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Events
HARLEM COMMUNITY NEWSPAPERS EVENTS HARLEM CALENDAR OF COMMUNITY EVENTS
Now Until
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December 31
Gimme 50
On the fiftieth anniversary of the release of GIMME SHELTER, Maysles Documentary Center presents a series of films from the late 60’s and early 70’s that underscore the political, social, and cultural currents of the music and events depicted in the film. You can stream each film for $5 or watch all for $50 at maysles.org
December 24-28
All Day
Still/Moving
STILL/MOVING is a triptych of collaborative compositions created by an international working group of artists and writers who formed out of a 3-day virtual workshop, led by Lynne Sachs and Paolo Javier, in May 2020. During this initial workshop, a cohort of folks from around the world (Uruguay, Ireland, and all across the US) met over Zoom to explore the resonances and ruptures between still/ moving images and written/spoken words. Inspired by the experience, the participants decided to continue working together and have since made two more collaborative projects over the ensuing months combining language and moving imagery in various forms. There will be a live Q&A with the participants on Dec. 17th at 8:00pm Watch online at maysles.org
December 25 12:00pm
The Rare Miles Davis
Celebrate the holidays with some of the least-known and rare recordings of one of jazz’s greatest icons: Miles Davis. Join online at the National Jazz Museum in Harlem’s Facebook Live. FREE.
Miles Davis (Dec 25)
December 26 12:00pm
The Rare Billie Holiday
The holiday celebration continues with lesser-known and superlative recordings from one of jazz’s icons: Billie Holiday. Join online at the National Jazz Museum in Harlem’s Facebook Live. FREE.
December 27 12:00pm
The Rare Ella Fitzgerald
The holiday celebration continues with lesser-known and superlative recordings from on of jazz’s icons: Ella Fitzgerald. Join online at the National Jazz Museum in Harlem’s Facebook Live. FREE.
December 27 7:00pm
Kwanzaa
Celebration:
Regeneration Night
The tradition of Kwanzaa at the Apollo continues in 2020 on the Apollo Digital Stage! Since 2006, the Apollo Theater has celebrated Kwanzaa, bringing families and communities together from all of New York’s five boroughs. This year we have witnessed unprecedented disruption - a deadly pandemic, social unrest, economic tumult, an exhaustive presidential race and uncertainty
Billie Holiday (Dec 26)
Ella Fitzgerald (Dec 27)
around every corner. This digital gathering to celebrate culture, tradition, ritual and community in New York and around the country is more important than ever. FREE online at apollotheater.org
December 27 1:00-2:00pm
Winter Wonderland Hike
Join the Rangers on this hike to explore the winter wonderland of the North Woods in Central Park. Please wear comfortable shoes or boots. West 100 Street and Central Park West in Central Park. FREE.
HARLEM COMMUNITY NEWSPAPERS
Boosting Holiday Cheer at Home During a Socially Distant Season
Unfortunately, ries of past seasons and light candles in scents many Amer- invite hope for future like evergreen and pepicans will be ones all season long. permint. You can even unable to celebrate You can even set up a try simmering a pot of the holidays with their video conference to en- water and add aromatic extended family and joy the camaraderie of ingredients to it such as friends in person this decorating with far-off cloves, cinnamon sticks year, making it all the loved ones. and rosemary. more important to boost • Deck the halls • Send season’s holiday cheer at home. with music. Add a dig- greetings: Set aside an Here are few festive ital piano to your hol- afternoon to compose ideas for getting into iday-scape to help el- and send holiday cards. the holiday spirit during evate the mood with This end-of-year tradithis socially distant sea- Christmas carols and tion allows you to reson. other seasonal tunes. connect with the people • Don’t skip out on Consider Casio’s line of you care about most and the decorations: You PX-S console digital pi- can help lend the season may not be hosting any anos, which have a strik- a touch of normalcy. houseguests, gatherings ing design that fit any While you may not or big meals, but this room, décor and mood. PHOTO SOURCE: (c) Sinenkiy / iStock via Getty Images Plus be making your usushouldn’t be the year A glossy top panel and al visit to relatives or to skip out on the full- unibody case evoke audio lets you connect erful stereo amplifica- don’t forget its deli- throwing your annual scale decorating you a luxurious acoustic your device wireless- tion system. cious scents. Your nose bash, there are many typically enjoy. Lights, grand in a sleek case ly to the musical key- • Add favorite aro- will know the holidays creative ways to make trees, garlands, stock- that’s barely larger than board, so you can play mas: Now that you have have arrived when you the most of the season ings and wreaths can the keys themselves. all your favorite holiday the sights and sounds bake that first batch of and create happy memevoke favorite memo- Integrated Bluetooth music through its pow- of the season covered, gingerbread cookies or ories for years to come.
