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https://democracynow.org - On Tuesday, immigrant rights leader Jean Montrevil was deported to Haiti after residing in the United States for over three decades. He came to the U.S. from Haiti with a green card in 1986 at the age of 17. During the height of the crack epidemic, he was convicted of possession of cocaine and sentenced to 11 years in prison. He served that time. Upon his release, he married a U.S. citizen, had four children, became a successful small businessman, as well as an immigrant rights activist. He has had no further interaction with the criminal justice system. Joining us from Haiti is Jean Montrevil, who was deported to Haiti on Tuesday. We are also joined by Jani Cauthen, Jean’s former wife and the mother of three of his children.
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“A Big Relief”: Haitian Immigrant Rights Leader Jean Montrevil Wins Victory in Fight to Stay in U.S.
Longtime immigrant rights leader Jean Montrevil has been granted three years of protection from deportation as part of a settlement for the First Amendment lawsuit Montrevil filed against the U.S. government that argued federal immigration officials targeted him for deportation due to his activism. Montrevil was abruptly deported to Haiti in 2018 but was allowed under the Biden administration to return home to New York in October to reunite with his family. We speak with Jean Montrevil, who says the news has given him “peace of mind” to enjoy the holiday season without fear of getting detained or deported, as well as Montrevil’s lawyer Alina Das, who attributes the highly unusual decision to the strength of the immigrant rights movement. “It is the power of organizing that brought the government to the negotiating table,” says Das.
#DemocracyNow
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As the world recently bore witness to the devastating way the U.S. treated Haitian refugees coming to our borders seeking safety, one thing is clear: We must critically examine the ways in which we respond to the persons and families that come to the U.S. border seeking our protection. Several questions are illuminated: Was this legal? Are we complying with our moral, ethical and international obligations to displaced persons and honoring their dignity and human rights? How does a global pandemic impact these obligations?
Join us for a convening of experts who will discuss the most recent crisis at the U.S. border. Panelists provide further details into this and similar instances of human rights violations at our border. They will also examine current events from an international law perspective while simultaneously exploring the U.S.’s use of public health authority under Title 42 as justification for keeping out groups of Haitian refugees and other displaced persons. Finally, join us for a discussion of how to get involved with efforts to provide legal and other resources to Haitian and other refugees.
Welcome:
Sheila S. Boston, President, New York City Bar Association
Moderator:
Danny Alicea, Chair, NYC Bar Association's Immigration and Nationality Law Committee, Supervising Immigration Attorney at Center for Family Representation
Speakers:
Miriam Lacroix, Founder of Lacroix Law, P.C.
Jonathan Blazer, ACLU Director of Border Strategies
Zaid Hydari, Executive Director, Refugee Solidarity Network
Sponsoring Committee:
Immigration and Nationality Law Committee, Danny Alicea, Chair
Co-Sponsoring Committee:
International Human Rights Committee, Ramya Kudekallu, Chair
Related Reports:
Statement on Haiti and Haitian Migrants by New York City Bar Association President Sheila S. Boston - https://www.nycbar.org/media-l....isting/media/detail/
Sean Penn explains what motivates his social activism in Haiti.
Co-Presented with WNYC’s Greene Space
We are thrilled to close our Creative Activism summit with an in-depth conversation with award-winning playwright and MacArthur Genius Grant fellow Dominique Morisseau. As a Detroit-born artist who is one of the few Black women produced on Broadway, Dominique will share her perspective on movement building, and how the arts help empower every person with the language and vocabulary they need to create change. This interview is co-presented with WNYC’s Greene Space and hosted by journalist Alison Stewart (All of It).
In the 1960s and 70s, Quebec saw an influx of Haitian immigrants fleeing Francois Duvalier’s dictatorship. By 1971, thousands of Haitians had immigrated to Quebec, the only other majority French-speaking society in North America. Arriving mostly in Montreal, Haitians encountered the Quiet Revolution, the perfect setting to establish their exiled community and combat Duvalier’s regime from abroad. Their battle for liberation infused with Quebec’s own.
But who are these Haitian immigrants, and what do we really know about their history? We speak with musician Jenny Salgado (a.k.a. J Kyll) and educator and historian Alain Saint-Victor to learn more about the relationship between Haiti and Quebec and the influences of the Haitian community in “la belle province.”
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Strong and Free is produced by Media Girlfriends and Historica Canada.
This episode was written and produced by Josiane Blanc.
Senior producers are Garvia Bailey and Hannah Sung.
Sound design and mix by David Moreau and Gabbie Clarke.
