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Queen Calafia: Ruler of California
will star the phenomenal singer/songwriter/actress Ajuana Black on Sept. 30, Oct. 1, Oct. 2 in the Buriel Clay Theatre in the African-American Art and Culture Complex at 762 Fulton St. Tickets are going fast and can be purchased online.
Here’s a clip of this talented performer at the Guerrilla Cafe in Berkeley. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sX9EioxFLyI&feature=related One can listen to her new soulful album at http://ajuanablack.fuzz.com/
The play is a benefit for the reentry program Up From Darkness, a cornerstone of the Western Addition community in San Francisco for 15 years under the leadership of Rev. Regnaldo Woods and his late co-founder Reggie Glover and a ministry of Bethel A.M.E. Church, the city’s oldest black congregation, founded in 1852. September is Re-entry Month in the City and County of San Francisco, underscoring the importance of breaking the cycle of incarceration and addiction.
It is also a highlight of the second annual Preserving California Black Heritage conference, designed to train educators in effective teaching strategies for black children and to alert homeowners and public policy makers on strategies to protect black historic neighborhoods and sites. Hundreds of school children are expected for the Oct. 1 matinee showing of Queen Calafia, the allegorical black queen whose 1510 epic was the first use in print of the word California. In the play, Black’s character, Dr. Wright Now, a Los Angeles anthropologist, is preparing for a major speech in a San Francisco hotel ballroom when the murals of Queen Calafia and her Amazon warriors on the wall beckon her.
Following the matinee, a panel entitled Family Jewels will highlight several new books on other long-overlooked California black pioneers. Authors Regina Mason, The Life of William Grimes (her great-great grandfather and the first black to self-publish a slave narrative), and Sharon McGriff Payne, The John Grider Century: African-Americans in Napa, Solano and Sonoma Counties (Grider helped create the first Bear Flag) team with filmmaker Kevin Epps, completing his new film and book The Black Rock: the Dark Side of Alcatraz. Actress Black will join the panel to discuss her own work as home school educator of nine students in Oakland, including her own four children, to illustrate the power of infusing African-American heritage to erase the achievement gap.
The final presentation is a professional development opportunity for educators Black Heritage as Gap Closer, providing results of a statewide study on educator capacity to provide culturally-responsive teaching in California social science by John William Templeton, who earlier presented the study as keynoter for the California Council on Social Studies in March.
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A slew of wild fires, declining supplies of water, a chronic budget deficit and rising unemployment mark the headlines in California newspapers daily. Increasing street violence also makes people feel uneasy. I had the opportunity to let Attorney General Jerry Brown know that our model of restoration for persons shackled by addiction and incarceration is a big part of the solution. He was speaker for the economic summit of the Black American Political Action Committee at Bethel A.M.E. Church Saturday.
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KGO-TV reporter Vic Lee conducted an interview with Up From Darkness executive director Rev. Regnaldo Woods which is scheduled to air on the 6 p.m. newscast on Channel 7 Thursday, July 3.
In other news, Up From Darkness is holding its first fundraising event, the three-day presentation of Queen Calafia: Ruler of California starring Ursaline Bryant in the Buriel Clay Theatre of the African-American Art and Culture Complex at 762 Fulton St. at 7 p.m. each evening. Click to donate to our work by attending the play.
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For more than 15 years, we have believed in the power of the Creator to restore lives who have been racked by incarceration and addiction. It is an enormous undertaking to bring dozens of men who have lost faith in institutions to come together in common cause to improve themselves and their communities. But every time someone gains employment, begins to support themselves and their families and maintains their clean and sober status, it is a true blessing to all of us. You can help Up From Darkness bring down the enormous cost of our corrections system by supporting our first fundraiser on July 29-31, 2008.








