazine has named German Chancellor Angela Merkel ''Person of the Year'' for her leadership during the European refugee crisis and E.U. currency turmoil.



Repeating those ideas on Monday was meant to calm her supporters who have grown increasingly weary of the influx of refugees. Newcomers, Merkel stressed, should assimilate to German values and culture, and respect the country's laws.


Merkel's comments may also reflect a particular understanding of assimilation. Many Germans expect immigrants to quickly learn the German language and to contribute to their communities and work life.


Multiculturalism usually has a positive connotation, but to Merkel it symbolizes the emergence of isolated societies within Germany — and ultimately a failure of assimilating immigrants. Her policy toward the issue is supposed to avoid the creation of suburbs such as the areas around Paris, for instance, where young immigrants are isolated from the rest of society.


However, her speech comes at a sensitive time. Germany has opened its borders to approximately 1 million refugees this year, many of whom are still being accommodated in makeshift housing. Fights have broken out in multiple reception centers, raising fears about the country's ability to deal with the influx.


Local disputes have caused tensions in national politics as well. Last year, Germany's influential Christian Social Union party proposed that everyone in Germany should be required to speak German "in public and in private with their families." The public backlash forced the party to retract the draft resolution.


Compared to 2010, when Merkel first voiced her criticism of multiculturalism, there was little reaction Monday. The applause following her speech lasted nine minutes and again had to be interrupted by Merkel. "Thanks, but we have work to do," she said.

Saturday, December 12, 2015

Just To Make you Smile

iuQ8vhI

This cat beyond photobombed its family's portrait



Screen Shot 2015-10-28 at 11.47.12 AM copy 

This dog photobombed his owner's engagement pix so hard

Perhaps Megan and Chris shouldn’t be all that surprised. Even though the three of them are a family now, Louie has certain opinions whenever Megan tries to show Chris a little affection. He’s not exactly a fan. Megan told Valley News Live, “I feel like Louie’s always just kinda like that. Anytime I go to touch Chris, he’s like, no, I want to be pet.” Yeah, he does apparently.
So what does Chris think of this epic photo (because we really, really love it)? “I knew he was going to be in the shot. I didn’t know he was that much in the shot,” he said.
Um, something tells us Chris needs to get used to it. Just saying.
We should mention that Louie was kind enough to let Chris and Megan have a few nice, normal engagement shots. He was still in the pics, though. (Because, well of course he was.)
Screen Shot 2015-10-28 at 11.54.32 AM copy


http://justsomething.co/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/animal-photobombs-34.jpg


https://i.ytimg.com/vi/k_npDcNqyK4/hqdefault.jpg



https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/236x/04/cd/7a/04cd7a76198b9876cc91a6a88b518784.jpg Whether it's land or sea, watch out for the playful Animal Photobombers!!!!

 http://ak-hdl.buzzfed.com/static/2013-12/enhanced/webdr06/7/11/enhanced-buzz-12837-1386433549-4.jpg

Tuesday, December 8, 2015

An Important Voice and Spirit of Native Americans Walked On Today ~ John Trudell


John Trudell Matika Wilbur

Noted activist, poet and Native thinker John Trudell walked on December 8 at the age of 69.
Matika Wilbur/facebook.com/Project562

 Remembering the Life and Legacy of John Trudell

 12/8/15

  By Alex Jacobs


John Trudell, noted activist, poet and Native thinker, walked on this morning after a lengthy bout with cancer. His family included some of his last messages to Indian country in a press release. Among them: “I want people to remember me as they remember me.”

John Trudell was a Santee Dakota activist, artist, actor, and poet, who led a life dedicated to indigenous human rights, land and language issues. He helped spark a spoken word movement that is a continuation of Native American oral traditions. He walked on December 8 at the age of 69.

Born on February 15, 1946 in Omaha, he spent his early years living on the Santee Reservation in northern Nebraska. His father was Santee and his mother was of Mexican Indian heritage. He had a normal life until his mother died at age 6, and the new rock and roll music resonated with him from ages 9-12. He said high school was not good for him and would enlist in the U.S. Navy from 1963 until 1967, to get away. He married Fenicia “Lou” Ordonez in 1968 in California, briefly attended college, thinking he would go into radio and broadcasting.

Everything changed in 1969 when Native American students and organizers, Trudell among them, occupied Alcatraz Island from November 20, 1969 to June 11, 1970. That group became “Indians of All Tribes,” and they issued the manifesto, We Hold the Rock, and eventually the book, Alcatraz is Not an Island.

