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SEEK TRUTH: The Haitian Revolution
Posted on 13. Jan, 2010 by kahlilalmustafa.
Guide to Liberation Rule: SEEK TRUTH: The Haitian Revolution

Monument Honoring free black Haitians who fought in the American Revolution located in Savannah's Franklin Square (Savannah, Georgia)

Monument Honoring free black Haitians who fought in the American Revolution located in Savannah's Franklin Square (Savannah, Georgia)
As I wake up today, January 13th, 2010, Haiti has been hit with a 7.0 Earthquake which has devastated the people and the landscape. I wrote this short historical piece as my early morning prayer. It is my contribution to the way think about these people and this place. My hope is that we can bring an added humility and honor by understanding the historical contribution of the Haitian people.
The Haitian Revolution (1791-1804), is widely known as “the only successful slave revolt in human history.” This uprising followed hundreds of rebellions which established Haiti as the first republic ruled by blacks in the modern era in 1804, sixty-one years before enslaved Africans would gain their independence in the United States.
This new black independent state received mixed reactions in the U.S. Those invested in the slave trade feared the slave revolution might spread a couple hundred miles up north, from the island of Hispaniola to the slave plantations of the Southern United States. Abolitionists argued that the U.S. support the insurgents to stay consistent with the principles of the American Revolution, won in 1783.
The Haitian people actually helped America win independence. In October 1779, a force of 500 free black Haitians joined American colonists and French troops in a battle to drive back British troops in Savannah, Georgia. Long before Haitians infamous recognition for migrating to the United States on boats, they fought and died in the American Revolutionary War. A life-sized bronze monument of four Haitian soldiers stands six feet tall atop a granite pillar in Savannah’s Franklin Square honoring Haiti’s contribution to American independence.
TIMELINE
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1776 – Declaration of Independence
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1779 – 500 free black Haitians join American colonists and French troops in the fight for American independence
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1783 – American independence is established with the signing of the Treaty of Paris by the Kingdom of Great Britain and the newly formed United States of America
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1791 – A Haitian priest performs a Vodou ceremony where hundreds of Haitians vow to die for their liberty
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1804 – Haiti declares independence becoming the first independent nation in Latin America, the first black-led nation in the modern era, and the only nation whose independence was gained as part of a successful slave rebellion
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1865 – U.S. President Abraham Lincoln signs the Emancipation Proclamation granting freedom to enslaved people in the Confederate States
The Guide to Liberation project aims to aggregate rules and actions for reference on freeing ourselves from tentacles of exploitation and oppression. Our goal is to produce a small publication of the Guidebook to share within our communities based on the communities’ submissions.
James, C.L.R. The Black Jacobins: Toussaint L’Ouverture and the San Domingo Revolution. Vintage, 2nd edition, (1989)Continue Reading
The People’s Inauguration: Poetry & Dialogue on the one-year anniversary of Obama’s Inauguration
Posted on 09. Jan, 2010 by kahlilalmustafa.
Last year was Barack Obama’s Inauguration. This year is The People’s Inauguration
kahlil almustafa, The People’s Poet and author of From Auction Block to Oval Office leads an interactive event combining performance poetry and critical dialogue commemorating the one-year anniversary of President Obama’s inauguration.
When: January 20th, 2010
44 Charlton Street (on the corner of Charlton and Varick) New York, New York 10014
Time: Doors 6:30pm, Poetry & Panel 7pm
Panelists include:
- Rosa Clemente – 2008 Green Party Vice-Presidential Candidate
- Cindy Sheehan – author of “Not One More Mother’s Child”
- Michael Skolnik – Political Director to Russell Simmons & Editor for GlobalGrind.com
About the event: “kahlil almustafa’s poems are extraordinary in their political complexity and aesthetic sensibility. His language in From Auction Block to Oval Office is crystal-clear and the ideas are continually provocative.”
- Howard Zinn, author, A People’s History of the United States
This event will be interactive. The panel will respond to the critical questions raised by the poems. Audience members will have the opportunity to create their own poems. Panelists to be announced.
Some of the questions to be addressed:
- How do we create a space for people to express the ways Barack Obama has inspired them and create a space for principled criticism?
- Is this the closing of a chapter in the American narrative beginning with the auction block and concluding with the Obamas in the White House? Or is the narrative of African enslavement being used to promote the idea of America perfecting its democracy?
- It has been said that the Hip-Hop generation greatly impacted the election in 2008. How has the Hip Hop generation been impacted by the campaign, Obama’s presidency, and how will the Hip-Hop generation continue to be engaged?
The event is powered by the Mighty Mighty ![]()
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Praise for kahlil almustafa
Posted on 28. Nov, 2009 by kahlilalmustafa.
“almustafa is unafraid to tackle thorny issues of race, gender, class, love, hate, with a keen eye and a precision worthy of a doctor, a healer, a root worker. Listen to him, read him, and be prepared to have your mind and heart reflected by his truth-telling mirror.”
- Kevin Powell, author/community organizer
“He tells it like it is. The subjects he writes of–politics to poverty, family to freedom–are thought-provoking and real.”
-BRM (Beyond Race Magazine)
“. . . exuberant!!”
- CBS Morning News
“His words escalate, soaring and diving like a bird on the wind.”
- Associated Press
“He’s talent that should be heard.”
- JoshSpears.com
“kahlil almustafa’s poetry has a mixture of content and soul. It comes out as powerful in its message as it does in its style.”
- Ras Baraka, Deputy Majority Leader of Newark
“kahlil uses his words to build images which cause us to question ourselves, our society, our past, and our future. He invites us to explore our humanity as he explores his own and uses his Spirit Words to help create a better world.”
- Camille Yarbrough, author, Cornrows
“The words of kahlil almustafa are both fierce and loving, chilling yet warm, a reminder that poetry goes beyond spoken word touching not only the ears, but the heart and the soul. His work possesses an integrity reserved for the truly gifted, one that reminds the elders and the ancestors that we are still here, still fighting with genuine spirits like kahlil on the frontlines.”
- Toni Blackman, author “Inner-Course”/US Hip Hop Ambassador
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Books/CD
Posted on 28. Nov, 2009 by kahlilalmustafa.
BOOKS/CD
Grandma’s Soup
(Feb. 2000)
almustafa’s first collection of poems is dedicated to his grandmother. Through simple language, almustafa shares the blu’z of one young black man living in an urban landscape. Grandma’s Soup was selected by Black Issues Book Review Magazine as a poetic pick for the holidays.
I’m Crying Everyone’s Tears
(Aug. 2002)
almustafa’s best-known work, I’m Crying Everyone’s Tears has sold or been distributed to more than 5,000 people worldwide. Poems from this collection have been featured in articles in The Village Voice, Alternet.org, Mahogany Blues Magazine, The Shield Magazine, Free Magazine, BRM (Beyond Race Magazine) and many more. Poems from this collection were performed at the nationally-televised Rally to End Occupation in Iraq in Washington DC in 2003, the “Millions for Reparations Rally” at the United Nations in 2003 and the 45th Anniversary of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s Speech Against the Vietnam War at Riverside Church in 2006.

