NY Times Photo Essay of the Black Panthers and Their Efforts

Idaeo

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Sickle cell anemia testing during Bobby Seale's campaign for mayor of Oakland Calif. 1972


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Black Panther children in a classroom at the Intercommunal Youth Institute, the Black Panther school ;Oakland. 1971


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A party member preparing bags of food for distribution at the Black Panther Community Survival Conference in Oakland 1972

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Black Panthers, including Khalid Raheem in front, marching through West Philadelphia. 1971


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Bobby Seale, co-founder and chairman of the Black Panther Party, selling Mao's Red Book to raise money at the first San Francisco peace march against the Vietnam War


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Huey Newton, co-founder and minister of defense of the Black Panther Party ;listening to Bob Dylan's record Highway 61 Revisited; in his house in Berkeley, Calif., shortly after his release from prison. August 1970.


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A boy giving a raised fist salute as he and a friend sat on a statue in front of the New Haven County Courthouse at a demonstration of 15,000 people during the trial of Bobby Seale and Ericka Huggins. Both were acquitted. May 1, 1970


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The Breakfast for Children Program was run by the Black Panther Party so children could eat before going to school. Oakland. 1972
 

Idaeo

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The Black Panther office in the Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn. 1970.


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The Black Panther Gloria Abernethy selling papers at the Mayfair supermarket boycott in Oakland. Tamara Lacey was in the background holding a poster.

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Emory Douglas, Panther artist and minister of information for the party, designing The Black Panther newspaper. His graphic art was featured in most issues of the newspaper. Oakland. 1970


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The Lumpen, the Panthers' singing group, performing at the boycott of Bill's Liquors in Oakland. Clark Bailey, known as Santa Rita, was dancing. Michael Torrence, front right, and James Mott were drumming
 

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08-lens-panthers-slide-01T9-jumbo.jpg


Sickle cell anemia testing during Bobby Seale's campaign for mayor of Oakland Calif. 1972


08-lens-panthers-slide-U3I5-slide.jpg


08-lens-panthers-slide-OS3H-jumbo.jpg


Black Panther children in a classroom at the Intercommunal Youth Institute, the Black Panther school ;Oakland. 1971


08-lens-panthers-slide-B95Y-jumbo.jpg




08-lens-panthers-slide-BN7C-jumbo.jpg



A party member preparing bags of food for distribution at the Black Panther Community Survival Conference in Oakland 1972

08-lens-panthers-slide-U10V-jumbo.jpg


Black Panthers, including Khalid Raheem in front, marching through West Philadelphia. 1971


08-lens-panthers-slide-LZYR-jumbo.jpg


Bobby Seale, co-founder and chairman of the Black Panther Party, selling Mao's Red Book to raise money at the first San Francisco peace march against the Vietnam War


08-lens-panthers-slide-7TQA-jumbo.jpg


Huey Newton, co-founder and minister of defense of the Black Panther Party ;listening to Bob Dylan's record Highway 61 Revisited; in his house in Berkeley, Calif., shortly after his release from prison. August 1970.


08-lens-panthers-slide-ODFD-jumbo.jpg


A boy giving a raised fist salute as he and a friend sat on a statue in front of the New Haven County Courthouse at a demonstration of 15,000 people during the trial of Bobby Seale and Ericka Huggins. Both were acquitted. May 1, 1970


08-lens-panthers-slide-JOOO-jumbo.jpg


The Breakfast for Children Program was run by the Black Panther Party so children could eat before going to school. Oakland. 1972
These photos are amazing. Folks don't seem to realize how much work on the grassroots level that The Panthers put in. Beautiful. When folks see photos like this, how can they still use the word "Militant" as a pejorative?

:jbhmm:

BTW, Huey is Body Goals....

:wow:
 
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Realist brothers to ever live:wow:


Most of us (including me) don't posses HALF the heart, courage, and strength that these heroes displayed layijgnitmon the line for black people. I don't hesitate to say that they were the last group that could've gotten us as a race of black people in America, to truly unite
 

Idaeo

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"But...but...they're the black kkk!"

Lemme get that link :salute::myman:

http://lens.blogs.nytimes.com/2016/...black-panthers-through-photos-stephen-shames/


A black man helps an older African-American woman as she shops in an Oakland, Calif., supermarket. The image from 1972, by Stephen Shames, documents an initiative to protect the elderly in a crime-ridden neighborhood. It doesn’t just show community activism, it also challenges lurid media stereotypes about the organization responsible for the initiative: the Black Panther Party.

