Thursday, January 10, 2008

New Jersey Becomes the First Northern State to Apologize For Its Role in Slavery

By TOM HESTER Jr.Associated Press Writer
TRENTON, N.J. (AP)

New Jersey became the first Northern state to apologize for slavery, as legislators approved a resolution Monday expressing "profound regret" for the state's role in the practice.
The Assembly and the Senate 29-2 both voted overwhelmingly to approve the resolution, which expresses the Legislature's opinion without requiring action by the governor.

"This resolution does nothing more than say New Jersey is sorry about its shameful past," said Assemblyman William Payne, a Democrat who sponsored the measure.
The resolution offers an apology "for the wrongs inflicted by slavery and its aftereffects in the United States of America."

It states that in New Jersey, "the vestiges of slavery are ever before African-American citizens, from the overt racism of hate groups to the subtle racism encountered when requesting health care, transacting business, buying a home, seeking quality public education and college admission, and enduring pretextual traffic stops and other indignities."

Legislators in Alabama, Maryland, North Carolina and Virginia have issued formal apologies for slavery.

According to the resolution, New Jersey had one of the largest slave populations in the Northern colonies and was the last state in the Northeast to formally abolish slavery, not doing so until 1846.

The state didn't ratify the constitutional amendment prohibiting slavery until January 1866, a month after it had already become federal law. Opponents said the apology was a meaningless gesture. Assemblyman Richard Merkt, a Republican, said everyone deems slavery an abomination. "But this was a sin that was atoned for in blood 150 years ago by the death of 650,000 Americans," Merkt said, referring to the Civil War.


My comment to this: Part of the reason people feel the need to oppose a formal apology for slavery is they are racists at the very core of their being. You weren't taken from you homeland, you didn't lose a language, name or religion. Your ancestors from whereever they came from moved here by their own accord, got paid a fair wage for work. My ancestors were brought and sold here, never paid a fair wage for work. "650,000 americans dieing in the civil war atoned" for 400 years of a profitable slave trade? I understand, if I were white and born with a sense of privilege, I would think the same way.

Amazingly, everyone can understand the Jews, including Black Folks, but no one including Jews understands how Blacks feel. Slavery had an impact on the world and until everyone starts to recognize the pain, suffering and disadvantage it has caused and start the healing process, we each will retreat to our corners until the bell tolls again.

Thursday, December 6, 2007

NEW ENTREPRENEURSHIP GUIDE HELPS INCARCERATED AND FORMERLY INCARCERATED BUILD SUCCESSFUL LIVES

CONTACT:
Sheila Rule
Resilience Multimedia
877-267-2303
resiliencemultimedia@verizon.net


New York, NY (BlackNews.com) - The journey that led Joseph Robinson to write the new book Think Outside the Cell: An Entrepreneur's Guide for the Incarcerated and Formerly Incarcerated (Resilience Multimedia) began in 1992, after he was sentenced to 25 years to life in prison for a crime that had its roots in his illegal drug business. Behind prison walls, Joe developed a passion for legitimate business by reading newspaper financial sections that other prisoners threw away. He traded cigarettes for books to build his own business library and became an authoritative financial adviser to fellow incarcerated men. And he convinced top Wall Street executives and others--including a former U.S. Deputy Secretary of State--to go inside prison to share their business knowledge.

With the publication of his inspiring and informative Think Outside the Cell, Joe is encouraging men and women nationwide to use what for many are innate entrepreneurial gifts in order to build the lives they want and break the cycle of recidivism. This step-by-step guide is packed with straightforward information on a range of topics, including how to get others to embrace your ideas and help launch your business, how to legally avoid taxes, how to establish good credit and the steps to take to remove occupational restrictions that many states place on convicted felons.

Think Outside the Cell has already won high praise, including from John C. Whitehead, former U.S. Deputy Secretary of State and former co-chairman of Goldman Sachs; Steve Mariotti, founder of the acclaimed National Foundation for Teaching Entrepreneurship; Wahida Clark, best-selling urban fiction author; Nicole Lindahl, assistant director of the Prisoner Reentry Institute at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York; Catherine F. Rohr, founder of the nationally recognized Prison Entrepreneurship Program, and Julio Medina, founder of Exodus Transitional Community, whose work with the formerly incarcerated has been recognized by the White House.

Think Outside the Cell is being published amid renewed efforts to help the formerly incarcerated--who are disproportionately black and Latino--successfully reenter society. But the reentry programs being developed focus on finding jobs in a nation where, according to a Princeton University study, it is easier for a white person with a felony conviction to get a job than for a black person who has never been arrested. Think Outside the Cell presents a largely unexplored option that can help give men and women leaving prison a realistic second chance.
Think Outside the Cell is published by Resilience Multimedia, a New York-based publisher of quality African-American and Latino books. Its founder is Sheila Rule, a journalist for The New York Times for 30 years who started writing to the incarcerated as a volunteer for the Riverside Church Prison Ministry. Inspired by the rich talent she found behind prison walls, she started Resilience Multimedia. Future titles will help the incarcerated and formerly incarcerated tackle other hard challenges. And to present a more balanced image of this population, Resilience will publish books featuring formerly incarcerated men and women who have become successful as entrepreneurs and in other endeavors. To order Think Outside the Cell, or for more information, please visit www.thinkoutsidethecell.com

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