Be-Boy, Be-Man
(July 2003)
Be-Boy, Be-Man, originally entitled Chivalry IS Dead explores one young black man’s experience with masculinity, sexuality, love and romance. Poems from this collection were performed at Feminist in Hip-Hop Panel at Fordham University in 2004 and Kevin Powell’s Black Men in America gatherings in 2003 and 2007. If the featured speakers in Byron Hurt’s “Beyond Beats and Rhymes” gathered their secret diaries, it would be this collection of poems.
CounterIntelligence CD
(May 2006)
almustafa’s highly-anticipated debut CD received critical acclaim and was dubbed “HipRockSpoketry” by FreeHipHop.com. CounterIntelligence featured production by GAME Rebellion, mixing and mastering by Aaron “Freedom” Lyles and vocals by Sparlha Swa. This CD included the poem Optimis Prime IS a Blk Man” recorded live at Afro-Punk in Feb. 2006.

Growing Up Hip-Hop
(Aug. 2008)
Growing Up Hip-Hop tells a coming-of-age story through fifteen years of poetry, beginning with unreleased poems from almustafa’s youth. This collection features an introduction by Nana Camille Yarbrough, author of Cornrows and a legendary performance poet. Poems from almustafa’s final chapter were featured at the first solar-powered hip-hop concert at the U.S. Social Forum in Atlanta, GA in 2006, La Casita at Lincoln Center outdoors alongside Amiri Baraka, Yusef Komunyakaa and Joy Harjo, and in almustafa’s multimedia show “Growing Up Hip-Hop: Plugged-In.”
Growing Up Hip-Hop is currently being used in more than 40 classrooms from the elementary to the university level and was named as a must-read by Teaching to Change: A Planning Book for Radical Educators.
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kahlil almustafa CV
Posted on 28. Nov, 2009 by kahlilalmustafa.
kahlil almustafa
ADDRESS: 410 Westminster Rd., Apt. 1C, Brooklyn, NY 11218
EMAIL ADDRESS: kahlilalmustafa@gmail.com
PHONE NUMBER: (917) 517-9006
DATE OF BIRTH: June 29, 1977
EDUCATION : Vermont College, BA in Cultural Studies, Montpelier, VT, 2007
Goddard College, MFA in Interdisciplinary Arts, Plainfield, VT, 2011
AWARDS:
Selected by The Field for the Economic Revitalization Program for Artists (ERPA) funded by Rockefeller Foundation, 2008.
Selected by the Hip-Hop Theater Festival as a Future Aesthetics Artist Re-grant (FAAR) winner funded by the Ford Foundation, 2008.
Member of 2006 Brooklyn Slam Team which was a semi-finalist at the 2006 National Poetry Slam Team event, Austin, TX, 2006.
2002 Nuyorican Grand Slam Champion, New York, NY, 2002.
2nd Place as a member of the Nuyorican Poet’s Café Poetry Team at the National Poetry Slam Championship, New York, NY, 2002.
2nd Place at the Baltimore Arts Festival Poetry Slam, Baltimore, MD, 2000.
BOOKS:
Growing Up Hip-Hop, MVMT Milk Publishing, August 2008
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Being used in more then 40 classrooms from Junior High School to the university level
I’m Crying Everyone’s Tears, Black Alchemist Press Inc., August 2002
Grandma’s Soup, Black Alchemist Press Inc., February 2000
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Selected a “poetic pick for the holidays” by Black Issues Book Review