The Alcatraz Occupation became an incubator for the nascent Native American rights movement, including the American Indian Movement (AIM) in Minneapolis. The legal basis for this occupation was the Treaty of Fort Laramie of 1868, which said that any abandoned federal property would revert to the Indian Nations. This treaty’s legality would also inspire many more actions across Indian country.

Trudell has always maintained that all these political actions were not just moral, ethical issues but were legal issues, according to Native treaty rights and federal trust responsibilities.

Trudell used his broadcasting experience on the airwaves of “Radio Free Alcatraz” (a clip from the program can be heard on the 2005 documentary Trudell). His marriage would end during this period as he become a leading Native spokesman attracting national attention. The negotiations over Alcatraz, the proposed Indian Center and the occupation itself fell apart in 1971, but so many names of Native activists, organizers, artists, writers and actors from that time would become prominent in the ensuing struggles, movement and documentation.

RELATED: Warriors of Our Time: Remembering John Trudell

Events would cascade from actions related to the Raymond Yellow Thunder beating in 1972, to the nationally organized cross-country caravan Trail of Broken Treaties in 1972 that ended with the occupation of the Bureau of Indian Affairs building in Washington, D.C. and the issuance of The 20 Points Manifesto. The scattering of activists after the BIA take-over led to AIM actions at the Custer County Courthouse, followed by the 1973 Liberation/Occupation of Wounded Knee village by AIM and the Oglala Sioux Civil Rights Organization. In 1973, Trudell became the national spokesperson for AIM, a position that he held until 1979.

Everybody seemed to have a personal relationship with Trudell, even if you met him only once. Some folks who never met him still have that same feeling that he knew their story because they could hear it resonate in his songs, poetry, and movies. While poetry editor at Akwesasne Notes, I reviewed Trudell’s first poetry chapbook, Living in Reality: Songs Called Poems (1982). It was a simple chapbook produced straight from “Indian country,” on Franklin Avenue, Minneapolis. My review basically stated, don’t worry that it didn’t sound like “modern” poetry, Trudell had found a voice and had tapped into the collective consciousness; that no matter how well this collection of poems sold, Trudell’s voice would be big, listened to and embraced. What he had to say was that good, it was that needed. Nowadays we must come up with descriptions TO define his voice and presence, words like empowering, authentic, intelligent, inspirational and necessary. He believed in the Spoken Word, that it had power. He didn’t think we should call our music and poetry “political or protest,” as those were labels from those in control. He called them cultural realities and artistic statements: “We are speaking our truth, bringing our energy. Music is its own energy, it’s good and positive in strengthening our communities.”
"Living in Reality" by John Trudell.
The FBI agreed. In the documentary Trudell by Heather Rae (2005), they quote an FBI memo early on: “He is extremely eloquent, therefore extremely dangerous.” They compiled a 17,000-page dossier on him, one of the longest in its history. Trudell said in the documentary, Incident at Oglala, “All I did was talk, and they cracked down hard just for that.” Trudell was referring to a pivotal And Cataclysmic Moment in his life: the deaths of his wife Tina, their children Ricarda Star, Sunshine Karma, Eli Changing Sun, unborn son Josiah Hawk, and Tina’s mother Leah Hicks-Manning, in a suspicious fire in their parents’ house in February 1979 at the Duck Valley Reservation, Nevada. Trudell burned an American flag in protest on the steps of the FBI building in Washington, D.C., within 24 hours of the house fire. His family was known to have local enemies in law enforcement, but they could not prove it was arson even after the private investigator he hired said that the official version was practically impossible.

The period that followed brought most people to identify with the poet, artist and thinker called John Trudell. It is interesting to note that some dubbed him an ex-activist but that is one of those labels he criticized, and he would actually go on to influence another generation of activists and ordinary people. Many artists now use the phrase “Art Saved Me,” and it had to be something like that for Trudell, because after the tragedy he was compelled to write poetry. He said it just came to him, like Tina was talking to him and he was just “following the lines.”

“I didn’t even know what reality was… then these lines came into my head and something said don’t stop writing. I started to write my lines, they’re called poems but in reality they are lines for me to hold onto, my hanging-on lines, it was real to me, it was a parting gift from Tina. Whatever happens just follow the writing and I might be able to find some kind of center. Whatever my future is… to see how long I get to participate… she gave me the lines to follow… so I won’t fall completely… that feeling of falling apart, it doesn’t go away.” – John Trudell, from the 2005 Heather Rae documentary, “Trudell.”

