GOOD NEWS FROM THE CHURCH AND COMMUNITY
™ May 2018 $2.95
thepositivecommunity.com
Focus on
PURE JOY Jennifer Jones-Austin Memoir on Health & Healing THRIVE NYC First Lady Chirlane McCray Talks About Mental Health
Powered By—
TPC_May_2018WF.indd 3
HEALTH ONE BROOKLYN HEALTH LaRay Brown Heads New Hospital Network
Relected
Ras J. Baraka Keeps Newark Moving Forward
5/18/18 4:17 PM
Work that puts you first Sign up to drive for a convenient way to earn on your own schedule. Give rides around town—or deliver food—for a few minutes or a few hours at a time. Use the app to track how much you make on every trip.
Visit uber.com/drive to become a partner.
MONEY magazine says Touro’s NYSCAS is #1. So do our students.
Steve O. B.A. | NYSCAS ’18 Future Special Ed teacher
Your path to success starts at New York School of Career & Applied Studies (NYSCAS). Students like Steve choose from more than 45 associate’s and bachelor’s degree programs at seven convenient locations throughout the metro area. Choose NYSCAS. A division of Touro College.
1.212.463.0400 x5500 | NYSCAS.TOURO.EDU
Touro is an equal opportunity institution. For Touro’s complete Non-Discrimination Statement, visit www.touro.edu *Touro College was named #1 in the Value-added all star category. MONEY is a registered trademark of Time Inc. and is used under license. From MONEY Magazine, ©2017 Time Inc. Used under license. MONEY and Time Inc. are not affiliated with, and do not endorse products or services of Touro College.
M AY 2 0 1 8
CONTENTS 34
SECTIONS HEALTH...................................16 EDUCATION.............................39 CULTURE ................................44
Features Dedication to Sheila Oliver ...................................... 12 Bethany Baptist Commemorates MLK ...................... 14 NYC First Lady’s Program Continues to Thrive ........... 16
ON THE COVER: Photo by: Risasi Dias Newark Mayor Ras Baraka keeps his promises as he moves Newark forward!
&
also inside
Seniors Strut at Annual Fashion Show ...................... 20 One Brooklyn Strives to Improve Hospitals .............. 24 The Joy of Jennifer Jones Austin ............................... 29 Pastor Saunders Retires .......................................... 32 Cecil’s in Harlem Welcomes Mayor Baraka ............... 36 Accomplished Women Win, Rock & Rule! ................. 39
Publisher’s Desk .................................. 8 Wealth, Spirituality, and Culture ............................... 40 My View ............................................. 10 Marcella Maxwell’s Still Got It at 90! ....................... 42 Fitness Doctor .................................... 26
McCann Marks 25th Pastoral Anniversary ................ 43 Positive Music Matters in Harlem ............................ 44
Gospel Train ....................................... 50
St. John’s Baptist Gets New Pastor .......................... 46
The Way Ahead .................................. 53 Liz Black Wins Stellar Award .................................... 48 The Last Word .................................... 54 Avoiding Spam Calls ................................................ 52 5
The Positive Community May 2018
www.thepositivecommunity.com
The Legend in Luxury® H. Dan Dunn
Ray Catena® Sales Associate
908-610-7282
Hugh.Dunn@verizon.net
It’s a “DUNN” Deal!
I would be happy to customize a lease or finance offer for any one of our fine automobiles.
• We build one-on-one relationships with our customers for generations • We offer an enjoyable and stress-free car buying experience • We pride ourselves on our prices, unparalleled customer service & selection • As Ray Catena says, “You take care of your life, your business, your family and we’ll take care of your car.”
OUR BRANDS & LOCATIONS
Ray Catena® Motor Car 910 US-1, Edison, NJ
Ray Catena® of Union 2585 US-22, Union, NJ
Ray Catena® of Freehold
Audi Freehold
3561 US-9, Freehold, NJ
Ray Catena® Jaguar of Edison 920 US-1, Edison, NJ
325 NJ-37, Toms River, NJ
Audi Toms River
COMING SOON! Ray Catena® Jaguar of Marlboro
Ray Catena® Alfa Romeo
Ray Catena® Maserati
4380 US-9, Freehold, NJ
Ray Catena® Lexus of Monmouth 2135 NJ-35, Oakhurst, NJ
Ray Catena® Lexus of Freehold 4264 US-9, Freehold, NJ
Ray Catena® Lexus of White Plains 525 Tarrytown Rd., White Plains, NY
2133 NJ-35, Oakhurst, NJ
2133 NJ-35, Oakhurst, NJ
Ray Catena® Lexus of Larchmont 1435 Boston Post Rd., Larchmont, NY
Land Rover Edison 920 US-1, Edison, NJ COMING SOON!
Land Rover Marlboro
Ray Catena® Porsche 920 US-1, Edison, NJ Porsche Toms River 325 NJ-37, Toms River, NJ
Ray Catena® Motor Car Ray Catena® INFINITI of Edison 900 US-1, Edison, NJ
Ray Catena® INFINITI of Bridgewater
1350 US-22, Bridgewater, NJ
MINI of Westchester BMW of Westchester 543 Tarrytown Rd. White Plains, NY
543 Tarrytown Rd. White Plains, NY
MINI of Monmouth
2127 NJ-35, Oakhurst, NJ
910 US-1, Edison, NJ
Ray Catena® of Union 2585 US-22, Union, NJ
Ray Catena® Motor Car 910 US-1, Edison, NJ
For nearly 60 years, the Ray Catena® Family of Dealerships has been guided by one defining principle:
“If you think there is anything more important than a customer, think again.”
1-800-NEW-AUTO
Roll Call for PC_MAY_18.qxp_Roll Call for PC Document.qxd 5/17/18 1:37 PM Page 1
R C
GREAT
T
OLL
MAKE THE DIFFERENCE!
ALL
TO PROGRESS
he clergy organizations, churches, community businesses and institutions listed below have committed to the purchase of at least 50 magazines per month at $1.50 each or they support this publication through the purchase of advertising. Find out more by calling 973-233-9200 or email rollcall@thepositivecommunity.com.
Abyssinian B.C., Harlem, NY Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts III, Pastor
Concord B.C., Brooklyn, NY Rev. Dr. Gary V. Simpson, Pastor
Messiah Baptist Church, Bridgeport, CT Rev. James Logan, Pastor
St. Anthony Baptist Church, Brooklyn, NY Rev. Dr. Duane E. Cooper, Pastor
Abundant Life Fellowship COGIC, Newark, NJ Supt. Edward Bohannon, Jr, Pastor
Convent Avenue Baptist Church, New York, NY Rev. Dr. Jesse T. Willams, Pastor
Messiah Baptist Church, East Orange, NJ Rev. Dana Owens, Pastor
St. John Baptist Church, Camden, NJ Rev. Dr. Silas M. Townsend, Pastor
Aenon Baptist Church, Vauxhall NJ Rev Alphonso Williams, Sr Pastor
Ebenezer B.C. of Englewood, NJ Rev. Preston E. Thompson, Jr., Pastor
Metropolitan B.C., Newark, NJ Rev. Dr. David Jefferson, Pastor
St. John’s B.C., Scotch Plains, NJ Rev. Dr. Evans L. Spagner, Interim Senior Pastor
Agape Baptist Church, Newark NJ Rev. Craig R. Jackson, Pastor
Emmanuel Baptist Church, Brooklyn NY Rev. Anthony Trufant, Pastor
Mount Calvary B.C., Englewood, NJ Rev. Dr. Vernon C. Walton, Senior Pastor
St. Luke Baptist Church of Harlem, NY Rev. Dr. Johnnie McCann, Pastor
Antioch Baptist Church., Brooklyn, NY Rev. Robert M. Waterman, Pastor
Empire Missionary B.C., Convention NY Rev. Dr. Ronald Grant, President
Mount Calvary United Methodist Church, New York, NY Rev. Francis Kairson, Pastor
St Luke B.C., Paterson, NJ Rev. Kenneth D.R. Clayton, Pastor
Archdiocese of New York Brother Tyrone Davis, Office of Black Ministry
Fellowship Missionary B.C., Newark, NJ Rev. Dr. Elton T. Byrd Pastor/Founder
Mt. Neboh Baptist Church, Harlem, NY Rev. Dr. Johnnie Green Jr., Pastor
Baptist Ministers Conference of Greater NY & Vicinity Rev. Dr. Charles A. Curtis, President
First B.C. of Lincoln Gardens, Somerset NJ Rev. Dr. DeForest (Buster) Soaries, Pastor
Mt. Pisgah B.C., Brooklyn, NY Rev. Dr. Johnny Ray Youngblood, Pastor
First Baptist Church, East Elmhurst, NY Rev Patrick Henry Young, Pastor
Mount Olive Baptist Church, Hackensack, NJ Rev. Gregory J. Jackson, Pastor
Berean B.C., Brooklyn, NY Rev. Arlee Griffin Jr., Pastor Bethany B.C., Brooklyn, NY Rev. Dr. Adolphus C. Lacey, Sr. Pastor Bethany B.C., Newark, NJ Rev. Timothy E. Jones, Pastor Bethlehem Missionary B.C., Roselle, NJ Rev. Jeffrey Bryan, Pastor Beulah Bible Cathedral Church, Newark, NJ Gerald Lydell Dickson, Senior Pastor Calvary Baptist Church, Garfield, NJ Rev. Calvin McKinney, Pastor Calvary Baptist Church, Morristown, NJ Rev. Jerry M. Carter, Jr., Pastor Canaan B. C. of Christ, Harlem, NY Rev. Thomas D. Johnson, Pastor Canaan B.C., Paterson, NJ Rev. Barry L. Graham, Pastor Cathedral International., Perth Amboy, NJ Bishop Donald Hilliard, Pastor Charity Baptist Church, Bronx, NY Rev. Reginald Williams, Pastor Christian Cultural Center, Brooklyn, NY Rev. A.R. Barnard, Pastor Clear View Baptist Church, Newark, NJ Rev. Curtis W. Belle, Jr., Pastor Community B.C., Englewood, NJ Rev. Dr. Lester Taylor, Pastor Community Church of God, Plainfield, NJ Rev. Dr. Shirley B. Cathie., Pastor Emeritus
First Baptist Church of Teaneck, NJ Rev. Dr. Marilyn Monroe Harris, Pastor First Corinthian Baptist Church, NY Rev. Michael A. Walrond, Jr. Senior Pastor First Park Baptist Church, Plainfield, NJ Rev. Rufus McClendon, Jr., Pastor First Baptist Church, South Orange, NJ Rev. Dr. Terry Richardson, Pastor Friendship Baptist Church, Rahway, NJ Rev. Allen Thompson, Jr., Pastor
Mount Zion Baptist Church, Westwood, NJ Rev. Barry Miller, Pastor Mt. Olivet B.C, Newark, NJ Rev. André W. Milteer, Pastor Mt. Zion AME Church, Trenton, NJ Rev. J. Stanley Justice, Pastor New Hope Baptist Church of Hackensack, Hackensack, NJ Rev. Dr. Frances Manning-Fontaine Pastor Emeritus
General Baptist Convention, NJ Rev. Dr. Lester W. Taylor, Jr., President
New Jerusalem Worship Center, Jamaica, NY Rev. Dr. Calvin Rice, Senior Pastor
Good Neighbor Baptist Church Rev. Dr. George A. Blackwell, III, Pastor
New Life Cathedral, Mt. Holly, NJ Rev. Eric Wallace, Pastor
Grace B. C., Mt. Vernon, NY Rev. Dr. Franklyn W. Richardson, Pastor
New Zion B.C., Elizabeth, NJ Rev. Kevin James, Pastor
Greater Abyssinian BC, Newark, NJ Rev. Allen Potts, Senior Pastor
Paradise B. C., Newark, NJ Rev. Jethro James, Pastor
Greater Zion Hill B.C., Harlem, NY Rev. Dr. Frank J. Blackshear, Pastor
Park Ave Christian Disciples of Christ, East Orange, NJ Rev. Harriet Wallace, Pastor
Harlem Congregations for Community Improvement (HCCI) Malcolm A. Punter, President & CEO
Pilgrim B. C., Newark, NJ Rev. Dr. Glenn Wilson, Pastor
Imani Baptist Church, East Orange, NJ Rev.Chuch Chamberlayne, Pastor
Ruth Fellowship Ministries, Plainfield, NJ Rev. Tracey Brown, Pastor
It Is Well Living Ministries, Clark, NJ Rev. Kahlil Carmichael, Pastor
Shiloh AME Zion Church, Englewood, NJ Rev. John D. Givens, Pastor
Macedonia Baptist Church, Lakewood, NJ Dr. Edward D. Harper, Pastor
Shiloh B.C., Plainfield, NJ Rev. Hodari K. Hamilton, Sr., Senior Pastor
Mariners’ Temple B.C., New York, NY Rev. Dr. Henrietta Carter, Pastor
Shiloh B.C., Trenton, NJ Rev. Darell Armstrong, Pastor
St. James AME Church, Newark, NJ Rev. Ronald L. Slaughter, Pastor St. Paul Baptist, Red Bank, NJ Rev. Alexander Brown, Pastor St. Mark Missionary B.C., Jamaica, NY Rev. Owen E. Williams, Pastor St. Matthew AME Church, Orange, NJ Rev. Dr. Lanel D. Guyton, Pastor St. Paul's B.C., Montclair, NJ Rev. Dr. Bernadette Glover, Pastor St. Paul Community B.C., Brooklyn, NY Rev. David K. Brawley, Pastor The New Hope B.C., Newark, NJ Rev. Joe Carter, Senior Pastor Union Baptist Temple,, Bridgeton, NJ Rev. Albert L. Morgan, Pastor United Fellowship B.C., Asbury Park, NJ Rev. James H. Brown, Sr., Pastor Walker Memorial B.C. Bronx, NY Rev. Dr. J. Albert Bush Sr., Pastor Welcome Baptist Church, Newark, NJ Rev. Dr. Elijah C.Williams, Pastor World Gospel Music Assoc., Newark, NJ Dr. Albert Lewis, Founder
Businesses & Organizations 125th St. BID City National Bank Essex County College, NJ Greater Harlem Chamber of Commerce Marion P. Thomas Charter School Mildred Crump, Newark City Council Muslim American Chamber of Commerce NAACP New Jersey* NAACP, NY State Conference* New Brunswick Theological Seminary New Jersey Performing Arts Center New York Theological Seminary NobleNNJ Nubian Conservatory of Music Razac Products Co., Newark, NJ Schomburg Center for Research The College of New Rochelle United Way of Essex and West Hudson WBGO-88.3FM West Harlem Group Assistance, Inc.