Bill de Blasio Mayor Dave A. Chokshi, MD, MSc Commissioner
HARLEM COMMUNITY NEWSPAPERS PANDEMIC Push is On to Increase African Americans’ Confidence in COVID Vaccine
By Stacy M. Brown, NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent @StacyBrownMedia
Former President dreth, one of the world’s Barack Obama has leading immunologists vowed to take the and an African Amerinew COVID-19 vaccination on live television. Dr. Ebony Hilton, a physician in the critical care and anesthesiology department at the University of Virginia Health, is also publicly taking the vaccine and documenting how she’s coping on YouTube.
On Day 1 of Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine, Queens, New York, critical care nurse Sandra Lindsay received the first dose of the two-shot vaccine at about 9:20 a.m. EST on Monday, December 14.
What Obama, Dr. Hilton, and Lindsay all have in common is that they are African American.
Intentional or not, the rollout has featured prominent Black people. can who sat on the U.S.
The mistrust in med- Food and Drug Adminicine and science in the istration’s panel that Black community re- approved the rollout of mains palpable for lots Pfizer’s coronavirus vacof well-founded reasons. cine.
“Truth and transpar- “There was an Afency are going to start rican American doctor with me,” Dr. Hilton that was in charge of declared. “I want you to the vaccine,” Baker said see me in real-time as I during a video call. undergo this process, “I felt more comfortand as my body adapts able that he and other as I have this medicine African Americans were in my body.” on the boards to come
Houston Astros man- up with the vaccine. ager Dusty Baker, an And he guaranteed that African American, also it wouldn’t be another urged Black people to Tuskegee kind of exget vaccinated. periment. And he urged
Baker praised Me- Black Americans to use harry Medical College the vaccine.” President Dr. James Hil- Because of the Tuskegee experiment, the notorious 40-year study that began in 1932, where U.S. Public Health
officials misled African Americans about their health status.
The study’s participants were infected with syphilis, and health officials withheld treatment like penicillin, leaving some to die.
“The Tuskegee Experiment ended ten years before I was born, and we still have heavy metal laced water in Flint, Michigan, we still have not fixed,” Dr. Hilton offered.
However, she offered optimism about the new coronavirus vaccine.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s foremost infectious disease physician, also championed the work of Dr. Kizzmekia Corbett, an African American scientist, whom Dr. Fauci said was at the forefront of the development of the vaccine.
“So, the first thing you might want to say to my African American brothers and sisters is that the vaccine that you’re going to be taking was developed by an African American woman. And that is just a fact,” Dr. Fauci remarked.
More than 300,000 Americans have died, and nearly 17 million have contracted the coronavirus. Some reports indicate that as many as 25 percent of COVID-19 victims are African American.
However, that hasn’t stopped the skepticism about the vaccine among many Black people.
“We saw early on that vaccine acceptance and willingness to enroll in vaccine clinical trials were going to be a major challenge,” Dr. Reed Tuckson, a former public health commissioner in Washington, D.C., and the leader of the Black Coalition Against COVID-19, a D.C.based effort to spread information about the virus and potential vaccines to Black Americans, told NBC News.
Over the past several months, the coalition has worked with sev-
eral Washington community organizations, historically Black colleges and universities, and community leaders, to share information about Covid-19 prevention.
They also drafted a public “Love Letter to Black America” that calls for people to be open to vaccines when they are available.