He issued the chapbook, Living in Reality in 1982. That same year he began recording his poetry to traditional Native music by talking his friend Quiltman into backing him on drum and vocals. In 1983, he released his debut album Tribal Voice on his own Peace Company label. His relationship with Jackson Browne led him to other supporters like Kris Kristofferson, Bonnie Raitt, Indigo Girls, John Fogerty, Willie Nelson, and Bob Dylan. Legendary Kiowa guitarist Jesse Ed Davis came up to him in 1986 and said, “I can turn your poems into songs.” They recorded three albums during this time. AKA Graffiti Man was released in 1986, dubbed the best album of the year by Bob Dylan, followed by But This Isn’t El Salavdor and Heart Jump Bouquet, both in 1987.

In 1988, Jesse Ed Davis passed away due to heroin addiction. Trudell was stunned. However, he was able to connect with other performers who kept him out there on stage, like Midnight Oil’s From Diesel and Dust tour and Peter Gabriel’s WOMAD tour. That era is known for the breakthrough of contemporary Native music, yet its main performers, Buddy Red Bow, Jim Pepper and Jesse Ed Davis all died at the height of their popularity due to ailments such as alcoholism and drug addiction. Trudell, however, followed more along the path of Floyd Red Crow Westerman, who walked on in 2007 after a slow deterioration of health.

Trudell’s spoken word and music catalog is formidable. The title track of Fables and Other Realities (1991) jumps at the listener from the speaker and screen thanks to Trudell’s urgent, rhythmed delivery, a style he would use in future songs and videos. It actually prefigures NDN rap and hip-hop beats. The album kicked off a good collaboration period with Mark Shark and other musicians. A.K.A. Graffiti Man from 1992 was remixed as a best of compilation in 1992 to critical acclaim, as was Johnny Damas & Me in 1994, which continued the positive reception. Trudell embarked on another pivotal period when he started up his Bad Dog touring band in 1999. He always said he wanted to bring Bad Dog everywhere with him from then on, but most times people were happy just to hear him speak. He and the band produced Blue Indians that year winning NAMMY awards; 1999 also brought international attention with Stickman: Poems, Lyrics, Talks edited by Paola Igliori. Further success in 2001 came with Bone Days, which was produced by actress Angelina Jolie. Trudell and Bad Dog would release Madness And The Moremes, a double album in 2007, and Crazier Than Hell in 2010.
"Stickman" by John Trudell.
JT – DNA (Descendant Now Ancestor), 2001, is all spoken word, no music, and represents his more popular speeches and themes. He repeats some of those themes, and adds newer Bad Dog lyrics, in his most recent, Through the Dust, 2014, which features the ambient beats of Swiss producer, Kwest. There’s also the rare CD/vinyl, John Trudell & Bad Dog – Live à Fip, a live album recorded in Paris, France in 2005 that now sells from $70 to copy60. In 1992, he also released Children of the Earth: Child’s Voice. Trudell was partnered with Marcheline Bertrand, Angelina Jolie’s mother, as she dealt with cancer, which she succumbed to in 2007. Marcheline and Angelina also executive produced the 2005 documentary with Heather Rae as well.
"Children of the Earth: Child's Voice" was released in 1992.
Trudell’s movie career also created a new generation of fans with feature films like Thunderheart, a 1992 Hollywood thriller by director Michael Apted, who also swung a documentary film into the deal, Incident at Oglala, produced/narrated by Robert Redford. He was also in the 1998 seminal Native-made film, Smoke Signals, written by Sherman Alexie and directed by Chris Eyre. His great line in the film is, “It’s a good day to be indigenous,” in which he is again back to NDN radio roots as DJ Randy Peone of K-REZ. He was also in the Steven Seagal thriller, On Deadly Ground, and played Coyote in Hallmark’s made for TV movie, Dreamkeeper. Incident at Oglala and Trudell were important projects that helped to develop Redford’s Sundance Institute’s Native American Program, as overseen by Bird Runningwater.

Controversy occurred in 2004 when Trudell testified at the trial of AIM members, Arlo Looking Cloud and John Graham, who were sentenced to life imprisonment for the kidnapping and murder of Anna Mae Pictou-Aquash. Trudell was boycotted by Native students in Vancouver, British Columbia, and criticized by AIM hardliners. Trudell said it was a confidential matter involving Looking Cloud relieving his conscience and Trudell only talked about it after it was revealed in media accounts.
John Trudell starred alongside Val Kilmer in Thunderheart in 1992. (TriStar Pictures)
In constant demand as a speaker, presenter or commentator, he and his fans preferred to post speeches and videos on his website, Facebook or YouTube. His lengthy illness became generally known, and one may assume he was involved in medical marijuana therapy given videos for songs like Wildseed, Grassfire and various Bad Dog concerts and interviews. He has several children, as he has said, “spread around the country so they will always be safe.” His daughters Sage, Song and Star are featured in the 2005 documentary and his daughter Tara and her sisters were at Alcatraz. His youngest boy, Cetan, lives in San Francisco. He was very private about his family life and had managers screening all of his business and social media.