“The Positive Community magazine does outstanding work in promoting the good works of the Black Church. All churches and businesses should subscribe to and advertise in The Positive Community. Please support this magazine, the only one that features good news about the black community.”—Rev. Buster Soaries, General Baptist Revival, May 20, 2010
ADRIAN COUNCIL PUBLISHER’S DESK
Straight Outta Brooklyn: Building Positive Communities . . . Together
T
he Positive Community (TPC) is currently completing its first Brooklyn Issue, which is due for distribution on the weekend of June 16. We are inviting Brooklyn congregations and clergy leaders to be featured in this collector’s edition. Each year, TPC publishes the annual Harlem Summer Issue (July/Aug) and The Newark issue (Oct.). I am proud to announce that the Borough of Brooklyn is now in full rotation—June is TPC’s “Straight Outta Brooklyn” Issue! It’s time to tell the real story about black life and culture in the largest, most ethnically concentrated and culturally diverse, black community in America! Claims to the contrary notwithstanding, the people of God are moving forward! This community’s faith institutions are leading the way. Hope, opportunity, prosperity and faith abounds in Brooklyn! Together we will make the case for the future of our people in the “Borough of Churches”! Let The Positive Community tell your story about church, congregation, ministry, and community service at no cost to you or your church. Indeed, each and every Monday morning untold millions of dollars are deposited into local bank branches from Sunday church collections. Here’s the challenge to our faith leaders: Would you be willing to inquire of your local bank about taking out a commercial ad in a publication that you and your congregation value; that’s distributed to over 200 churches (40 congrega-
8
The Positive Community May 2018
tions in Brooklyn), as well as scores of schools, businesses and community institutions throughout the tri-state region? The people would love to see the businesses they support with their consumer dollars advertise in TPC. Always remember this: many large businesses or corporations have two community outreach budgets: 1.) corporate giving for nonprofits and, 2.) commercial advertising. TPC only seeks the latter—commercial advertising. If you ask them about advertising in TPC, they would be hard-pressed to say “no.” Advocacy works! For a media advertising package, email: Adrian@thepositivecommunity.com; see my editorial “A Call to Action; A Knock at Midnight” at thepositivecommunity.com, It was written almost one year ago in June 2017 about the crisis in black-owned media. Check us out on Facebook. Your thoughts and ideas are very important to us! The publishing deadline for all material to be included in our first Brooklyn Issue is June 11; distribution to churches, June 17. The “Straight Outta Brooklyn” Issue will be nothing less than spectacular! A Positive Community Ideal
This presents an excellent opportunity to show some love; to package and sell (showcase) hope and opportunity to our readers throughout the NY/NJ/CT region; to tell our own story on our own terms—to affirm a future of potentials and possibilities for our people in Brooklyn and beyond! For 19 years, The Positive Community has delivered quality results for both our readers and our advertisers, as the region’s exclusive faith-based life style magazine. Ultimately it’s up to each of us—the forward thinkers--to contribute toward producing this desired effect. The success of the Brooklyn Issue will depend upon collective, coordinated, community action--a positive, community-building ideal! Participation in TPC’s Brooklyn Issue is not limited to churches, but should also include businesses, corporations, city government, as well as public and private institutions. Together, we move forward . . . Because a positive community is everybody’s business . . . it really pays to care! www.thepositivecommunity.com
www.citytech.cuny.edu/directadmissions
FALL DIRECT ADM
SSIONS
SUMME SESSI ONS 2018
2018
www.citytech.cuny.edu/summer
CITY TECH 718.260.5500 NEW YORK CITY COLLEGE OF TECHNOLOGY
300 Jay Street Downtown Brooklyn facebook.com/citytech • @citytechnews
www.citytech.cuny.edu
GET READY TO TAKE YOUR CAREER TO THE NEXT LEVEL. Metropolitan College of New York’s accelerated bachelor’s or master’s degree programs will prepare you for a high-demand career. With a unique educational model designed for working adults like you, earn an undergraduate degree in less than 3 years or a graduate degree in as little as one year. Don’t put your life on pause to earn a degree. Manhattan - 60 West Street by 1 Bronx - 463 E 149 Street by 2
4
5
R trains
5 trains
mcny.edu | 877.263.7066
www.thepositivecommunity.com
ACCELERATE YOUR FUTURE.
May 2018 The Positive Community
9
REV. THERESA NANCE MY VIEW
Rev. Nance is pastor of The Church by the Side of the Road in Passaic, NJ. She is also a radio talk show host and documentary filmmaker.
Take Two Aspirin and Call Me in (Hopefully) 2020
I
got a headache. I have been on this planet for quite some time and have seen much, both good and bad. I have lived through the assassination of one president and have had the privilege and delight to watch the first African-American president take the oath of office and lead this country for two terms. That president was Barack Obama. I have witnessed a woman finally being taken seriously to run for the highest office in the land twice. Hillary Clinton didn’t break the glass ceiling but got mighty close. I have seen the suits in Hollywood finally recognize the reality that blacks are not box office poison on the silver screen. Can we all say Wakanda? And now, for the first time in my life I’m seeing a man sitting in the Oval Office with a total disregard for the rule of law, and behaving in a manner that disrespects the office itself and the people he’s supposed to represent. So, I got a headache. Not literally, thank God. But, I can’t imagine a black man or woman holding such an office and being allowed to demean themselves and the nation as a whole repeatedly. Not only that, the very people who went bonkers because President Obama wore a beige suit when he was president appear to be totally oblivious to what Donald J. Trump, Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, does on the regular. What’s wrong with this picture? Well, it’s lopsided. The hypocrisy coming from members of his own Republican party has got to be a stench in God’s nostrils. You know that old refrain, what do we tell the children? Well, what do we tell the children? Do we tell them all of this is a bad dream and will go away in a few years? Do we tell them there are two sets of rules for different tribes? Do we utter, “The Lord will make a way somehow?” Or, do we agitate, agitate, agitate, as the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. advised us to do during those perilous times of the past? If memory serves, two black men were taken out of Starbucks because they apparently were sitting while black. The manager of the coffee house reportedly said they were trespassing and so the police were called. The “brothers” were taken out of the establishment in handcuffs. In my
10
The The Positive Positive Community Community May May 2018 2018
judgment, some of the things our president has said equate to the “dog whistle” that seems to indicate, any humiliating treatment you give people of color is okey dokey. I came of age in the 1960s and though I spent my time in the North, it seems what I’m seeing regularly is an instant replay of the goings-on that occurred down South when blacks were fighting for access. Don’t get it twisted, it wasn’t for integration. It was for access. Sorry, folks, I kind of look back longingly to the days when you’d enter a greasy spoon on a late Sunday night coming from the clubs and felt perfectly comfortable being around your own tribe. The Apostle Paul tells believers to pray for those in authority . . . Will do! That includes the president. But, somebody, please pull this man’s coat, if I may write using black vernacular, so future generations can have time to do more than simply clean up after him. www.thepositivecommunity.com www.thepositivecommunity.com
Doctors who understand our community – that’s Getting Better with Us.
Ogori Kalu, MD Dr. Kalu is a graduate of New York Medical College and completed her research fellowship in Breast Surgery Oncology at Stanford University.
Dr. Ogori Kalu is an oncological breast surgeon with the Connie Dwyer Breast Center at Saint Michael’s Medical Center in Newark. The Breast Center offers comprehensive coordinated breast imaging services in a comfortable, inviting setting equipped with stateof-the-art diagnostic technology. When you visit the Breast Center, you will be treated by experienced, compassionate breast health professionals and technicians. The American Cancer Society recommends that all women over the age of 40 have regular breast exams and mammograms. Call us for an appointment today.
973.877.5189
smmcnj.com/conniedwyer
/SaintMichaelsMedicalCenter
/SMMC_Newark
Lt. Governor Sheila Y. Oliver Conference Center Paying Tribute to Lifetime of Achievements by Oliver, the First African-American Lt. Governor of NJ Photos: Raymond Hagans
L–R: U.S. Representative Donald M. Payne Jr.; William Payne; Sheila Oliver; and Essex County Executive Joseph N. DiVincenzo, Jr.
N
ewark, NJ – Essex County Executive Joseph N. DiVincenzo, Jr. recognized the public service contributions and accomplishments of Lt. Governor Sheila Y. Oliver by rededicating the conference room on the 14th floor of the Essex County LeRoy F. Smith, Jr. Public Safety Building as the “Lt. Governor
New Jersey Lt. Governor Sheila Oliver, the second highest-ranking official in the State of New Jersey
L-R: Maurice Brown, Calvin West, H. Dan Dunn, and Essex County Democratic Committee Chairman LeRoy Jones
Sheila Y. Oliver Conference Center” on Tuesday, March 27th. The renaming recognizes Oliver as being the first African American Lt. Governor in New Jersey. The room previously was named for Oliver in 2013 to recognize her for being the second woman to serve as Assembly Speaker in New Jersey history. Photo: Charles Wilkinson
New Vision Begins New Chapter Bishop Agee Installed as New Pastor
W
ith the installation of its new pastor, Bishop Victor D. Agee on Sunday, March 18, 2018, New Vision Baptist Church (NVBC) celebrated the beginning of a new chapter in the history of the church as Pastor Agee begins to build on the framework laid by Bishop Andre L. Jackson, the church’s late pastor and founder. In addition to the installation service, the church hosted an evening worship and gospel concert on Friday, March 16, in honor of the incoming bishop. Born in Chicago, IL and educated in the Maywood, IL public school system, Victor D. Agee accepted his call to the gospel ministry at the age of 21. He earned a degree in Biblical Studies from Moody Bible Institute, a Bachelor’s degree in Intercommunications from Trinity International University, and was ordained on July 17, 1985.
12
The Positive Community May 2018
Agee is a celebrated religious television and radio personality and served as a board member of The Leaders Network, which strives to improve the quality of life for the Greater Chicago area, particularly the disenfranchised and outcast. His ministry, work, and influence have spread globally by way of preaching, teaching, and humanitarian service in Jamaica; Bahamas; Ghana; Liberia West; Kenya East; Istanbul, Turkey; and Israel. New Vision Full Gospel is located at 100 Warrington Place in East Orange, New Jersey. www.thepositivecommunity.com
The Essex County Free Summer Music Concert Series offers a diverse lineup of performers who will take center stage throughout our historic Parks System. Pack a blanket, enjoy the cool evening breeze, and dance to the sounds of summer.
Hosted by:
Joseph N. DiVincenzo, Jr. Essex County Executive
r e m Sum sic u M 018
Joseph N. DiVincenzo, Jr. Essex County Executive
2
Essex County
Branch Brook Park
All performances begin at 5:30pm Concourse Hill Pavilion across from the Cathedral Basilica of the Sacred Heart
FR E E FAM I LY M U S I C
JAZZ IN THE PARK Thursdays: June 14, 21 and 28
Festivals*
Essex County
GOSPEL FESTIVAL Saturday, June 9 ~ 2pm-5pm Monte Irvin Orange Park, Orange
Brookdale Park
All performances begin at 7:30pm
HOUSE MUSIC FESTIVAL Saturday, June 23 ~ 12noon Weequahic Park, Newark
GARDEN STATE RADIO Friday, July 6
AFRICAN CARIBBEAN FESTIVAL Saturday, August 4 ~ 12pm-8pm Monte Irvin Orange Park, Orange
BILLY GILMAN Finalist On NBC’s “The Voice” Friday, July 13 THE INFERNOS Friday, July 20 JAZZ UNDER THE STARS: NICOLAS KING QUARTET & ALEX BUGNON Friday, July 27 TUSK: FLEETWOOD MAC TRIBUTE Friday, August 3
Fireworks Spectaculars NEW JERSEY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Friday, June 29 ~ 7:30pm Branch Brook Park, Newark MOTOR CITY REVUE Monday, July 2 ~ 7:30pm Weequahic Park, Newark BELLETONES & TOTAL SOUL Tuesday, July 3 ~ 7:30pm Brookdale Park, Bloomfield/Montclair
INTERNATIONAL FOOD FESTIVAL Saturday, August 11 ~ 4pm-9pm Ivy Hill Park, Newark LATINO FESTIVAL Sunday, August 12 ~ 12pm-8pm Monte Irvin Orange Park, Orange RAYFIELD MORTON’S TALENT “GONG SHOW” Sunday, August 19 ~ 2pm-7pm Monte Irvin Orange Park, Orange ESSEX COUNTY AFRICAN CARIBBEAN FESTIVAL Saturday, September 8 ~ 11am-8pm Branch Brook Park, Newark
MIKE GRIOT’S ESSEX COUNTY SOUTH MOUNTAIN BLUES FESTIVAL Sunday, September 9 ~ 12pm-8pm South Mountain Reservation, West Orange *These events are co-sponsored by the Essex County Department of Parks, Recreation, and Cultural Affairs.
the Board of Chosen Freeholders and the Department of Parks, Recreation & Cultural Affairs Board of Chosen F reeholders
Brendan W. Gill, President Wayne L. Richardson, Vice President Janine G. Bauer Leonard M. Luciano Rufus I. Johnson Robert Mercado Lebby C. Jones Carlos M. Pomares Patricia Sebold
Live At Your Local Essex County Park All performances begin at 7pm
JUKEBOX LEGENDS Tuesday, June 26 ~ Yanticaw Park, Nutley JULIAN & DOMINIQUE Wednesday, June 27 ~ Verona Park, Verona BRADFORD HAYES Tuesday, July 10 ~ Veterans Memorial Park, Newark PULSE JAZZ QUINTET Wednesday, July 11 ~ Monte Irvin Orange Park, Orange LATIN SPLENDOR Tuesday, July 17 ~ Riverbank Park, Newark DENISE HAMILTON Wednesday, July 18 ~ Watsessing Park, Bloomfield/East Orange RICHARD REITER Tuesday, July 24 ~ Ivy Hill Park, Newark GORDON JAMES Wednesday, July 25 ~ Vailsburg Park, Newark GROUP TBD Tuesday, July 31 ~ Irvington Park, Irvington CAMEOS Wednesday, August 1 ~ Cedar Grove Park, Cedar Grove STEPPIN OUT Tuesday, August 7 ~ Grover Cleveland Park Caldwell/Essex Fells NANNY ASSIS BRAZILIAN EXPERIENCE Wednesday, August 8 ~ Independence Park, Newark JOEY ARMINIO & THE FAMILY Friday, August 10 ~ Eagle Rock Reservation, West Orange KENNEDY DANCERS Tuesday, August 14 ~ Anderson Park, Upper Montclair
For more information, please call 973-268-3500 or visit www.essexcountynj.org OUR SPONSORS: made possible with funds
MLK Commemoration Our Fight Is Not Just About Us; It Is for the Generations to Come
O
n April 4, 2018, the 50th anniversary of the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., more than fifty Brooklyn clergy came together at Bethany Baptist Church to celebrate his life and legacy. The program also honored three people who continue to establish worldwide justice and equality in the spirit of Dr. King—Rev. Dr. Raphael G. Warnock; Rev. Herbert D. Daughtry, Sr.; and Linda Sasour. Rev. Warnock is senior pastor of historic Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, GA, the spiritual home of Dr. King. Along with his father, Rev. Martin Luther King, Sr. known as “Daddy” King, the younger King co-pastored Ebenezer until his death in 1968. His funeral, which was attended by thousands and covered worldwide on television, was held at the church. Rev.Warnock assumed the role of senior pastor in 2005. Under his leadership, Ebenezer Baptist Church, with a congregation of over 6,000, continues to serve the Atlanta community in the Martin Luther King, Jr. National Historic Site. Reverend Dr. Herbert Daughtry is the national presiding minister of the House of the Lord Pentecostal Church, headquartered in Brooklyn, and a noted civil rights and equal justice activist. His more than 50 years in church and community service has earned him the title of “The People’s Pastor.” Linda Sasour, former executive director of the Arab American Association of New York, gained national attention for her advocacy on behalf of American Muslims and as a co-chair of the 2017 Women's March. The program was organized by Rev. Sharmaine Byrd, pastor of Greater Mt. Carmel Worship Center. Rev. Dr. Adolphus C. Lacey is the senior pastor of Bethany Baptist Church. —JNW
L-R: Rev. Dr. Adolphus C. Lacey; Rev. Dr. Raphael Warnock; Rev. Dr. Herbert D. Daughtry, Sr.; Linda Sasour; and Rev. Sharmaine Byrd, pastor, Greater Mt. Carmel Worship Church.
