The Anti-Imperialist Archive
1992 International Tribunal of Indigenous Peoples and Oppressed Nations in the USA, held in San Francisco as part of the Quincentennial 500 years of Resistance. As always, edited by Ian Anderson (@), with special thanks / credit to Sina Rahmani + The East is a Podcast. Our Twitter presence is @, and if you would like to reach out directly we have an email address at: antiimperialistarchive@gmail.com
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This week, we’re airing a presentation by Mark Cook from Burning Books bookstore in Buffalo, NY. This was recorded on February 18th, 2016. From the announcement on Kersplebedeb.com for the event: “Mark Cook is a former Black Panther, member of the George Jackson Brigade, and political prisoner. Twenty four years in prison could not break his spirit or commitment to Black liberation and Mark Cook is as active an organizer now as ever. These events will be worth traveling for, as Cook will only be speaking on these two dates while on the east coast, before heading back to the Pacific...
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Author Nawal Saadawi has written over 50 books and has been translated into more than 32 languages. She is a novelist, human activist and social reformer. More than any other figure in modern-day times, she has continued to influence generations for the past 50 years. She is a medical doctor by profession and started writing about her clinical cases in order to educate men and women about gender. This talk examines the impact of Nawal’s work and the benefit her work has to students, faculty and outside guests. Nawal El Saadawi, Egyptian Feminist Writer, Activist, Physician and Psychiatrist...
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Official Film website Watch feature length Gene Sharp documentary As always, edited by Ian Anderson (@), with special thanks / credit to Sina Rahmani + The East is a Podcast. Our Twitter presence is @, and if you would like to reach out directly we have an email address at: antiimperialistarchive@gmail.com
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Apartheid South Africa and Israel Today: The Parallels with PROFESSOR FARID ESACK Prof. Esack is a South African Muslim theologian, currently a visiting professor at Harvard Divinity School. He has taught at several universities, including Union Theological Seminary in New York. As always, edited by Ian Anderson (@), with special thanks / credit to Sina Rahmani + The East is a Podcast. Our Twitter presence is @, and if you would like to reach out directly we have an email address at: antiimperialistarchive@gmail.com
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As always, edited by Ian Anderson (@), with special thanks / credit to Sina Rahmani + The East is a Podcast. Our Twitter presence is @, and if you would like to reach out directly we have an email address at: antiimperialistarchive@gmail.com
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Last September, the Alliance of Families for Justice led a 19-day protest and marched from Harlem to Albany on the anniversary of the devastating 1971 Attica Prison riots. During the March for Justice, marchers were greeted and joined in solidarity by communities throughout the state, culminating in a rally in the state capital. In this program, participants and organizers discuss their continued commitment to criminal justice reform and the ongoing struggle to close Attica Correctional Facility. Following a screening of a documentary short about the March for Justice, Soffiyah Elijah,...
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by Robert Gold, Mitchel Cohen, Assata Shakur Publication date 1992-06-14 As always, edited by Ian Anderson (@), with special thanks / credit to Sina Rahmani + The East is a Podcast. Our Twitter presence is @, and if you would like to reach out directly we have an email address at: antiimperialistarchive@gmail.com
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"Eyes of the Rainbow" deals with the life of Assata Shakur, the Black Panther and Black Liberation Army leader who escaped from prison and was given political asylum in Cuba, where she has lived for close to 33 years. In it we visit with Assata in Havana and she tells us about her history and her life in Cuba. This film is also about Assata's AfroCuban context, including the Yoruba Orisha Oya, goddess of the ancestors, of war, of the cemetery and of the rainbow. "In the struggle of the African American people, many women's voices in the past and the present have always called for social...
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Dr. Sara Roy is a Senior Research at the Center for Middle East Studies, Harvard University. As always, edited by Ian Anderson (@), with special thanks / credit to Sina Rahmani + The East is a Podcast. Our Twitter presence is @, and if you would like to reach out directly we have an email address at: antiimperialistarchive@gmail.com
info_outlineSummary: Cuba is once again in the international spotlight. The saga of Elian Gonzalez, the 6-year-old Cuban boy whose custody battle captivated two nations, catapulted the island back to the forefront. And the media frenzy surrounding the recent visit of Cuban President Fidel Castro to New York for the United Nations Millennium Summit reminds us that Cuba can never be entirely ignored or forgotten. As the United States exerts its economic and military might around the globe with impunity, Cuba is one of the few countries able to resist US imperialism. And as the post-cold war era moves into its second decade, the United States' attitude toward Cuba looks more and more like a strange relic. In this program we take a look at some of the ways the United States government and mainstream media in the US try to undermine Cuban sovereignty and bring down the communist structure that has been in place for over 40 years. And we'll examine how Cuba, although comparatively poor, is able resist such attempts thru a national dedication to education and health care. Cuba is by no means perfect. Yet it seems that this small nation, suffering for years under economic blockade by the United States, has managed to care for its people, especially its children, in a way the United States has not. We'll speak with Karen Wald, a Californian who has spent the last 18 years living in Havana. Wald is a civil-rights activist, a journalist, and author of a book, Children of Che: Childcare and Education in Cuba. In addition, we'll hear from Cuban President Fidel Castro himself, speaking in New York earlier this month, and Pennsylvania death row inmate Mumia Abu-Jamal, in whose case Castro has taken a personal interest.
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