His last big media success was the book, Lines from a Mined Mind: The Words of John Trudell, a collection of 25 years of poetry, lyrics and essays from Fulcrum Publishing, 2008. This collection is a tribute to the man, his legend and legacy. We all felt we knew him. He shared pain, courage, insight and wisdom with all of us. He felt he could mix thoughts, poetry, music and human energy to create… Power. Human Being Power. Some felt him a prophet like Bob Marley, but John also said he was a happy soldier in Elvis Presley’s Army.
"Lines from a Mined Mind" was published in 2008.
Safe journey, brother.
“We are strong again, thank you. Thank you John.”

Read more at http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/print/2015/12/08/remembering-life-and-legacy-john-trudell-162697
 
And more from a recent post of blogger Abagond:
 

John Trudell: Look At Us

by abagond
Remarks:
 One of my favourite spoken-word poems of John Trudell. It came out on his album "Tribal Voice" (1983).
Notice how "technological" becomes "tech no logical". Among other things.
See also:
Lyrics:
At times they were kind, they were polite in their sophistication, smiling but never too loudly acting in a civilized manner an illusion of gentleness always fighting to get their way. while the people see, the people know, the people wait, the people say the closing of your doors will never shut use out, the closing of your doors can only shut you in.
We know the predator, we see them feed on us, we are aware to starve the beast is our destiny. At times they were kind, they were polite, but never honest.
We see your tech no logical society devour you before your very eyes we hear your anguished cries exalting greed through progress while you seek material advances the sound of flowers dying carry messages through the wind trying to tell you about balance and your safety
But your minds are chained to your machines and the strings dangling from your puppeteers hands turning you, twisting you into forms and confusions beyond your control
Your mind for a job your mind for a t.v. your mind for a hair dryer your mind for consumption.
With your atom bombs your material bombs your drug bombs your racial bombs your class bombs your sexist bombs your ageist bombs
Devastating your natural shelters making you homeless on earth chasing you into illusions fooling you, making you pretend you can run away from the ravishing of your spirit
While the sound of flowers dying carry messages through the wind trying to tell you about balance and your safety.
Trying to isolate us in a dimension called loneliness leading us into the trap believe in their power but not in ourselves piling us with guilt always taking the blame greed chasing out the balance trying to isolate us in a dimension called loneliness
economic deities seizing power through illusions created armies are justified class systems are democracy god listens to warmongers prayers tyranny is here, divide and conquer trying to isolate us in a dimension called loneliness
greed a parent insecurity the happiness companion genocide conceived in sophistication tech no logic material civilization a rationalization replacing a way to live trying to isolate us in a dimension called loneliness
To god we hope you don’t mind but we would like to talk to you; there are some things we need to straighten out, it’s about these christians they claim to be from your nation but man you should see the things they do all the time blaming it on you: manifest destiny, genocide, maximized profit, sterilization, raping the earth, lying taking more than they need in all the forms of the greed. we ask them why, they say it’s god’s will.
Damn god they make it so hard. Remember jesus? Would you send him back to them, tell them how to kill him, rather they should listen stop abusing his name and yours.
We do not mean to be disrespectful but you know how it is, our people have their own ways we never even heard of you until not long ago, your representatives spoke magnificent things of you which we were willing to believe, but from the way they acted we know we and you were being deceived.
We do not mean you and your christian children any bad, but you all came to take all we had we have not seen you but we have heard so much it is time for you to decide what life is worth we already remember but maybe you forgot.
Look at us, look at us, we are of Earth and Water
Look at them, it is the same
Look at us, we are suffering all these years
Look at them, they are connected.
Look at us, we are in pain
Look at them, surprised at our anger
Look at us, we are struggling to survive
Look at them, expecting sorrow be benign
Look at us, we were the ones called pagan
Look at them, on their arrival
Look at us, we are called subversive
Look at them, descending from name callers
Look at us, we wept sadly in the long dark
Look at them, hiding in tech no logic light
Look at us, we buried the generations
Look at them, inventing the body count
Look at us, we are older than America
Look at them, chasing a fountain of youth
Look at us, we are embracing Earth
Look at them, clutching today
Look at us, we are living in the generations
Look at them, existing in jobs and debts
Look at us, we have escaped many times
Look at them, they cannot remember
Look at us, we are healing
Look at them, their medicine is patented
Look at us, we are trying
Look at them, what are they doing
Look at us, we are children of Earth
Look at them, who are they?



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