Call of the drums with dancers
L–R: Bro. Paul Muhammad; Minister Henry Muhammad of Muhammad Mosque #7C; and Rev. Robert Waterman, senior pastor, Antioch Baptist Church
Rev. Dr. Adolphus C. Lacey.
Senior Pastor of the Historic Ebenezer Baptist Church, Rev. Dr. Raphael Gamaliel Warnock
Photos: Rev. James Perry and Lem Peterkin
14
The Positive Community May 2018
www.thepositivecommunity.com
MLK Commemoration at Bethany BC, Brooklyn, NY
www.thepositivecommunity.com
May 2018 The Positive Community
15
music, art + literature
Health ideas for wellness
Money
THRIVE TOGETHER: A Weekend for Mental Health buiness, finance + work NYC First Lady Chirlane McCray Talks About Mental Health By Fern Gillespie
Education
Studies show a mental illness can go undiagnosed for 10 years. “In poor communities with a lot of uninsured people, African Americans are especially hit hard,” said McCray. “We don’t have the mental health workforce that is culturally responsive as it could be. Only 5 percent of our mental health professionals are African American.” ThriveNYC has launched the volunteer programs Sisters Thrive and Brothers Thrive, which have African American women and men assisting with mental health concerns in communities. “We want everyone to know that they can be a mental health helper or healer,” said McCray. In a recent conversation, the First Lady of New York City spoke about mental health in NYC.
the art + science of learning Chirlane McCray
FG: Why do you think there is a general stigma about people with mental illness?”
I
n 2015, New York City First Lady Chirlane McCray created ThriveNYC, the most comprehensive mental health plan of any city or state in the nation. ThriveNYC initiatives represent a total commitment of more than $850 million over the next four years to help New Yorkers living with mental illness get the support they need. From May 17–20, Thrive Together: A Weekend for Mental Health takes place at over 2,000 of houses of worship and community groups in New York and across the U.S. Throughout New York, there will be programs in mosques, churches, and synagogues—including St. Patrick’s Cathedral and Rev. A.R. Bernard’s Christian Cultural Center.
16 16
The Positive Community May 2018 The Positive Community May 2018
CM: I think there is a lot of miseducation and a great deal of fear. People, when they don’t understand something, they are afraid. Our culture views these as problems, as failings, as character flaws; not as health problems. We’ve come a long way. These are diseases and should be treated as such. But, there’s not enough education about the science of addiction or illnesses like bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and even depression and anxiety. In the absence of education, there is a fear of people who seem different and behave in unexpected ways. It makes people nervous. FG: Why do you think the religious community is interested in focusing on mental illness? CM: Members of the faith communities are our first responders. They see the incredible suffering in our communities and their call is to relieve suffering. The statistic is one in five adults and children suffer from a mental www.thepositivecommunity.com www.thepositivecommunity.com
illness illnessor or addiction addiction in in any any given year. That That means means we weare are all all touched touched by by this. this. We We are suffering suffering ourselves ourselves or or it’s it’s aa family family member, member, which which means we are affected affected by by it. it. The The problems problems are are so so widespread. widespread. For example, example, an an estimated estimated 88,000 88,000 people people die die from from alcohol related related causes causes annually. annually. We Wereally really don’t don’t talk talk about about that. We are are talking talking about aboutthe the drug drug overdoses overdoses now, now, because because they are are the the leading leading cause cause ofof death death before before the the age age of 50—especially 50—especially in in the the case case of of opioids. opioids. Our Our family family and and community leaders leaders are are the the core core ofoftheir their communities. communities. People turn to them. them. People People trust trust them. them.We Wewant want them them to to be equipped to to connect connect people peopleto to appropriate appropriatecare. care. FG: FG:What WhatisisThriveNYC ThriveNYC Mental Mental Health First First Aid? Aid? CM: CM: ThriveNYC ThriveNYC provides provides mental health health training training to to anyanyone one17 17 or or older. older. It’s It’s aa comprehensive comprehensive eight-hour eight-hour course. course. ItItdescribes describes the the signs signs of of different mental mental health health illnesses, illnesses, what what substance substance abuse abuse looks looks like, it evens evens offers offers guidance guidance on onhandling handlingsituations situations like someone who who isis suicidal, suicidal,hears hears voices, voices,or orfears fears leaving leaving the house.
help—to help—toreach reachout outand andtalk talk toto someone someone you you trust, trust, somesomeone onewho whocan canhelp helpyou youget geteducated educated about about thethe problem. problem. As As with withany anyhealth healthchallenge, challenge,the theparticular particular problem problem may maycall callfor forthe theassistance assistanceofofmore more than than one one professionprofessional. al.ItItmight mightmean meantalking talkingwith with a social a social worker, worker,therapist, therapist, psychiatrist, psychiatrist,spiritual spiritualleaders, leaders,and andother otheradvisors. advisors. But, But, the thefirst firststep stepisistotoreach reachout outsomeone someone you you trust trust who who willwill not notbe bejudgmental. judgmental. For Formore moreinformation informationvisit visitthrivenyc.cityofnewyork.us/ thrivenyc.cityofnewyork.us/
UPCOMING UPCOMINGininJUNE JUNE SPECIAL SPECIALISSUE ISSUE
FG: FG:How Howcan canfamilies families deal deal with the problem problem of of aa loved lovedone onehaving having both bothaamental mentalillness illness and and drug problem? CM: CM:The Theadvice advicefor for helping helping a loved one one is is the thesame samefor forselfself-
Straight Straight Outta Outta
Brooklyn Brooklyn ToToAdvertise AdvertiseCall Call
973-233-9200 973-233-9200 ororEmail Email
sales@thepositivecommunity.com sales@thepositivecommunity.com FOR FORRATES RATES& &DEADLINES DEADLINES www.thepositivecommunity.com www.thepositivecommunity.com www.thepositivecommunity.com
1717 May May 2018 2018The The Positive Positive Community Community May 2018 The Positive Community 17
Protective PCI: A less invasive alternative to triple bypass heart surgery
Left to right: Gail Baker, Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center; Claire Simmonds, of Somerset, NJ; Najam Wasty, MD, Director of the Cardiac Catheterization Laboratories at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center.
Claire Simmonds, 76, of Somerset, NJ, woke up in the middle of the night a few days before Thanksgiving with her heart beating wildly. She said she could feel her heart beating in her neck. She was rushed to the emergency room where doctors told her she was in AFIB (atrial fibrillation), a serious condition where the heart cannot effectively pump blood to the body. An angiogram revealed several blocked arteries and Claire was shocked by the news because she had taken such good care of her heart ever since experiencing a heart attack 28 years ago. Claire had no outward signs of heart trouble. This time around, her doctors found it impossible to perform the coronary angioplasty procedure because her blockages were in locations that were difficult to reach. When Claire woke up she was told she needed triple bypass open heart surgery.
“Dr. Wasty and the cardiovascular team at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center saved my life!” — Claire Simmonds
Claire was not happy about the news. While awaiting surgery she reached out to her friend, Gail Baker, a Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center, an RWJBarnabas Health facility located in Newark. “We fix impossible blockages at Newark Beth Israel all the time,” said Baker, and she arranged for Claire to see Najam Wasty, MD, Director of the Cardiac Catheterization Laboratories at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center. During her appointment with Dr. Wasty, Claire felt immediately at ease. “His words gave me confidence. He was very clear and kind and I knew, after that first visit with Dr. Wasty that I would be all right.” Although Dr. Wasty confirmed that open heart surgery and triple bypass were the preferred treatments for her type of heart blockage, he also gave her another option—protective PCI. Protective PCI is a non-surgical procedure that entails guiding a mini heart pump device called an Impella® through an artery in the leg and up to heart. The mini heart pump temporarily assists with blood flow from the heart to the body and gives the interventional cardiologist the ability to monitor and control the blood flow and therefore more time to access difficult blockages during an angioplasty. “Protective PCI is an alternative for a certain population of cardiac patients,” said Dr. Wasty. “It is less invasive than traditional open heart coronary bypass surgery and most patients are home in 24 hours.” Dr. Wasty is one of only of a handful of physicians in New Jersey who performs protective PCI procedures. Dr. Wasty successfully performed Claire’s protective PCI angioplasty at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center in December 2017. Today, Claire feels great and is back to her everyday activities which include “trotting” with her Italian Greyhound dog. She hopes to spread the word about this procedure so others can be helped. According to Claire, “Dr. Wasty and the cardiovascular team at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center saved my life!” For more information or to make an appointment with one of New Jersey’s top cardiologists or cardiovascular surgeons, visit rwjbh.org/heart.
Let’s be healthy together.
L–R: Judge Greg Mathis; Jim Olmstead of United Healthcare; Council President Mildred Crump; Jocelyn Chisholm-Carter, J.D., CEO United Heallthcare; and Mayor Baraka
Dapper Seniors
Newark Mayor Ras Baraka escorts Mildred Wiggins on the runway
United Healthcare Sponsors 29th Annual Senior Fashion Show
C
ity Council President Mildred Crump, Mayor Ras Baraka, and the Newark City Council hosted the 29th Annual Senior Citizens Fashion Show and Cultural Extravaganza on May 10, 2018 in the ballroom of the Best Western Robert Treat Hotel. More than a few hundred seniors dressed in their Sunday best fashions filled the room. The free luncheon event brought together seniors from every corner of the city. The event is one which draws in members of the city government including members of the city council and fire and police departments, who enjoy showing off on the runway to the delight of appreciative seniors. Mayor Baraka wowed the crowd as he sauntered down the catwalk with guest model Mildred Wiggins.
“I’m incredibly honored to partner with Council President Mildred Crump to celebrate the seasoned citizens of Essex County, as they are truly the heart and soul of the community,” said Jocelyn C. Carter, CEO of UnitedHealthcare Community Plan of NJ. “We are building a number of community partnerships that will provide medical education to aging populations. We are also offering affordable health care options through our Dual CompleteOne plan, which will coordinate coverage for seniors and help them better navigate the health care system.” A highlight of the day was the surprise appearance of special guest TV star Judge Greg Mathis, who accompanied Mildred Crump on the catwalk. Everyone cheered, had fun and a truly enjoyable day. Photos: Karen Waters
The United Healthcare team
20
The Positive Community May 2018
Hon. Mildred Crump walks the runway with Judge Greg Mathis www.thepositivecommunity.com
New Jersey residents, learn how you can get
MORE BENEFITS THAN ORIGINAL MEDICARE. If you live in New Jersey and have both Medicare and full Medicaid, you may qualify for the UnitedHealthcare Dual Complete® ONE (HMO SNP) plan. It’s a plan that offers more benefits than Original Medicare, including: Health Products Catalog Up to $900 in credits to buy things you may need. Personal Emergency Response System No cost for monthly monitoring.
Health Products Debit Card Up to $800 in credits to buy things you may need. Meal Program Up to 84 meals in 28 days delivered to you with $0 copay.
If you have both NJ FamilyCare and Medicare, you may qualify for more benefits. Call us to learn more.
1-888-834-3721, TTY 711
8 a.m. – 8 p.m. local time, 7 days a week
UHCCommunityPlan.com/NJ Plans are insured through UnitedHealthcare Insurance Company or one of its affiliated companies, a Medicare Advantage organization with a Medicare contract and a contract with the State Medicaid Program. Enrollment in the plan depends on the plan’s contract renewal with Medicare. This plan is available to anyone who has both Medicare and full Medicaid benefits. This information is not a complete description of benefits. Contact the plan for more information. Limitations and restrictions may apply. Benefits may change on January 1 of each year. Premiums are covered for enrollees of UnitedHealthcare Dual Complete ONE (HMO SNP). Members must use network plan providers, pharmacies, and DME (Durable Medical Equipment) suppliers. Members will be enrolled into Medicare Part D prescription drug coverage under the plan and will be automatically disenrolled from any other Medicare Advantage or Medicare Part D prescription drug coverage. UnitedHealthcare does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, age or disability in health programs and activities. We provide free services to help you
communicate with us, such as letters in other languages or large print. You can also ask for an interpreter. To ask for help, please call the toll-free member phone number listed on your health plan member ID card, TTY 711, Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. EST. ATENCIÓN: si habla español, tiene a su
disposición servicios gratuitos de asistencia lingüística. Llame al 1-800-941-4647, TTY 711. 1-800-941-4647, TTY 711. Y0066_161213_104149 Accepted H3113-005_CST17522
Caring for Melanin-Rich Skin You can go ahead and thank the melanocytes in your body for the skin color you were blessed with. Melanocytes are located in the outer layer of the skin and are responsible for producing melansomes — the tiny packets that contain the chemical melanin. Skin color is determined by the size and distribution of melanosomes. Dark skin is rich with large melanosomes — making it more adept at scattering energy from ultraviolet (UV) light and reducing the risks of sun damage that can lead to cancer formation and skin aging. (But sunscreen is still necessary!) While the aesthetic beauty and protective benefits of having dark skin cannot be denied, people with melanin-rich skin should be aware of several skin conditions and diseases and ways to properly care for their skin. Gary Brauner, MD, wrote the very first textbook chapter on skin of color back in 1975.
Brauner_skincare.indd 1
Since then, he has practiced dermatology in Bergen County, including at Englewood Hospital and Medical Center. He treats a host of skin issues that disproportionately affect the black community. Perhaps the most common issues Dr. Brauner’s melanin-rich patients contend with are hypopigmentation and hyperpigmentation — the loss of pigment and the rapid gaining of pigment in the skin. Changes in pigment are often caused by skin injury such as a cut, a scrape, or even mild acne. Eczema, which is believed to occur twice as frequently in children with dark skin, also poses the threat of discoloration. “Any inflammatory rash can interfere with the pigment cells’ ability to move the pigment into the outer layers of the skin, preventing the surface of the skin from maintaining its normal color and turning it lighter,” Dr. Brauner said.