This is one of many photographs in an important new book by Mr. Shames and Bobby Seale, “Power to the People: The World of the Black Panthers” (Abrams), that help us to better understand one of the most innovative, if controversial, American movements for racial equality and justice. An accompanying exhibition of Mr. Shames’s Panther photographs opens this month at the Steven Kasher Gallery in New York.:leon:

Published on the 50th anniversary of the party’s founding, “Power to the People” constitutes an impressionistic visual and oral history of the Panthers. It combines in-depth commentary by Mr. Seale, a major figure within the Panthers; the photographs and observations of Mr. Shames, the group’s principal visual chronicler; excerpts of interviews Mr. Shames conducted with party leaders — including Kathleen Cleaver, Emory Douglas, Elbert (Big Man) Howard, Ericka Huggins, Billy X Jennings and Jamal Joseph — as well as the words of Huey P. Newton and Eldridge Cleaver.

Mr. Shames was a student at the University of California, Berkeley, when he became active in politics. He met Mr. Seale and Mr. Newton in San Francisco during the Spring Mobilization to End the War in Vietnam six months after they founded the Black Panther Party for Self Defense in October 1966.

“I started hanging out with the Panthers, attending their rallies,” Mr. Shames recalled in the text. “Bobby Seale became my mentor and friend. … I was granted incredible access. Over the next seven years, culminating in Bobby Seale’s 1973 campaign for mayor of Oakland, I documented this group of young men and women, who were at the forefront of the Black Power movement and who became the vanguard of the revolution that was sweeping America.”

The aims of the Black Panther Party were diverse and complex. On one level, the group advocated armed resistance against police misconduct and abuse, as well as a revolution to achieve the racial equality and justice that it felt the nonviolent civil rights movement had failed to achieve. As the party gained momentum, J. Edgar Hoover, director of the F.B.I., deemed it “the greatest threat to the internal security of the country.” Vowing that 1969 would be the last year of the Panthers’ existence, Hoover made it a principal target of the bureau’s Cointelpro initiative, established in the 1950s to monitor, infiltrate and discredit radical political organizations.

But the movement endured, in part because its objectives went far beyond armed self-defense and insurrection. To some extent stymied by the 1967 Mulford Act — which repealed the right to publicly bear firearms in California, a bill created largely in response to Panther members who were conducting armed patrols of Oakland neighborhoods — the party increasingly emphasized community-based activism, voter registration drives and more than 60 “survival programs.” Those programs included free medical, eye and dental care, legal aid, food cooperatives, employment referral, plumbing, pest control and home maintenance programs, screening for sickle cell anemia, a child development center and a well-regarded school.

Granted, among such a group of strong-willed leaders with a particular vision, “the Panthers suffered from the factionalism, disorganization and personality cults that so often afflict oppositional movements,” wrote the Times critic A. O. Scott in his review of the 2015 documentary “The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution.”

But Mr. Shames’s pictures affirmed the movement’s complexity, countering an unrelenting stream of mainstream images of menacing, gun-toting men, women and children. If some in the news media viewed the party as an influential force for black autonomy, others saw it as a criminal organization. “Power to the People” offers a relatively nuanced view of a militant national organization that advocated insurrection and armed resistance, but also fought for empowered, self-reliant and culturally expressive black communities.

The photographs in “Power to the People” attest to the movement’s accomplishments and ingenuity: children engaged in programs designed to educate, bolster self-esteem and teach the black history and culture that were virtually absent from public schools; people carrying grocery bags emblazoned with the Panther logo and filled with free food; suave, self-possessed and media-savvy leaders who challenged prevailing stereotypes; and protest rallies and boycotts.

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In the end, Mr. Shames’s exacting photographs were in keeping with a movement that often disseminated its ideas through imagery. As the artist and writer Colette Gaiter has documented, every detail of the party’s visual campaign was rigorously considered, from the impeccable uniforms of its leaders to the vivid graphic design of its national weekly newspaper, The Black Panther, for which Emory Douglas, the “master craftsman” of the party’s visual identity and its minister of culture, was the art director.

“Before a correct visual interpretation of the struggle can be given, we must recognize that Revolutionary Art is an art that flows from the people,” Mr. Douglas observed in 1968. “It must be a whole and living part of the people’s lives, their daily struggle to survive.”

To emphasize this point, the Kasher Gallery has mounted a companion exhibition, in tandem with Mr. Shames’s photographs, of Mr. Douglas’s illustrations for the newspaper.

Through its retrospective view of the party, which disbanded in the 1980s, “Power to the People” has much to say about our present-day racial crisis. Over the past half-century, much has changed, yet little has changed, as the campaign to end systemic racism and violence against people of color, exemplified by the Black Lives Matter movement, remains as vital as ever.

And 50 years after he helped found the party, Mr. Seale sees it as relevant as ever. “Now we must reach for the future,” he wrote in the book’s afterword. “… Progressive people around the world understand that we must continue our liberation struggle. We must organize people’s programs and evolve greater participatory community control democracies, void of racist, bigoted, and chauvinistic practices. This is the true legacy of my Black Panther Party.”
 

Idaeo

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ahh this is my era brothers. in Brooklyn, it was an honor to share time with these powerful warriors


wait a min:dahell:

so how old were you back then? and do you mean you worked with the Panthers?
 
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