The Media Girlfriends team is rounded out by Lucius Dechausay, Jeff Woodrow and Nana aba Duncan, the founder of Media Girlfriends.
Thanks to singer/songwriter Jenny Salgado. And thank you to our script-consultant Alain Saint-Victor.
Special thank you to Imposs for the use of his song “Jaco” featuring Jenny Salgado.
Fact-checking by Cloé Carron
English versioning by Power of Babel
Additional reading:
- https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/quiet-revolution
- https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/montreal
- https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/michaelle-jean
- https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/caribbean-canadians
- https://archipel.uqam.ca/11427/1/M15471.pdf
Together we'll into the ubiquity of White supremacy as a core tenet of Euro- and Americano-centric political & educational rhetoric around language. Upon acknowledgement of these colonial realities, we'll look into alternative paradigms that center language at the intersection of race, culture, and self-identity where global media activism & transracial allyship serve to establish anti-colonial resistance through powerfully unsettling creativity & transdisciplinary intelligence.
By the end of this talk, we will empowered to know: 1) how to use language to activate advocacy over privilege; 2) use language activistically to establish anti-colonial radical resistance; 3) become mini language intrapreneurial activists. Learn to be power through creatively disruptive activism and be accountable to the standard of social justice anti-racism impresses upon us to reestablish. Today.
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On March 31, 2021, Edward Onaci presented “Liberating the Territory: Activism, Repression, and the Republic of New Afrika” as part of the History Is Lunch series.
On March 31, 1968, more than five hundred Black nationalists—including Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party director Lawrence Guyot—convened in Detroit. Many concluded that Black Americans' best hope for liberation was the creation of a sovereign nation-state, the Republic of New Afrika, which would be created from Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, and South Carolina.
“This decision to ‘free the land’ indicted the United States as unredeemable and uninhabitable for descendants of the country’s enslaved,” said Onaci, author of Free the Land: The Republic of New Afrika and the Pursuit of a Black Nation-State.
New Afrikan citizens demanded reparations for the enslavement and subsequent inhumane treatment of Black Americans. The group framed their struggle as one that would allow the descendants of enslaved people to choose freely whether they should be citizens of the United States.
“New Afrikans remade their lifestyles and daily activities to create a self-consciously revolutionary culture,” Onaci said. “The RNA's tactics and ideology were essential to the evolution of Black political struggles.”
Edward Onaci is an associate professor of history and African American and Africana Studies at Ursinus College. He earned his BA in history from Virginia State University and his MA and PhD in history from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Onaci’s book Free the Land: The Republic of New Afrika and the Pursuit of a Black Nation-State was published by UNC Press in 2020.
History Is Lunch is sponsored by the John and Lucy Shackelford Charitable Fund of the Community Foundation for Mississippi. The weekly lecture series of the Mississippi Department of Archives and History explores different aspects of the state's past. The hour-long programs are held in the Craig H. Neilsen Auditorium of the Museum of Mississippi History and Mississippi Civil Rights Museum building in Jackson. MDAH livestreams videos of the program at noon on Wednesdays on their Facebook page, https://www.facebook.com/MDAHOfficial/.
November 20th, 2020
This conversation features representatives from student representatives from the Students for Sanctuary organization as well as the New Sanctuary Coalition, Andres Jiminez and Deirdre, joined by Shakoure (who was in ICE detention at the time of recording, released as of 02/17/2021) to bring awareness to the #FreeShakoure direct action, ICE & CBP and carceral system injustices. The goal of this discussion is to teach how everyone can help people targeted by ICE and the carceral system, bring awareness to the reality of the crisis, and learn how activism can be integrated into pedagogy.
Génération Kassav' le 11 mai à 20h45 sur France Ô !
abone ak Chanel la se sel fason ou ka sipote nou
COUPÉ CLOUÉ - ROSE JADIN LA
ZAFEM ANTANN POUN ANTANN LIVE( GRANDE PREMIERE)
Haïti continue de s'enfoncer dans la violence. La vague d'enlèvements a atteint un sommet l'an dernier. Il y en a eu près de 1000. Les affrontements entre gangs de rues paralysent l'économie et accentuent aussi la crise humanitaire dans le pays.
Le vaste quartier de Martissant, en banlieue de Port-au-Prince, qui comptait encore plus de 200 000 habitants il y a un an, est pris en otage par des groupes armés, qui bloquent la seule route vers le sud du pays. C'est un climat de terreur pour de nombreux Haïtiens.
Le reportage de Sophie Langlois et de notre collaborateur Étienne Côté-Paluck, en Haïti.
#TJ22h
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