5/11/18 12:23 PM
ADVERTISEMENT
Treatment for pigment change is mainly about prevention. For eczema-prone skin, staying moisturized is key in managing symptoms. Dr. Brauner advises his patients to perform their moisturizing routines when they’re fresh out of the shower.
“What actually moisturizes the skin is water. Lotions are just greases used to coat the skin and trap the water inside.” — Dr. Gary Brauner, dermatologist
If you do experience rash, eczema or acne, seeking help from a dermatologist to quell the initial symptoms quickly will go a long way in preventing pigment change. After the inflammation dies down, it may take weeks or even months for natural pigment to return to the skin. During this time, sunscreen can be applied to darkened areas to prevent hyperpigmentation. If dark spots persist, bleaching agents can be used — but talk to your doctor about which agents are safe. “But if someone has had enough inflammation, the pigment cells that constitute the outer layer of skin can crack and allow the brown pigment to drop down into the middle layer of skin and become like a tattoo,” Dr. Brauner said. Whenever your skin experiences an inflammation or injury, the main way to prevent long-lasting pigment change or the formation of a keloid (a raised scar after an injury has healed) is paying attention to your skin and treating the initial symptoms quickly.
Paying attention to your skin means different things at different times in your life. As a child, you or your parents watch your skin for scrapes and rashes, as a teenager you watch for acne, and as an adult you watch for stretch marks, age lines and, hopefully, you’re also watching for abnormalities and signs of skin cancer. “One thing that African Americans have to become more aware of is a rapidly lifethreatening skin cancer — melanoma,” Dr. Brauner said. Melanoma may show up as a new and unusual growth on the skin, or an unusual change in an existing mole. While the rate of occurrence of melanoma is indeed higher in Caucasian people, it may come as a surprise that this malignant mole is actually a deadlier force in the black community. “African Americans get melanomas in places no one would ever think to look for them — places that have the least amount of pigment and exposure to the sun: the palms of the hand, under the fingernails, the soles of the feet, inside of the mouth and on the lips,” Dr. Brauner said. As a result, melanomas are diagnosed in the later stages of the cancer’s growth, when treatment is not as effective. This, coupled with the dangerous and categorically false belief that people of color do not need sunscreen or protection from the sun, form a deadly pair that leaves African Americans with a lower survival rate for skin cancer. The answer to this is awareness and early detection. Do not stop paying attention to your skin as the years pass by, see a dermatologist when abnormalities appear, wear sunscreen, and, please, moisturize when you get out of the shower. Your hospital for life. 866-980-3462 englewoodhealth.org
Brauner_skincare.indd 2
5/11/18 12:23 PM
Brooklyn Hospitals Merge Forming ONE BROOKLYN HEALTH By Glenda Cadogan
A
2016 study commissioned by the New York State Department of Health concluded that several Brooklyn Hospitals have “undergone a decade of financial and organizational trauma.” As a result, the study—made public in October 2016—recommended the “coming together” of Brooklyn Hospitals (four at that time) to work as an integrated delivery system on behalf of the residents of Central Brooklyn. The Brooklyn study: Reshaping the Future of Healthcare conducted by Northwell Health, concluded the merger will help stabilize the health care system and best provide for the community’s needs. Giving a timeline of five to seven years for full transformation, the recommendation stated: “the hospitals and support services must be consolidated, clinical services regionalized, facilities rebuilt and a large, transformative ambulatory care network developed throughout the service area.” Green-lighted, the action plan resulted in what is called: One Brooklyn Health, Inc. Three safety-net hospital merged under the governance of one Board of Directors with the aim of eventually becoming a single hospital. The network hospitals are: • Interfaith Medical Center: a small community hospital with an array of community-based outpatient services and a significant range of behavioral based services. • Kingsbrook Jewish Medical Center: a comprehensive acute care hospital providing full medical services including sub-specialty medicine and surgical services. The facility also provides a family/patient-centered outpatient specialty center where primary care is integrated with over 20 medical and surgical specialties. • Brookdale University Hospital Medical Center: one of the largest nonprofit, voluntary teaching hospitals in Brooklyn is a trauma center that also provides inpatient, ambulatory, long-term care, and senior living.
LaRay Brown, a nationally recognized health advocate for community health and safety-net hospitals and now chief executive officer of One Brooklyn Health, Inc., has spent her entire career working in this field. She is also CEO and president of Interfaith Medical Center and served at NYC
24 24
The Positive Community May 2018 The Positive Community May 2018
LaRay Brown
Health and Hospitals Corporation (HHC)—the largest municipal hospital system in the nation—for the past 28 years. “My entire career has been committed to the expansion of access to high quality, culturally responsive health care and to engaging all stakeholders to achieve this aim,” Brown said. As such, she is excited about the present and future of One Brooklyn Health especially as it pertains to the illumination of “irrational competition” that drives duplication. “Each of the hospitals in the One Brooklyn Health network is located a mile and a half away from one another. In the past we have competed for patients, staff, and resources. By coming together we have a better opportunity to be more viable and sustainable in providing efficient healthcare to the one million people in the seven neighborhoods we serve.” “I am very optimistic about the future of One Brooklyn Health,” explained CEO Brown. “With the unprecedented level of support from the state in providing a $664 million capital improvement grant to One Brooklyn Health, I am confident that we will not just continue to exist, but also provide the kind of excellent care that the community needs and deserves.” www.thepositivecommunity.com www.thepositivecommunity.com
SHARING A LIFE-SAVING MESSAGE K
imberly Slaton never thought much
about organ and tissue donation … until it became personal. Kim, a resident of Essex County, grew up as close as cousins with Dr. Randall (Randy) Giles. When Randy passed away unexpectedly in 2012, he became an organ and tissue donor, saving five lives
When minorities register as organ donors, it is more likely that someone in their community will get a second chance at life. Co-Captain NJSharing Network’s 5K Team Biff’s Gifts
and enhancing the lives of 50 others— as well as opening Kim’s eyes to the
committee for the 5K Celebration of Life New Providence location. Through the Donate Life Group of Greater Newark, Kim organizes and participates in programs which help bring awareness about donation to minority communities, including events during National Minority Donor Awareness Week in August and information tables at churches, colleges and street fairs throughout the year.
miracle of donation. His generosity did not surprise her one bit. “Randy would give you the shirt off his back. He was always there for you
“Due to high rates of diabetes, hypertension and heart disease, minorities are at greater risk for
or helped you find your way,” she says. “I think he’s still doing that for all of us.” Kim has dedicated herself to advocating for organ and tissue
organ failure and, therefore, more likely to need a transplant,” she says. “When minorities register as
donation through NJ Sharing Network, the organ procurement organization saving lives in New
organ donors, it is more likely that someone in their community will get a second chance at life.”
Jersey and across the country. At NJ Sharing Network’s first 5K Celebration of Life, she was among
Kim’s life continues to be touched by donation in new ways: an uncle and a cousin are both currently
the many family members and friends
waiting for organ transplants. These
who gathered to honor Randy’s memory with Team Biff’s Gifts. Seven years later, she serves as co-captain of the team and sits on the steering
connections and Randy’s legacy inspire her to continue sharing this life-saving message.
Kimberly Slaton and her nephew, Lavarra Hines, Jr., volunteer each year at NJ Sharing Network’s 5K Celebration of Life.
You can help save a life by registering as an organ and tissue donor, having a conversation with your family and friends and educating people you know about organ and tissue donation and transplantation.
To learn more, get involved and register as an organ and tissue donor, visit www.NJSharingNetwork.org
SIGN UP OR BECOME A VOLUNTEER TODAY! PositiveCommunity_May2018.indd 1
SUNDAY
JUNE 3, 2018 5K Walk & USATF Certified Race
New Providence, NJ 7:30am Event Begins 8:30am Race 10:00am Walk
www.NJSharingNetwork.org/5K 5/1/2018 11:19:39 AM
KAHLIL CARMICHAEL THE FITNESS DOCTOR
Kahlil Carmichael MAPCC, MDIV, CPT is the pastor of Live Well Church, in Somerset, New Jersey. He is a fitness specialist at The Fitness Doctor, a fitness and wellness consulting company; and the author of 50 Tips for a Better You. He is a contributor to Guideposts magazine. His first publication, Living Longer Living Better, is available now. Go to www.livewellchurch.org for more information.
Rise Up Again
T
he month of May is Health and Awareness month. This is inclusive of: American Stroke Awareness Month, Hepatitis Awareness Month, Lupus Awareness Month, Mental Health Month, National High Blood Pressure Education Month, National Physical Fitness and Sports Month, National Women’s Health Week, and National Senior Health Fitness Day. Of course, Live Well Church and The Fitness Doctor host our annual Health and Healing revival with free screenings, exercise instruction, massage therapy, and great prophetic preaching on healing and restoration. Whenever we highlight physical fitness and health during the month of May, I notice people have the tendency to experience feelings of failure and even defeat as they come face-to-face with the reality of their health challenges —which could have been prevented (diabetes, hypertension, etc.) through healthy eating and exercise. I call this subconscious fitness syndrome. Our inability to prioritize our life and implement a fitness regimen to help prevent obesity related illnesses is driven by previous failed attempts at weight loss and consistent exercise programs, embedded deep within the subconscious. These subconscious thoughts of fitness failure prevent us from actualizing a fitness program and improving our physical fitness and health. Here are a few things we can do to move forward and overcome subconscious fitness failure: • Hire a coach—A professional fitness coach can help you overcome the subconscious thoughts of past fitness failure by helping you get results. At the Fitness Doctor, we have been helping people start and maintain good health through personalized fitness programs. • Forgive yourself and move forward—Forgive yourself for not taking care of yourself. I recently helped a physician who worked fifteen hours per day for eight years. His physical fitness and health were failing because he prioritized everyone above himself. He was depressed; he had let himself go.
26 26 The The Positive Positive Community Community
May May 2018 2018
• Rise up and don’t look back—Once you hire a coach, forgive yourself and move forward, rise and don’t look back. Here is an excerpt from a devotional about Peter who experienced great failure: The story of the transformation in the bible of Simon the fisherman to Peter the great disciple, is one of my favorites. It is the story of giving birth to great success after experiencing great failure. There was a time when if I did not achieve something in the world that I wanted, I considered myself a failure. If I didn’t get the promotion, the right car, or the perfect house I would wonder what I had done wrong. Since that time, I have grown, and now consider my greatest failures to be the times when I do not listen to God; when I honk the horn in impatience, when I am short with someone, or when I do not respond in love—everyday failures. Sometimes on the way to becoming who God intends for us to be we are going to experience failure. It is what we do after the failure that matters. Although you might have failed before, it’s time to rise up again. Exercise Consistently, Eat Healthier, Live Well. Disclaimer: The information contained in this column is of a general nature. You should consult your physician or health care professional before beginning any exercise program or changing your dietary regimen.
www.thepositivecommunity.com www.thepositivecommunity.com
SPH-1886 Diabetes Ad Positive Community 8x10.5_SPH-1886 5/2/18 10:38 AM Page 1
Don’t let diabetes and hypertension control your life.
If you suffer or are at risk for diabetes and hypertension, Saint Peter’s university Hospital can help. If you are 18 years of age or older, you can receive high quality care to better manage these chronic diseases — even if you have no insurance or not enough of it to cover long-term medical expenses. In one convenient location at The Diabetes and Hypertension Center at Saint Peter’s Family Health Center, you can benefit from comprehensive care provided by physicians, nurses, a nutritionist and a social worker, all experienced in helping you to better manage your diabetes and hypertension. In addition to primary care and follow-up care, we offer: ■
Education on managing medications and living and coping with chronic disease;
■
Zumba classes;
■
Nutrition counseling;
Psychological or behaviorial health;
■
■
Foot, skin and eye care;
Home visits;
■
■
Information about community resources.
■
Support groups;
Our goal is to help you make healthy lifestyle changes so that you can succeed in managing your diabetes and hypertension, and ultimately, reduce emergency room visits and hospital stays. For your convenience we have extended hours on Wednesdays until 7 pm. To learn more about The Diabetes and Hypertension Center at Saint Peter’s Family Health Center, call 732.339.7672 or visit saintpetershcs.com
123 HOW LaNE, NEW BRuNSWICk, NJ 08901
■
732.339.7672
■
Sponsored by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Metuchen
saintpetershcs.com
PREPARE TO CARE PREPARE TO HEAL PREPARE TO SERVE • TRADITIONAL 4-YEAR BS PROGRAM • LPN TO BS AND RN-BS PROGRAM • CHRISTIAN LEARNING COMMUNITY • GLOBAL MISSION OPPORTUNITIES
NYACK.EDU/NURSING 877.626.2236 2 WASHINGTON STREET NEW YORK, NY 10004
800.876.9225 1 SOUTH BOULEVARD NYACK, NY 10960
Jennifer Jones Austin
CONSIDERING HER PURE JOY
By R. L. Witter
W
hen last I spoke with Jennifer Jones Austin, we mostly discussed her work and her commitment to service. We talked about her faith and her dedication to improving the quality of life for the underserved and less fortunate. We touched upon and breezed past her battle with leukemia in favor of
highlighting more joyful aspects of her life. But now, with her new book, Consider It Pure Joy, Jones Austin is discussing her battle with cancer and what some might find surprising—the joy she found in and after facing her mortality. “I hesitated to write the book,” she explained, “because there are already so many books about cancer, so why did I need to add yet another book?” Jones Austin’s refreshingly upbeat and optimistic determination to face her illness head on with the help of faith, family, and friends is a roadmap for anyone facing a life-threatening illness or any other overwhelming challenge. “Every battle with cancer is horrific, but this was so complicated, so nuanced, so full of ups and downs, and so public. I was being invited to churches to speak about it… It hit me that the story wasn’t mine; it was God’s story and He had given it to me. He had me live it to tell it, and I felt compelled in that moment to go forward and write the book.”
No one is ever ready for a diagnosis of 99 percent chance of death, not even Jennifer Jones Austin. A woman from a respected family who led a seemingly charmed life comprised of fulfilling work, a strong marriage, lovely children, and a happy home. There were no tell-tale signs, no symptoms ignored. Her illness began like a flu and within a few short days resulted in something that stymied doctors and had Jennifer experiencing blindness. It was only after a battery of
I have drunken deep of joy, and I will taste no other wine tonight. —Percy Bysshe Shelley www.thepositivecommunity.com www.thepositivecommunity.com
May 2018 The Positive Community May 2018 The Positive Community
29 29
tests that a diagnosis was given and it was not good. It wasn’t just not good, it was devastating. Jones Austin had a well of faith she would visit frequently over the next year and a half. That well was a priceless gift from both her earthly and heavenly fathers. “My father preached about the storms of life. He would preach that you’re either in one, coming out of one, or about to go through one,” she recalled. Her father was the late Rev. Dr. William Augustus Jones, Jr., the renowned pastor of Bethany Baptist Church in Brooklyn for 43 years. “Having listened to him . . . I knew that storms come and I appreciated that life and longevity are not promised to us. So, there never really was a question of ‘Why me?’ because I’d have to follow it up with ‘Why not me?’” But it wasn’t just about Jones Austin. She had family and friends who were upended by the dire prognosis. “Additionally, I had young children (7 and 12 years old). So I was concerned about dying and them having a negative feeling about death, and also them developing a distrust of God,” she said. “I couldn’t bear to think that I’d die and then they would spend the rest of their lives angry at God.”
All true happiness, pure joy, sweet bounties, and unclouded pleasure are contained within the knowledge and love of God.—Said Nursi It has been said that joy comes more in sips rather than gulps. During her medical crisis, Jones Austin sipped steadily from an overflowing cup of love and support of loved ones and well-wishers. “One of the things I appreciate is how significant and important connections are . . . When you’re in crisis, how other people will show up for you or not show up for you is critically important. I learned about the power of community. Having been part of a faith community that raised me, I knew the power of the faith community. But when the faith community came together and moved on my behalf, better than 10,000 people of African descent came mainly out of the faith community to register as bone marrow donors,” she proudly reflected. “As an advocate, someone working for the vulnerable and the blessed children and their families, I couldn’t help but think to myself, ‘Today God became a shepherd for me, but every day, people from our community are in crisis. And what more can and should the faith community be doing to step
30 30
The Positive Community May 2018 The Positive Community May 2018
up on behalf of our brothers and sisters who are in crisis, vulnerable, and in need? It compelled and propelled me to try to be more connected to the faith community on issues of social justice.” Leo Tolstoy once wrote, “Joy can only be real if people look upon their life as a service and have a definite object in life outside themselves and their personal happiness.” Jones Austin’s entire life has been a lesson in service and her heart and mind for service have served her well in contemplating her journey and how she might impact others. During her recovery, one particular book, The Barbarian Way, offered additional insight. “The author posits that very often, Christians get Christianity wrong. Christians believe that if they follow Christ, all the days of their lives will be glory,” she explained. “The truth is if we strive to be Christ-like, we should appreciate that with Christ can come suffering and suffering is part of growing in Christ. That’s often the way we grow closer to God . . . One day I was in my car listening to one of my father’s sermons and he said, ‘Don’t you know, God didn’t save you for your sake? He saved you for the kingdom’s sake.’ And in that moment I had an epiphany or revelation that if I’m still living, I still have purpose and there’s work I’m supposed to do . . . I felt strongly that part of that purpose is to tell the story of my journey and how I grew from it and emerged from it.” I inquired about her personal connection with the title of her book, Consider It Pure Joy and was quoted James1:2-4: “Consider it pure joy when you face trials and tribulations www.thepositivecommunity.com www.thepositivecommunity.com
because the testing of your faith produces perseverance. Let perseverance finish its work so you may be mature and complete, lacking nothing.” A dear friend had read
“. . . Weeping may endure for a night, but joy comes in the morning.”—Psalm 30:5 that particular scripture at a revival and it resonated with Jones Austin immediately. “In that moment, it was like the heavens opened up and I had an answer for a question I’d been asked by many people. People would ask me, ‘How did you stay so positive? How did you not fall apart? How did you keep smiling?’” She continued, “It occurred to me, you can find joy, growth, and strength in the struggle and if you come through, you can mature and be stronger and better than you were before. I didn’t have time to fight God and I wasn’t interested in fighting Him. If this was to be the end of my life, then I needed to focus more on preparing to die and preparing my children for my death, than fighting God. I needed to focus more on the good and the joy I still could have in those final days, if they were to be my final days. That scripture gave me the foundational basis for what I was going through and what I was attempting to do.” Not only did Jones Austin retain her faith and positive outlook during the most trying time of her life thus far, she maintained her humanity and her deep concern for the well-being of others, especially her closest and most ardent supporters. “Those around you aren’t physically in crisis, but they are emotionally and mentally in crisis. My family was very much focused on lifting me up, and it was hard to talk about me dying,” she explained. “My husband and I had to have those conversations—and many people don’t want to have them. But there’s healing in those conversations and facing reality with each other. There needs to be an understanding that your loved ones are struggling, too, and there needs to be a space for them where they are supported in their struggle.”
A Thing of Beauty is a Joy Forever: Its Loveliness Increases—John Keats www.thepositivecommunity.com www.thepositivecommunity.com
Jennifer receives the inaugural Rev. Dr. William Augustus Jones, Jr. Award from Rev. Al Sharpton and Rev. Dr. W. Franklyn Richardson at the 2017 NAN Convention Ministers Luncheon.
Anne Morrow Lindbergh once wrote: “For happiness one needs security, but joy can spring like a flower even from the cliffs of despair.” Jennifer Jones Austin is tending a glorious garden of flowers planted in hope and faith, watered by tears of both joy and despair. She has emerged victorious from her hard-won battle, ready to take on her next challenge. “I am going to keep fighting this fight against poverty and dismantling poverty-perpetuating policies at the city, state, and federal level and raising awareness of how this society and systems are structured to keep people struggling and in need,” she resolved. “I need to keep working with people and organizations to see the importance of their roles in addressing poverty and other injustices in America—the intersection of race, justice, and poverty in America. My work, I believe, is to bring awareness and then mobilize people accordingly.” As Jones Austin continues her life of service, we continue to watch in awe of her strength, grace, wisdom, and faith. As she continues to shine her light on people and communities in need, her work, story, and book will endure as shining examples of the pure joy she embodies. May 2018 The Positive Community May 2018 The Positive Community
31 31
North Stelton A.M.E. Rev. Dr. Kenneth L. Saunders, Sr. enjoying the Jenkins Duo with his son Kenneth Jr. Photos: Karen Waters
The North Stelton A.M.E. Church, Piscataway, NJ
Pastor Saunders Retirement Celebration
R
ev. Dr. Kenneth L. Saunders, Sr. retired at high noon on April 7, 2018. The North Stelton A.M.E. Church held a celebratory retirement service for Rev. Dr. Kenneth L. Saunders, Sr. and First Lady Shirley A. Saunders. The special gathering honored Pastor Saunders for his dedication and service in over 42 years in ministry with an afternoon of music, reflections, and tributes for the first family of North Stelton A.M.E. Master and Mistress of Ceremonies were Bishop Gregory G. M. Ingram and Rev. Dr. Jessica Kendall Ingram of The African Methodist Episcopal (A.M.E.) Church, First Episcopal District. —AAC
Rev. Dr. Jessica Kendall Ingram and Bishop Gregory G. M. Ingram, 118th Bishop of the African Methodist Episcopal Church
First Lady Shirley A. Saunders; NJ Governor Phil Murphy; and Kenneth Saunders, Jr.
Thomas James (NSAME board member), and Minister of Music Myke Bissell Gospel songstress Kamuela (Nikki) Tillman, Calvary Baptist Church, Morristown, NJ Bishop E. Earl Jenkins (founder of True Servant Church, Hamilton, NJ) and Elder Carl Jenkins
NJ Governor Phil Murphy addresses congregation
32
The Positive Community May 2018
L–R: Senator Bob Smith; Council President for Piscataway Township Chanelle C. McCullum; Kenneth Saunders Jr.; Franklin Township Deputy Mayor Shanelle Robinson and Mayor of Piscataway Brian C. Wahler www.thepositivecommunity.com
Congratulations to Ras J. Baraka, the 40th Mayor of the City of Newark, N.J., for your ongoing commitment to moving the city forward.
The Communications Lifeline program by Verizon keeps the lines of communication open for your family. Under the Communications Lifeline program, Verizon NJ residential telephone customers may be eligible to receive free or discounted local telephone service, including touch-tone service, and additional features such as caller ID and three-way calling. To apply, just call NJ SHARES at 1-888-337-3339 or visit www.njshares.org.
g n i v o M k Newar
Forward
Ras Baraka Re-Elected. Campaign Promises Kept.
“S
o we are going forward together. And we won’t go back. There is too much work to be done, too much ground to cover. I won’t go back because I know what happened because Nehemiah stayed on that wall. I know what happened after Job went through calamity. I won’t go back because I know what happened after Daniel fasted and after Meshak, Shadrach, and Abendego were put in the fiery furnace. I know what happened after the people wandered for 40 years and reached the River Jordan. I can still see the stones mounted up on dry land! I won’t go back because I know what the future holds! I have seen it! And I have no doubt in my mind whatsoever tonight, Newark! If we stay on this course, this pathway forward—that if we hold on to each other from the streets of Summer Avenue to Mt. Prospect and Verona, from North 6th to South 10th, from Irvine Turner to 14th Avenue. If we just hold on to each other from Mt Vernon to 18th Avenue, from Clinton and Chadwick to Ferry and Monroe. If we hold on to each other from Pennington Court to Bradley Court, from the Weequahic section to Lower Broadway. If we do this and continue our march forward and not look back, our city will always be strong and each day it will get stronger. God Bless you and God Bless the great City of Newark! —Ras Baraka
First Term Accomplishments AFFORDABLE HOUSING Developers Required to Build Housing for Working Families: New housing must now include 20% affordable units and partner with minority and women Newark contractors. Affordable Housing Created for More than 2500 Families: Mayor Baraka is ensuring that residents of every neighborhood benefit from the surge in development. The City has programs to help families facing foreclosure to remain in their homes and provide low cost or no cost land and financial grants to help people develop homes for themselves. Rent Controls Strengthened: Landlords looking to raise rents on rentcontrolled buildings must now meet a stricter threshold. Renters Helped to Become Homeowners: Several programs enable residents to acquire city-owned property at low cost.
JOBS
EDUCATION
Convinced Employers to Hire a Specific Number of Newark Residents: The city’s major corporations, hospitals, colleges and universities are partnering with the City to give unemployed residents training and full-times jobs with living wages.
Took Control of Our Schools Back from Governor Christie: Our Schools are now under the control of Neewark parents and residents.
Won fight to Get Hundreds of Port Jobs for Newarkers: Two marches on the Port of Newark with hundreds of residents protesting hiring discrimination led to agreement that Newark residents will be hired at the Port. Reduced Unemployment from 12% to 7%: Mayor Baraka's job creating initiatives have gained employment for thousnds of residents. Doubled the Number of Summer Youth Jobs: Mayor Baraka has made Newark’s summer program a unique mixture of education, workforce development and public safety, offering financial literacy, college and career readiness. $15 Minimum Wage: Instituted a $15 minimum wage for City employees and is a leader in the fight for a $15 minimum wage throughout New Jersey.
Newark Street Academy Educates School Dropouts: The Newark Street Academy helps at-risk youth to complete their high school education and gain employment. Centers of Hope in Every Ward: These centers give residents of all ages access to City services, wellness and enrichment. They offer athletic, arts and culture, education, technology, and recreation programs. Community Schools: The initiative involves parents, community leaders, teachers and administrators in providing students with the academic, social, emotional, and health services needed for success. NAN Tech World Academy Teaches Technology Skills: This partnershjp offers courses in web design, graphic design, digital literacy, networking and more in a neighborhood setting for residents of all ages.
PUBLIC SAFETY Lowest Level of Crime in 50 Years: More than 3000 fewer victims of crimes since 2014. Homicides down 28% since 2016, Robberies down 26%. 517 guns taken off the streets including high powered weapons in 2016. Added 500 New Police Officers since 2014: By improving Newark's finances, Mayor Baraka has hired additional poliuce and put them on the streets walking a beat. Built Cooperation Between Residents and Police: Newark is now a national leader in building police/community trust. Undocumented Immigrants Protected: Mayor Baraka made Newark a Sanctuary City. Street Teams Reduce Violence and Protect Students: Street Team members are trained to defuse conflicts and steer young people toward education and employment. Cutting Edge Law Enforcement Technology: Newark Police have body and car cams, patrol cars with computers and surveillance. www.thepositivecommunity.com
TOUCHDOWN! Mayor Ras Baraka celebrates his re-election victory on May 8th, 2018 at Best Western Robert Treat Hotel.
May 2018 The Positive Community
35
< L–R: Basil Smikle, political strategist and former executive director NYS Democratic party; Rev. Herbert Daughtry, pastor, House of the Lord Church, Brooklyn; Mayor Baraka, and David C. Banks, Eagle Academy president/CEO
A Harlem Evening at Cecil’s With Mayor Ras J. Baraka
Hon. David N. Dinkins and Mayor Braraka
J
ust two weeks before the election, Mayor Baraka attended a fundraiser at Cecil’s Steakhouse in Harlem hosted by some of his his NYC friends. It was a wonderful evening, highlighted by the presence of former NYC Mayor David N. Dinkins. Special thanks to event coordinator Raymond Lewis. See more photos online at thepositivecommunity.com.
L–R: TPC Publisher, Adrian A. Council, Sr. and Rev. Steffie Barkley, national board member, National Action Network
Leecia Eve, Esq. VP Government Affairs for NY/NJ/CT Verizon
L–R: Dr. Joan O. Dawson, chairperson-elect HCCI Board of Trustees; Honorable Keith Wright, former NYS Assemblyman and guest. Photos: Bruce Moore, Seitu Oronde, Margot Jordan
Hope Mason, trustee at One Brooklyn Health System, Inc. (center) and friends
36
The Positive Community May 2018
Majorie Harris with Aisha Glover www.thepositivecommunity.com
Raschaad Hoggard Joins FWPA Vivian Cox Fraser
Photo: Sameer A. Khan / Fottobuddy, LLC
R
aschaad Hoggard joined the staff of Federation of Protestant Welfare Agencies (FPWA) in April, 2018 as director of Outreach & Engagement. His responsibilities include the planning and execution of engagement and outreach actions and activities with community and faith-based member organizations, allies, and partner organizations. A native of Plymouth, NC, he received a Bachelor of Science degree in Political Science from North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University (A&T) in Greensboro NC. While at A&T, he served twice as class president and received the A&T State University Award of Excellence for his service to the university. He earned a Masters in Public Administration from New York University and graduated from Union Theological Seminary, where he studied homiletics and social ethics. Currently, he is a PhD candidate at the Graduate School of Education at Fordham University. Raschaad served as an administrator and adjunct professor at the Medgar Evers College of the City University of New York for 14 years. He is an associate minister at the historic Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem, under the leadership of Dr. Calvin O. Butts, III. Raschaad is deeply committed to following the legacies of Dr. Samuel DeWitt Proctor, former president of North Carolina A&T and pastor emeritus of the Abyssinian Church in Harlem; and civil rights activist and educator Ella Josephine Baker, who confronted injustice and dismantled systems of inequality.
President and CEO
Congratulations to
Mayor Ras J. Baraka.
Together, let us continue to move
Newark forward! 508 CENTRAL AVENUE
NEWARK, NJ 07107 • 973-624-9535
“A Contagious Congregation” CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH OF NORTH JERSEY at GARFIELD Please Join the Calvary Family as we Worship and Celebrate the
46th Pastoral Anniversary Of
Reverend Dr. Calvin McKinney Pastor Calvin McKinney
On Sunday, June 10, 2018 at 9:30 a.m.
Guest Celebrant Rev. Dr. Manuel Scott Jr. Manual Scott Jr. Ministries Inc. Los Angeles, California
ALL ARE WELCOME 217-245 Passaic Street • Garfield, NJ 07026 973-773-2444 www.calvaryofgarfield.org www.thepositivecommunity.com
May 2018 The Positive Community
37
Get an early start and get your children vaccinated BEFORE the start of the new school year.
On a first come, first served basis.
Receive a gift if you come in by July 31, 2018 FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL IMMUNIZATION/PROJECT VACCINATE CALL-973-733-7580 FAX-424-4246
Education the art + science of learning
2018 Win Rock & Rule Women’s Empowerment Masterclass with Coach Dee
M
Dee Marshall
ore than 450 women gathered at Prudential Towers in Newark on to take part in an annual professional development and women’s networking event in celebration of Women’s History Month. It was a fun-filled evening of inspiration and empowerment. Popular Life Coach Dee Marshall brought together a diverse group of women professionals from mid-level, mid-career executives; nonprofit leaders; decision makers; and influencers all powered by Prudential, RWJ Barnabas, L3 Technologies, and DFree. Special thanks to community partners, Horizon, Panasonic, Unilever and Whole Foods. Keynote speaker, the former Miss New Jersey, Glamour Woman of The Year, and Essence Magazine 100 Woke Women, Janaye Ingram, who was one of the five women founders of the historic Women’s March on Washington,
Michellene Davis, Esq., executive vice president and chief Corporate Affairs officer for RWJBarnabas Health (RWJBH) Photos: Karen Waters
Keynote speaker, the former Miss New Jersey Janaye Ingram
Aisha Glover, CEO/president, NEDC received the Game Changer Award
Prudential’s Dorinda Walker and Sarah Jones, Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of NJ
The Panasonic team: L-R: Alanna Hawthorne; Stacy Moore; Mary Battle; Terri Seeney-Majette, planner, Corporate Outreach Programs at Panasonic; Kimberly Murtagh; Toni Simonelli; Angela Daniels; Michelle Esgar; Grace Taveras; and Jenny Vega www.thepositivecommunity.com
inspired the room with her real talk about stretching outside of her comfort zone and left attendees with a charge to “be defiant” and take the initiative to do something. Aisha Glover, president & CEO, Newark Community Economic Development Corporation (NCEDC), received the Game Changer Award for negotiating the biggest deal to come to New Jersey… Amazon, and her intention for the City of Newark to thrive with or without the big online retailer. May 2018 The Positive Community
39
Wealth, Spirituality and Culture Rev. Dr. David Jefferson speaks at Public Lecture Series
R
ev. Dr. David Jefferson, Sr., senior pastor of Metropolitan Baptist Church, Newark’s largest Baptist church, was the featured speaker on Thursday April 12 for the Public Lecture Series hosted by The Positive Community and The Newark School of Theology. Dr. Jefferson, who is also NJ state chair of the National Action Network, engaged the audience in a discussion focused on applying bible references regarding money, culture, values, and spirituality to contemporary times. Speaking about origins, destinies, and relationships he explained City National Bank, the region’s largest African American-owned commercial bank, came to fruition in the basement of Metropolitan Baptist Church in 1972. In creating the Public Lecture Series, The Positive Community and The Newark School of Theology joined forces to facilitate vigorous discourse on the issues of our times, helping to determine what role the church, faith, and spiritual values can play in our democracy. Special thanks to our community partners: Verizon, RWJ Barnabas Health, United Healthcare, Newark Clergy Alliance, Ray Catena Motor Cars. View the lecture online at thepositivecommunilty.com
L–R: First Lady Linda Jefferson; Rev. Dr. David Jefferson Sr., Esq.; and Rev. Carol Patterson
L–R: H. Dan Dunn, sales associate at Ray Catena and Deacon Wilbert Nobel
L–R: Adrian Council Sr., NST board co-chair; Hon. Mildred Crump, Newark Council president; Rev. Louise Rountree, director, Newark Clergy Alliance; and Dr. Douglas Bendall, founder of The Newark School of Theology
40
The Positive Community May 2018
Photos: Karen Waters and Vincent Bryant
L–R: First Lady Linda Jefferson; Rev. Dr. David Jefferson Sr., Esq.; Halim Quddus, president, Muslim American Chamber of Commerce
Marcia W. Brown, vice chancellor of External Affairs and Governmental Relations, RUN
L–R: NST Trusees Rev. Nicholas Johnson; Dr. Douglas Bendall; Board Co-Chair Dr. Marcia Brown; Elder Paul Trotman; and Rev. Dr. Miguel Hernandez www.thepositivecommunity.com
UNIVERSITY | NEWARK UNIVERSITY | NEWARK
Where Where Opportunity Opportunity Meets Meets Excellence Excellence
A N C H O R I N S T I T U T I O N in N E W A R K , of N E W A R K A N C H O R I N S T I T U T I O N in N E W A R K , of N E W A R K RESEARCH-BASED ACADEMIC PROGRAMS RESEARCH-BASED ACADEMIC PROGRAMS E X P E R I E N T I A L L E A R N I N G , L O C A L L Y and G L O B A L L Y E X P E R I E N T I A L L E A R N I N G , L O C A L L Y and G L O B A L L Y D I V E R S E S T U D E N T and F A C U L T Y C O M M U N I T Y D I V E R S E S T U D E N T and F A C U L T Y C O M M U N I T Y AFFORDABLE EDUCATION AFFORDABLE EDUCATION
Visit VisitUs. Us.Learn LearnMore. More.Apply. Apply. NEWARK.RUTGERS.EDU NEWARK.RUTGERS.EDU
www.thepositivecommunity.com
May 2018 The Positive Community
41
The Marvelous Marcella Maxwell
To
Dr. Marcella Maxwell, age 90 is just a number. For decades, the educator and women’s advocate broke barriers and glass ceilings as an African American official in New York City government and education institutions. Even in her super-senior years, Dr. Maxwell is an active, hands-on community advocate, heading outreach projects for Abyssinian Baptist Church, Greater New York City Links, New York Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, NAACP, and even AARP. “It makes me feel good. I try to do something for somebody each day,” she explained. “I support the impact of the community to help others to improve their lives.” Dr. Maxwell holds bachelor’s and master’s degrees in elementary education from Long Island University and a doctorate in educational administration from Fordham University. She wrote her dissertation on a comparison of black, white, and Puerto Rican elementary school principals in urban schools and later taught on the island. In 1978, she became the unsalaried head of the City Commission on the Status of Women. By 1984, she served as Commissioner of Human Rights under Mayor Edward Koch. During her career, she’s held a variety of positions in the education field, including classroom teacher, college professor, and administrator. Dr. Maxell was a founder of Medgar Evers College and for 13 years served as Dean of External Affairs and Dean of Adult and Continuing education. Recently, she worked at Brooklyn College as a clinical supervisor of teaching fellows. Currently, she volunteers as the coordinator of Abyssinian Baptist Church’s Golden Life Ministry. “I coordinate a partnership in geriatrics education to help empower seniors to meet the challenges of aging gracefully,” she explained. Some of the senior activities and seminars include: elder law,
42 42
The Positive Community May 2018 The Positive Community May 2018
By Fern Gillespie hearing and eye exams, products to prevent falls, and hoarding. The AARP and Links are partners. “The Links, Deltas, and NAACP are core organizations that help women grow and empower them. They afford women opportunities to work in their communities and the larger part of the city,” she said. “My network is rather broad, and I try to take advantage of it. I try to keep up with what’s going on with black women across the city and across the country. I meet different women and learn about their lives and what’s different about the things they do and about their history and their culture so that I stay abreast about some of the things going on in the world that will affect us and help us to keep our spiritual balance.” Dr. Maxwell’s reach is global. She is the official representative of the Deltas (an NGO) at the United Nations and attends international conferences at the UN to share information with the New York and national chapters. It’s part of her personal mission to help women to be “determined, disciplined, and dedicated.” Her daily routine is the Harlem YMCA morning swim class and reading four newspapers a day: New York Times, Wall Street Journal, New York Daily News and the New York Post “for the gossip.” This summer, Dr. Maxwell will be studying at the Harvard School of Education. “I plan to inspire and motivate my intellectual capacity by being in classes with people from all over the world,” she said. “Also, to be exposed to some of the world’s most preeminent professors in education and research.” “Retirement to me is to keep busy and continue helping people,” explained Dr. Maxwell. “Also, to take care of your health and members of your family. To travel, read, take courses, and to share your experience, knowledge and expertise.” www.thepositivecommunity.com www.thepositivecommunity.com
“… all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose.” Romans 8:28
Rev. McCann’s 25th Pastoral Anniversary Photos: Bruce Moore
J.G. “Johnnie” McCann and Tselane S. Sampson were married on January 5, 1985. They have three children: Johnnie, Jr., Sulure Grace, and Tseohnni Lenora-Mia.
T
he elegant VIP Country Club in New Rochelle, NY filled with the spirit and many blessings on Friday, March 8, 2016 when the congregation of Harlem’s St. Luke Baptist Church, family, and well-wishers from near and far celebrated with Rev. Dr. J.G. McCann on his 25th pastoral anniversary. Pastor “Johnnie” McCann and First Lady Tselane were treated to music rendered by the St. Luke Baptist Church Koinonia Mass Choir and the St. Luke Baptist Church Band; ministry in dance presented by the St. Luke Praise Dance Ministry K.A.R.A.R. (Keep a Righteous Attitude Resonated), and M.I.M.E. (Ministry in Motion Effectively). Toastmaster Rev. Gerald Lydell Dickson, pastor of Beulah Bible Cathedral Church, Newark, added humor and laughter to the evening and banquet. Rev. Clinton McFarland’s soul-stirring message was a blessing to all. McFarland is pastor of Grace Baptist Church, Atlanta, GA. The Reverend Dr. J.G. McCann, Jr., was called to preach God's Word on January 8, 1981. He began his ministry as a youth minister at the Thessalonia Baptist Church in the Bronx, received his license to preach on Christ on June 12, 1983, and was ordained on February 1, 1985, all under the mentorship of Dr. Shellie Sampson, Jr., the late pastor of Thessalonia.
www.thepositivecommunity.com
Rev. Dr. J.G. McCann, Sr. with First Lady Tselane S. Sampson and son, Johnnie, Jr.
On December 17, 1984, Rev. McCann became pastor of Mt. Zion Baptist Church of Bensonhurst, Brooklyn, New York. Eight years later, after an overwhelming vote by the congregation of St. Luke Baptist Church, he graciously accepted the call to become pastor of St. Luke on December 30, 1992. A Bronx native, McCann received an Associate of Arts Degree in Liberal Arts in 1989 from Bronx Community College. He received his Bachelor of Arts Degree in 1991 from Herbert H. Lehman College, majoring in philosophy and minoring in psychology and graduated cum laude. A full scholarship to Drew University Theological School in Madison, New Jersey followed. Subsequent degrees—Master of Divinity, Master of Sacred Theology and Doctor of Ministry—were all achieved at Drew University. He is a member of Phi Beta Sigma Incorporated, Beta Psi Sigma Chapter, serves as assistant chaplain for the New York City Transit Authority; chaplain for MTA Police, is an adjunct professor at Drew University, the author of several books, and served on the preaching team for the National Baptist Convention, USA, Inc., under the leadership of the Foreign Mission Board, where he preached in venues of Africa such as South Africa, Swaziland, and Malawi. —JNW May 2018 The Positive Community
43
Culture
music, art + literature
POSITIVEMUSICMATTERS
A Great Night in Harlem
Legendary Latino pianist Eddie Palmieri
Jazz Foundation of America Benefit Concert
R-L: Actor/activist Danny Glover and Wendy Oxenhorn, executive director of the Jazz Foundation of America, addressing The Apollo Theater audience.
The youngest performers, jazz geniuses Matthew Whitaker and Alexis Morrast
Photos: Risasi Dias
I
Brittany Howard of Alabama Shakes
44
The inimitable singer/songwriter Roberta Flack
The Positive Community May 2018
t was, indeed, a “Great Night in Harlem” on Friday, April 20, 2018 when jazz greats young and old gathered at the World Famous Apollo Theatre to honor Roberta Flack, the Health Brothers, and Otis Rush. Among the stellar performers were Brittany Howard of Alabama Shakes, Nona Hendrix, Eddie Palmieri, Jon Faddis, and Rufus Reid. Young 16 year-old geniuses, songtress Alexis Morrast and pianist Matthew Whitaker, also performed–holding their own with the legendary elders. Other appearances by Jazz enthusiasts and performers included Jimmie Vaughan, Danny Glover, Chevy Chase, Bruce Willis, Isaiah Sharkey, Davell Crawford, and Harold Mabern. Funds raised from the concert are used by The Jazz Foundation of America to provide services for musicians in need and their families, including housing and emergency assistance, pro bono medical, and disaster relief. Wendy Oxenhorn is the executive director. —JNW www.thepositivecommunity.com
beres hammond & friends Fri, Aug 10 @ 8PM Feel-good reggae and “lovers’ rock” with GRAMMY® nominee Beres Hammond (“One Love, One Life”) and his special guests.
alvin ailey american dance theater
Michael Jackson Jr. photo by: Andrew Eccles
earthquake’s father’s day comedy show jun 17
May 11–13 This elegant, electrifying company returns with new works and the beloved Revelations. Featuring NJPAC premiers of Members Don’t Get Weary, Stack Up and Shelter.
trevor noah Fri, Sep 7 @ 7PM Sat, Sep 8 @ 7PM Trevor Noah, the host of Comedy Central’s Emmy-winning Daily Show, returns to NJPAC with an evening of hilarious stand-up.
the illusionists Live from Broadway Sun, May 20 @ 3PM & 7PM This mind-blowing spectacle showcases the jaw-dropping talents of five of the most amazing Illusionists on Earth!
audra mcdonald Sun, Jun 3 @ 3PM Broadway’s only 6-time Tony Award winner returns with an evening of Broadway, standards, pop and more!
Sat, May 12 @ 7PM Featuring Charlie Wilson, Boyz II Men, Kem & Joe Barclays Center, Brooklyn, NY
jill scott Jun 4 -5 This 9-time GRAMMY-winning supergroup brings a night of greatest hits (“September,” “Let’s Groove,” “Celebrate”) & more.
Wed, Jun 27 @ 8PM The three-time GRAMMY-winning singer and songwriter performs her sensuous R&B hits like “He Loves Me” and “Fool’s Gold.”
bring it live! Fri, Jul 20 @ 8PM Fans become part of the action when Miss D and her Dancing Dolls perform never-before-seen routines live on stage!
The American Song series at NJPAC is presented, in part, through the generous support of the Blanche and Irving Laurie Foundation, the David S. Steiner and Sylvia Steiner Charitable Trust, and the Joan and Allen Bildner Family Fund.
may_NJPAC_ad_positive_community.indd 1
@NJPAC • 1.888.GO.NJPAC njpac.org Groups of 9 or more call 973.353.7561 One Center Street Newark, NJ 4/27/18 10:54 AM
Congregation Welcomes Reverend Shawn T. Wallace, Sr.
T
he congregation of St. John’s Baptist Church, Scotch Plains, NJ welcomed Reverend Shawn T. Wallace, Sr. as their new senior pastor. Reverend Wallace comes from Peoples Missionary Baptist Church of Newark, NJ; where he served as pastor for 13 years. He began his ministry at the age of 19, when he responded to the voice of God and submitted his life to God’s work. Licensed to preach the gospel of Jesus Christ on August 7, 1994, he is a graduate of Rutgers University in New Brunswick, NJ with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Journalism and African Studies. He has also earned credits toward a Masters of Divinity from Drew University Theological Seminary in Madison, New Jersey. We welcome him to St. John’s Baptist Church. In honor of Reverend Wallace, First Lady Carita, and their children: Shawn Jr. and Tamara Lee, the church hosted a series of services on March 19, 20, and 21, 2018
892 Broad St, Newark, NJ 07102
Photo: Vincent Bryant
New Pastor at St. John’s B.C.
The The First Family of St. John’s Baptist Church L–R: First Lady Carita N. Wallace; Tamara Lee-Wallace; Shawn T. Wallace, Jr; and Rev. Shawn T. Wallace, Sr.
to celebrate a new chapter in the history of St. John’s Baptist Church. On Sunday, March 25th, there were two worship services. Guest speaker for the 10:00 a.m. service was Rev. Dr. Marion Franklin of First Baptist Church of Vaux Hall. At 4:00 p.m. the installation service featured guest speaker Rev. Dr. J. Michael Sanders of Fountain Baptist Church, Summit, NJ. Reverend Wallace is active in the National Baptist Convention USA, Inc. He formerly served as the Assistant Dean of Christian Education for the General Baptist State Convention of NJ. He served as the first Congress of Christian Education President for the United Missionary Baptist Convention of NJ and also as the Shiloh Baptist Association Congress President. Reverend Wallace received his Pastor’s Alternative Teaching Certification and Dean’s Certification through the Sunday School Publishing Board of the National Baptist Convention USA, Inc.
(973) 982-2249
HAGGAR'S HALAL KITCHEN HAGGAR'S Halal Kitchen COMFORT FOOD FOR THE SOUL SERVING BREAKFAST, LUNCH MD DINNER
COMFORT FOOD FOR THE SOUL FRIED FISH-FROM THE STEAK AND TAKE MENU MEAT LOAF TURKEY OR BEEFAND DINNER SERVING BREAKFAST, LUNCH FRIED CIIICKEN FRIED FISH—FROM THE STEAK SMOTHERED CHICKENAND TAKE MENU BAR-BE-CUE CHICKEN
LAMB POTATO SALAD MEAT LOAF TURKEY OR BEEF JERK CHICKEN YELLOW RICE FRIED CHICKEN OX TAILS COLLARD GREENS SMOTHERED CHICKEN STRING BEANS AND CHEESE SMOTHERED MEAT BALLS BAR-B-CUEMACARONI CHICKEN RICE AND REAI\S POTATOE LAMB SALAD TURKEY CHOPS VELLOW RICE STRING BEANS JERK CHICKEN BURGERS, FRIES, CHICKEN WINGS SMOTHERED MEAT BALLS OXTURKEY TAILS CHOPS GRILLED CHICKEN SALAD BURGERS, FRIES, CIIICKEN WINGS COLLARD GREENS FISH SALAD GRILL CHICKEN SALAD FISH SALAD TOSSED SALAD MACARONI AND CHEESE TOSS SALAD CAKES AND CAKES PIF.S RICE AND BEANS AND PIES BANANA PUDDING BANANA PUDDING
SENIOR SPECIALS-BUY ONE . MEAL-GET ONE 50 0/0 OFF - SIT DOWN
MEALS ONLY!!!!! SENIOR SPECIALS—BUY ONE MEAL GET ONE 50% OFF MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY-ONE CHILD MEAL UNDER 5 YEARS
FREE WITH THE PURCHASE OF ONE ADULT MEAL -SIT DOWN MEALSFREE MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY—ONE CHILD MEAL UNDER 5 YEARS 01\1.Y. !!!!!!!!! WITH THE PURCHASE OF ONE ADULT MEAL PLEASE USE OUR FACILITY FOR WAKES, RABY SHOWERS, PRIVATE PARTIES, ETC.
ALL SPECIALS—SIT-DOWN MEALS ONLY!!
PLEASE USE OUR FACILITY FOR: WAKES, BABY SHOWERS, PRIVATE PARTIES, ETC.
46
The Positive Community May 2018
www.thepositivecommunity.com
Website
Exclusive: Dr. David Jefferson Lecture on Spirituality
ORNETTE COLEMAN BY NICK HIMMEL
MAY 18–19, 7PM & 9:30PM
MIRIAM MAKEBA & NINA SIMONE: SINGING PROTEST & MEMORY WITH SOMI Featuring vocalists Somi and Laura Mvula THE APPEL ROOM
MAY 18–19, 8PM
CELEBRATING ORNETTE COLEMAN Featuring the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis and music director Ted Nash ROSE THEATER
JUN 1–2, 7PM & 9:30PM
EDDIE DANIELS, HARLEM QUARTET AND TED NASH JAZZ IN THE CHAMBER Eddie Daniels, Ted Nash, Helen Sung, and Scott Colley cross boundaries of virtuosity with the Harlem Quartet This program is presented as part of the Ertegun Jazz Concert Series
THE APPEL ROOM
JUN 7–9, 8PM
WYNTON MARSALIS The Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra plays the music of Wynton Marsalis Bloomberg Philanthropies is a lead sponsor of Wynton Marsalis
ROSE THEATER
Frederick P. Rose Hall • Broadway at 60th St. Centercharge: 212-721-6500 • JAZZ.ORG/HARLEM
www.thepositivecommunity.com
May 2018 The Positive Community
47
Liz Black Wins Stellar Gospel Music Award: Photo: Earl Gibson III/Central City Productions, Inc.
Radio Personality of the Year
S
yndicated radio personality, Liz Black, earned her first Stellar Award, taking home the coveted golden statuette for Radio Personality of the Year during the 33rd annual Stellar Gospel Music Awards ceremony at The Orleans Ballroom in Las Vegas on Saturday, March 24, 2018. In her acceptance speech, Black thanked her listening audience, saying, “I do what I do because I’m on assignment to make sure that we continue to lift up the name of Jesus and try to make your day better no matter what’s going on around you. I just want to say thank you and this means so much to me.” It’s a high achievement for the former actress, model, and voiceover host for BET’s Joyful Noise musical TV series. Her life took a decade-long, downward spiral into drugs before she became a born-again Christian and started walking a new path as an on-air radio personality in 2001. Black’s weekday program “Inspirations with Liz Black” is syndicated by the Pittsburgh, PA-based American Urban Radio Network‘s AURN Inspirational wing. It airs between 11AM and 3 PM on a number of stations, including the powerhouse WLIB 1190 AM in New York City. Black also hosts Sunday Praise on WBLS 107.5 in the Big Apple. — Courtesy Central City Productions, Inc. Photo: Raymond Hagans
Osun the Goddess Nollywood Movie Premieres In Newark
O
sun The Goddess, a Nollywood movie, premiered at the Citiplex-12 Movie Theater in Newark, New Jersey on April 15,2018. Filmed in Abata Egba in Modakeke Ile Ife, Nigeria, the screenplay was written and produced by and stars Florence Trautman, aka Floxy Bee, the Queen of Hikosso Music (Yeye Asa), traditional Nigerian music. The story about the Osun Goddess
48
The Positive Community May 2018
delves into the interplay of life on earth and how the connection with the ancestors and spirits of the world beyond tend to work toward achieving fairness and justice in the society. Among dignitaries in attendance at the premiere were Hon. Ugo Nwokoro, deputy mayor of Newark; Hon. Oliver O. Mbamara, the president of Nollywood Producers Guild USA; Wale Idris
L-R: Paul and Florence Trautman aka Floxy Bee
Ajibade, the executive director of African Views; Chief Mrs T.O.S. Benson; Commissioner Olamide Davis-Talabi; and Dr. Akil Kokayi Khalfani, the Pan African Diaspora Ambassador to the Oni of Ife. The movie also starred Murphy Afolabi, Faithia Balogun, and Femi Branch. Osun the Goddess will open in cities across the country. www.thepositivecommunity.com
Presents
44 years
FREE ADMISSION
06.27-08.08 2018 (Except July 4)
WEDNESDAYS, 7pm
49 washington street newark, nj 07102-3176 973.596.6550
711
TEL
TTY
Featuring the Paul Robeson Awards Youth Cinema, Mondays & Wednesdays, July 9â&#x20AC;&#x201C;August 8
www.thepositivecommunity.com
newarkmuseum.org
May 2018 The Positive Community
49
PATRICIA BALDWIN
Unsung: Dottie Peoples Grace & Peace
W
hen I think of great women in gospel music, three come to mind right away: Living Legend Shirley Caesar, the sultry Yolanda Adams, and the belter Tamala Mann. However, there are some artists who’ve put in the work and hardly get the acknowledgment deserved. They’ll tell you upfront that you don’t do this work for fame or fortune; it’s for God’s glory. Without taking anything away from that statement, I’d like to recognize a Gospel legend who has been in the industry for over three decades—Dottie “Glam” Peoples. Oh yes, Ms. Dottie gained knowledge while traveling with Dorothy Norwood (Caravans) straight out of high school. While touring she met the Rolling Stones and Stevie Wonder, and being around legends in the making she glimpsed greatness and took notes. Her vocal skills took her to another side of music and she toured the country with a jazz ensemble, but her gospel roots were pulling her back home. She remembered, “I joined Salem Baptist Church and one of the ladies in the choir told the minister of music, ‘This girl can sing!’ I sang that Sunday morning and people were shouting. It changed my whole life…I knew I didn’t want to sing jazz any more, I just want to sing for The Lord.” After five years on the road and miserable singing secular music, the Dayton native moved to Atlanta to pursue her calling in gospel music and never looked back. Dottie Peoples has an amazing voice range; her second level soprano can be natural or falsetto, which she prefers. Her second range alto and first tenor are used to illustrate ministering a story lined-testimony or in the drives of her songs. Peoples has won Dove, Stellar, and plenty of other awards and nominations throughout the years. With songs like “Surely God Is Able,” “Testify,” “God Can, God Will,” and 15 of her own albums in addition to collaborations and featured guest songs she’s done for other greats in the ministry, Ms. Dottie has no intention to quit.
50 The Positive Community
May 2018
Not only does she sing, she looks great doing it. She’s known for her glamorous, blinged-out gowns and shoes and her “go high or go home” updo hairstyles. This woman’s gift made so much room for her around the world and with no regrets and a great deal of excitement, Dottie Peoples’ passion for the people of God is why she won’t stop. She states, “So many folks come up to me, some of them crying, some of them just hugging me, some of them so excited. Just to know you’ve touched their lives and blessed them like that — it’s a feeling that you never get over.” Never to be compared, never to be forgotten, we salute your longevity and love for the Kingdom. Happy Mother’s Day, Mommy—Elder Lillie M. Baldwin!
www.thepositivecommunity.com
LIMITED ENGAGEMENT PREVIEWS BEGIN MAY 30 THE TRUE STORY OF THE LITTLE ROCK NINE HARVEY BUTLER REBEL THEATRICAL MANAGEMENT, LLC PRESENT
WRITTEN AND DIRECTED BY
ILLUSTRATION BY CHARLES CHAISSON
RAJENDRA RAMOON MAHARAJ
TICKETS FROM $39 VISIT LITTLEROCKPLAY.COM OFF-BROADWAY AT THE SHEEN CENTER FOR THOUGHT & CULTURE 18 Bleecker St, New York, NY 10012
@LittleRockPlay www.thepositivecommunity.com
May 2018 The Positive Community
51
Don’t Fall for Spam Calls How to Keep Landline & Cell Phones Safe
I
f you feel like robocalls are increasing, you’re right. A recent article in the New York Times reported that 3.4 billion automated calls were placed to landlines and cell phones in April 2018—an increase of 900 million a month compared with April 2017. These calls run the gamut of scam attempts, from callers claiming to be with the IRS, customer service for companies like Microsoft, credit card companies, student debt lenders, utility firms, and even foreign governments. Last month, New York’s state government warned ChineseAmericans about calls purporting to be from the Chinese consulate demanding money. So far, 21 consumers have lost $2.5 million to the scam.
Lawmakers have taken notice—and taken action. The United States Congress held hearings on the issue in April, with several pieces of pending legislation aimed at fighting unwanted robocalls. Last November, the FCC also adopted new rules allowing phone companies to proactively block illegal robocalls in response to rising consumer complaints. Those complaints went up from 3.1 million in 2014 to 7.1 million in 2017. Still, the problem runs deep. Scammers can route their calls through a multitude of carriers and networks, making it difficult to determine exactly where they originate. The latest twist on the scam comes from “neighborhood spoofing,” in which robocalls are placed using local numbers to try and
entice recipients to pick up. Similarly, scammers can spoof an existing number, tricking con-sumers into thinking a trusted business is calling them. The federal Do Not Call list was supposed to stem the tide of spam calls, but experts liken it to more of a tennis net trying to stop a flood. Its protections for landlines are stronger than for cell phone numbers, which may explain why spam calls to smartphones represent the biggest increase in recent months. Adding your number to the list can help, but the most fraudulent hackers (many of whom are based overseas) have so far been undeterred by the rules. So what can you do to stop these calls and keep your information safe?
At CMIT Solutions, we understand the complexities of today’s digital world—and we know that threats now extend beyond computers and networks to our phone systems, as well. Our goal is to keep your business, your data, and your employees safe. Contact us today to learn more about our leading cybersecurity solutions. 1. Don’t answer calls from unfamiliar numbers The most straightforward way to avoid robocalls is not answering in the first place—especially when it comes to calls received on your cell phone. If you get a call from an unfamiliar number, let it go to voicemail; if it’s somebody important, they’ll leave a message. This advice aligns nicely with the number-one rule for preventing ransomware, which is not to click links or open attachments from unfamiliar email addresses. 2. Don’t engage the caller. If you do find yourself on the phone with a potential spammer, don’t respond to invitations to press a number to opt out—that will let the hackers know your number is working. The best bet in most instances is to hang up once you know the call is unwanted. 3. Be careful what you say. Spammers can ask a variety of questions like “Can you hear me?” If you answer “Yes,” that voice signature can be used at a later date to authorize fraudulent charges via telephone. In addition, don’t yell at or accuse a live caller. In many instances, this can result in more calls to your number—or the hackers spoofing your number and trying to take advantage of your trusted network of contacts.
52
The Positive Community May 2018
4. Report spammers to the National Do Not Call Registry Once your number has been listed on the Registry for a month, you can start reporting unwanted calls to the Federal Trade Com mission. Consider this one aspect of a multi-layered defense, though—not a surefire way to stop all calls. 5. Look into technological fixes A variety of these exist, from call blocking options on your cell phone to apps that block calls from known spam numbers and services that deliver a message to robocallers alerting them that your number is out of service. Working with a trusted IT provider is key—you wouldn’t implement firewalls or network security defenses on your own, and you shouldn’t try manipulating your phone systems alone, either.
CMIT Solutions of Northern Union 973.325.3663• 800.399.CMIT www.cmitsolutions.com/nunioncounty www.thepositivecommunity.com
MWANDIKAJI K. MWANAFUNZI THE WAY AHEAD
Special Days in May
M
ay 2018 contains many specially designated calendar days. These include the National Day of Prayer, the anniversary of the passage of the 1960 Civil Rights Act, Ascension Day, Mother’s Day, Pentecost, AIDS Walk New York, and Memorial Day. The United States Congress created the National Day of Prayer in 1952 and amended it in 1988. The Day is observed on the first Thursday in May and is monitored by the National Day of Prayer Task Force. The theme for the 2018 National Day of Prayer was “Pray for American Unity,” allegedly based on the scripture “Make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit through the bond of peace.”—Ephesians 4:3, New International Version The next specially designated calendar day, May 6, celebrates the Civil Rights Act passed on May 6, 1960, which established federal inspection of local voter registration. That law introduced penalties for obstructing people’s attempts to register to vote. Note, however, that Civil Rights laws targeting various civil rights issues were also enacted in the United States in 1866, 1870, 1875, 1957, 1964, 1965, 1968, and 1991. Next in May is Ascension Day, when Christians celebrate the resurrected Jesus leading followers to the Mount of
www.thepositivecommunity.com www.thepositivecommunity.com
Olives on the 39th day after Resurrection Sunday (Easter Sunday). On the Mount, those followers watched Christ ascend into heaven. In our time, for many Christians, the commemoration of Jesus Christ’s resurrection is a weeks-long affair, culminating on Ascension Day. Although not a Biblically stipulated holy day, for many Christians and churches, Mother’s Day is recognized with holy implications because of the fifth commandment of the Ten Commandments: “Honor your father and your mother, so that your days may be long in the land that the LORD your God is giving you.”—Exodus 20:12, New Revised Standard Version Pentecost occurs 10 days after Ascension Day. Acts chapter 2 records that on the original Day of Pentecost, “tongues, as of fire,” descended upon close followers of the ascended Jesus Christ, and they received the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other languages to gathered Jews who spoke those languages: “When the day of Pentecost had come, they were all gathered in one place. And suddenly from heaven there came a sound like the rush of a violent wind, and it filled the entire house where they were sitting. Divided tongues, as of fire, appeared among them, and a tongue rested on each of them. All of them were filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak other languages, as the Spirit gave them ability.”—Acts 2:1-5, New Revised Standard Version That day, about 3,000 of the hearers accepted the Christian message and were baptized. This year, Pentecost and AIDS Walk New York fall on the same day. The AIDS Walk occurs within and near Central Park, and consists of masses of people walking a prescribed route to publicize the AIDS crisis and to raise funds to combat it. Churches are among those who participate in the AIDS Walk, largely in an effort to quell the epidemic. Memorial Day occurs on the last Monday of May. Its focus is to honor people who have died in the service of the United States of America. Along that line, the day can also provide opportunities to comfort families whose family members have died fighting in U.S. military actions. Additionally, let’s also encourage the U.S. government to actively seek peaceful solutions to international issues as often as possible. “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God.”—Matthew 5:9, New Revised Standard Version May May 2018 2018 The The Positive Positive Community Community
53
GOODNEWS NEWS FROM FROM THE THE CHURCH CHURCH AND ANDCOMMUNITY COMMUNITY GOOD GOOD NEWS FROM THE CHURCH AND COMMUNITY
TM ™ thepositivecommunity.com ™ ™ thepositivecommunity.com Summer 2017 Vol. 18 17, No. 4 7 May 2018 Vol. May 2018 Vol. 18, No. 4
Publisher Publisher Adrian A. Council, Sr. Publisher Adrian A. Council, Sr. Adrian A. Council, Sr. Editor-in-Chief Editor-in-Chief Editor-in-Chief Jean NashNash Wells Wells Jean Jean Nash Wells Associate Editor Associate Associate R. L. Witter Editor Editor L. Witter R.R. L. Witter Sales Sales Angela Ridenour Sales Angela Ridenour Adrian Council, Jr. Angela Ridenour Adrian Council,Inc.Jr. NGS Communications, Adrian Council, Jr. Satori MPRWilliams Marc NGS Communications, Inc. Marc Williams NGS Communications, Inc. Satori MPR Marc Williams Satori MPR Contributing Writers Mwandikaji K. MwanafunziWriters Contributing g.r. mattox Contributing Writers Patricia Baldwin Patricia Baldwin Mwandikaji K. Mwanafunzi Glenda Cadogan Rev. Theresa Nance g.r. mattox Helene Fox Glenda Cadogan Patricia Baldwin Helene Fox Fern Gillespie Rev. Theresa Nance Rev. Joanne Noel Glenda Cadogan g.r.Dr.mattox Helene Fox Mwandikaji K. Mwanafunzi Photographers Rev. Dr. Joanne Noel Rev. Bob GoreTheresa Nance Wali A. Muhammad Photographers Photographers Seitu Oronde Bob Gore Vincent Bryant Rev. William L. Watkins, Jr. Wali Dr. A. Muhammad Risasi Dias Darryl Hall Seitu Oronde Regina Flemming Vincent Bryant Rev. Dr. William L. Watkins, Jr. Hubert Williams Bob Gore Darryl Hall Brian Branch Price Vincent Bryant Bruce Moore Karen Waters Hubert WaliWilliams Amin Muhammad Brian Branch Price Seitu Oronde Art Direction & Layout Karen Waters Penguin Design Group Karen Waters Martin Maishman Rev. Dr. William L. Watkins, Jr. Art Direction & Layout Penguin Design Group Art Direction & Layout Production Assistant PeterDavis Gillo April Penguin Design Group Maishman Media, LLC The Positive Community Corp.
133 Glenridge AvenueCommunity Corp. The Positive The Positive Community Montclair, NJ 07042 133 Glenridge Avenue Corp. 133 Glenridge 973-233-9200 Montclair, NJAvenue 07042 Montclair, NJ 07042 Fax: 973-233-9201 973-233-9200 973-233-9200 Email: news@thepositivecommunity.com Fax: 973-233-9201 Fax: 973-233-9201 Website: thepositivecommunity.com Email: info@thepositivecommunity.com Email: news@thepositivecommunity.com Website: All contents ©thepositivecommunity.com The Positve Community Corporation. All Website: thepositivecommunity.com Rights Reserved. This publication, in whole or in part,
maycontents not be reproduced, stored inCommunity a computerized or other All © The Positve Corporation. All contents © The Corporation. retrieval or Positve transmitted in any form, or by any All Rightssystem, Reserved. This Community publication, in whole orAllin part, Rights This publication, in written whole or in part, of meansReserved. whatsoever without the prior permission may not bereproduced, reproduced, stored in a computerized or may not be stored in a computerized or The Positive Community Corporation. Any opinions other other retrieval system, or the transmitted anyby form, retrieval system, orare transmitted in any form, or any or by expressed herein solely opinions ofinthe writer(s) means without permission TM,of any whatsoever thewritten prior written permisTheprior Positive Community and means notwhatsoever necessarily those without ofthe The Positive Community Corporation. Any opinions The Positive Community its management or staff. sion of The Positive Community Corporation. AnyTMopinions expressed herein are solely the opinions of the writer(s) reserves theherein right toare retain all materials and does expressed solely the opinions of thenotwriter(s) CommunityTM, TM and not necessarily those of The Positive assume for unsolicited and not reponsibility necessarily those Thematerials. Positive Community TM The of Positive Community its management or staff. TM its management staff. The Positive Community reserves the right toor retain all materials and does not assume reponsibility for unsolicited materials. reserves the right to retain all materials and does not assume reponsibility for unsolicited materials.
86 The The Positive Community Summer 2017 54 May 2018 54 The Positive Community April 2018
The The Last Last Word Word BY R.L. WITTER BY R.L. WITTER
A MATTER OF CONVICTION PRETZEL LOGIC
W M
hile summer is still in full y mother me, swing, I canused hearto falltell sneak“Things aren’tusalways what ing up behind and peektheycorners. seem.” Nights Maya Angelou ing around are getting cooler; told pumpkin spice isWinfrey, beginfamously Oprah ning to appear in lattes, cookies, “When people show you who and they other forms;them.” and I’m seeing people are, believe Both of these saysporting andover t-shirts ings havejerseys, served hats, me well the boasting favoritetoNFL teams’ years andtheir continue inform my names and logos. Yes, pre-season proassessment of people and situations. fessional football has arrived and My “Gram” scripture before we knowcould it, thequote regular season effortlessly did so often during will begin and the multi-billion dollar my youth. It’s funny how things year for the American sport seem that to permeate our hearts andnationminds often competes with pastors subconsciously. Gram told me wide on Sundays from September to February. repeatedly to be deliberate in everyOnefrom manmy of thoughts faith whotowill thing my seemwords ingly be able to attend Sunday and the company I keep. Her servichomees without conflictwisdom is former spun, faith-based has NFL been quarterback Colin Kaepernick. proven sound more times than I He can literally wears his faith on his sleeve, count. It is largely because of her I sporting several religious tattoos on canarms proudly call myself Christian, his depicting crosses,a bible versandand have simply always held of faith es, the people word “faith.” in high regard. Despite having taken the San Perhaps49ers thattois the whySuper I findBowl myself Francisco in absolutely perplexed so many of 2013, and boasting the by NFL’s top-selling in 2016, he is unsigned for my jersey evangelical brothers and sisters the 2017 season. some cite lately. I see them While crowded around Kaepernick’s declining athletic abilithe current resident of the White ty, others praying cite his social activism House, fervently forboth his on and off the field. strength and the fruition of his agenDuring the 2016 season, he began da and can find no explanation for kneeling during the National their unfettered I can Anthem in protest ofsupport. police brutality understand the desire toare have one’s and how people of color treated agenda realized, but doprotest the ends in America. Kaepernick’s was really justify the means? Proverbs considered polarizing as many found 10:2refusal reminds “Ill-gotten his to us, stand for the treasures anthem disrespectful, have no lastingwhile value,others—mainly but righteouspeople of color—found it inspiring ness delivers from death.” andWhile empowering. Kaepernick is I would hardly consider seemingly being punished for speakmyself a biblical scholar, I do know a ing against racism andIpolice fewout things. One thing knowbrufor tality, while running a foundation sure is that Jesus preached of kindwhose mission is “to fight oppression ness, humility. It is of all love, kindscharity, globally,and through educabeyond how supposed people of tion and me social activism.” faith canhave twistquestioned themselves into Many how hepretcan zels to support a thricehismarried, jeopardize his livelihood, ability twice divorced, known for to earn millionsadulterer of dollars playing football and garner lucrative
endorsements that will further endear him to existing fans and likely inspire some new ones. I don’t question it, because despite never having met Kaepernick, I share and understand his commitment to his faith. Romans 14:20 tells us, “Do not tear down the work of God for the sake food. his All things indeed are not of paying bills, housing disclean, but they are evil for man crimination, and being thethe epitome who eats and gives offense.” Romans of envy, pride, greed, gluttony, and 14:22 and 23 continue with, “The lust. That’s you five have, out ofhave seven the faith which as of your cardinal sins and I could likely own conviction before God. Happy arguments for ismake he whoconvincing does not condemn himself sloth and wrath. in what he approves. But he who Jesusissaid of the Pharisees, doubts condemned if he whom eats, because his hypocrites eating is notinfrom faith; he called Mark 7:6, and whatever is not from me faithwith is “‘These people honor sin.” seemsbut that Colin Kaepernick theirIt lips, their hearts are far would ratherIsnot eat, or today’s prefer toevango from me.’” this how without a hefty contract, rather than gelical Christians and Christian offend his God or his convictions. leaders want to be seen and rememA group of pastors from Madison, bered? Are they content AL are behind him.truly They’ve organ-to support a man who further burdens ized a “blackout” where they are the poor cut NFL taxesfootball for theuntil rich refusing to to watch and does away with social programs Kaepernick is signed to a team. And designed benefit and spent sustaintailthe the hours to they would’ve gating or in front least among us? of the television will Practicing be spent mentoring youth dispretense is in called advantaged neighborhoods. hypocrisy and Jesus spoke of it in By protesting racial Matthew 23:27-28: “Woeinjustice, to you, Kaepernick is joining the Pharisees, ranks of teachers of the law and Muhammad Ali, Mahmoud Abdulyou hypocrites! You are like whiteRauf, Tommie Smith, and John washed tombs,are which beautiful Carlos. These menlook whose conon the outside but on the inside are victions outweighed their desire for full of the bones of the dead and money and fame, and I respect and everything unclean. In collectivethe same honor them for that. We, way, on to thetake outside youfrom appear ly, need a page theirto books peopleand as withhold righteousour butfinancial on the support from yetfull another institution inside you are of hypocrisy and that fails to support best interwickedness.” While our I don’t think ests. Thiswould summer unmasked anyone saywe thesaw current presiwhite nationalists march acrossand a dent appears righteous, men Virginia college campus and an women of the cloth should both American President equate them appear strivethere to betorighteous. with theand people protest I’d much rather go Heaven than them, so if not now, to when? I won’t appear to go there. All people be watching football this season andof bear Ifaith pray should many will jointhat me.in I’llmind. save you a seat in church. www.thepositivecommunity.com thepositivecommunity.com thepositivecommunity.com
20 YEARS OF SERVICE
“The Fidelis Care Mission is central to every part of our work. We really care about helping those who need health insurance, and ensuring they have quality coverage. I’m proud that we’ve grown to serve more than 1.7 million members.” Nancy Cox-Reed Associate Operational Auditor
HERE TODAY. HERE TOMORROW.
HERE TO STAY.
1-888-FIDELIS • fideliscare.org (1-888-343-3547)
TTY: 711
1,000 hearts transplanted. Countless lives touched. RWJBarnabas Health is one of the top three adult heart transplant programs in the nation. And Newark Beth Israel Medical Center is where it all beganâ&#x20AC;&#x201D;the first and largest heart transplant center in New Jersey. Today, we celebrate more than 1,000 hearts transplanted, but perhaps more than anything, we pause to celebrate the sons and daughters, mothers and fathers, brothers and sisters and friends and relatives who have been transformed by transplant. You are the heroes of this story. You continue to inspire us.
rwjbh.org/hearttransplant