Winter 2023

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GOOD NEWS FROM THE CHURCH AND COMMUNITY ™ Winter 2023 thepositivecommunity.com $2.95 Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts III 1949–2022
Bob Gore

HONOR BLACK HERITAGE IN NEW JERSEY

Join New Jersey as we honor 160 years of the Emancipation Proclamation. Explore innovative East Coast art galleries, culture-rich events and museums. Visit Black-owned businesses and historical landmarks. Enjoy live shows. Global cuisine. Shopping adventures. And Black Heritage Itineraries through the heart and soul of the state.
Discover more at VisitNJ.org/Black-Heritage.
©CRDA
WINTER ISSUE 2023 Emancipation Day Awards Honorees ..................... 12 Q&A with JPMorgan Chase’s Jason Patton .............. 18 Senator Ron Rice Endowed Scholarship ................. 21 A Fourth Ward Christmas .......................................... 22 Newark Leaders Host Fundraiser for Unite PAC .......... 22 Essex County Executive Sworn Into Sixth Term ............. 23 BAMkids Celebrates MLK Day ................................ 26 Young Athletes and Heart Health .............................. 73 Celebrating Women in Medicine and Science ........... 74 RWJUH Hosts Health Equity Symposium....................... 77 UMBC Celebrates Decade of Service ..................... 80 Cultural Holiday Festival at Old First Church ............. 82 Celebrating Martin Luther King Jr. Day 2023 ...... 83 Rev. Dr. W. Franklyn Richardson Honored .................. 84 Recipe for Fun at Crossroads ................................... 85 Lenox Road Baptist Church Triple Jubilee .................. 87 The Kings and Queens Singles Holiday Soiree ........... 88 Melba Moore at First Zion Hill Baptist Church ........... 95 also inside Guest Editorial Rev. Dr. Cornell Edmonds .... 8 Op-Ed NYC Mayor Eric Adams ................... 10 Fitness Doctor ................................................. 69 Bits and Pieces ................................................. 92 Onward ............................................................ 94 The Last Word ................................ 98 31 First Annual Pre-Watch Night Prayer Walk Money Culture 17 24 79 Equitable Clean Energy Future BAM Tribute to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr HBCU Spotlight: Morehouse College 90 Education
Health 68 Responsible Drinking Campaign in Harlem Cover Story CONTENTS Features SECTIONS & 4 The Positive Community Winter Issue 2023 www.thepositivecommunity.com
Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts III: Tribute to a Harlem Legend

“What America Must Become”

Education and faith were hallmarks of the ministry of the late Rev Dr. Calvin O. Butts III, who served as pastor of the globally renowned Abyssinian Baptist Church in New York City. As we grieve his passing, my thoughts drift to the timeless essay, Letter to My Nephew on the one hundredth anniversary of the Emancipation, from James Baldwin’s, The Fire Next Time: “They are trapped in a history which they do not understand and until they understand it, they cannot be released from it.”

Black people must not suffer the same fate! While freeing ourselves from the constraints of a history that too often has been less than “great,” we must also free our nation to become a “more perfect union.” Take for example the threatened political disruption of the Advanced Placement (AP) African American History curriculum for students in Florida. Such actions raise two questions: Why would ‘They’ do that? And, who bears the principal responsibility of instructing our children about themselves?

First, why would “They,” do that? In a nutshell, whether or not They are racists, “They are trapped,” in a racist narrative. The Society for the Colonization of Free People of Color in America, later known as the American Colonization Society (ACS) was founded in 1816 for clearly “racist” reasons. The ACS united sentiments of whites in The North and whites in The South. They feared the presence of free Black people on American soil. Black freedom and self-determination, which come through self-understanding, were considered then, as now, existential threats to America’s ”manifest destiny.”

ACS’s goal was to disenfranchise Black freedom due to its threat to the economic advances created by Black bondage. Its plan would displace free Blacks through voluntary and/ or involuntary expatriation. Thereby, keeping enslaved Black people uneducated and passive, while creating white wealth through chattel bondage. ACS was not dissolved until 1964, but its legacy lives on. If uncensored, A.P. African American History would teach just that. Furthermore, it would equip young minds with critical thinking skills necessary to connect the dots from before 1619 to beyond 2023.

Second, who bears the principal responsibility of instructing our children about themselves? It is not the “They,” who continue to resist education for people in bondage. Ninety-seven years have passed since Dr. Carter G. Woodson’s creation of Negro History week, now Black History Month. Its intentional illumination of Black history, normalizes

our history, while contributing to the positive formation of young minds and moves it from limited celebration into the mainstream of American thought. Furthermore, it reverses the impact of the historical removal of language and culture from peoples displaced from their native lands.

For too long our community has been hampered in learning its history due to limited access to writings of Black authors, mixed messages of the mean streets, and legislative threats to intact, caring Black family. Thereby making development of a sufficiently transformative cultural narrative unachievable for many. This was never more evident than on the streets of Memphis, Tennessee when video captured a cadre of “miseducated” Black officers mercilessly inflicting a mortal beating upon a young, Black father. Were their actions any less insidious than the ACS? Beyond a needless and tragic death, a child will have to grow up without a manin-the-house.

Uncensored A.P. African American History would instruct upon the critical importance of the presence of Black men and women in the home. It would show how the U.S. Supreme Court in King v. Smith, struck down the “man-inthe-house” rules enacted by many states. Such legislative enactments disqualified families with dependent children from receiving essential government assistance, while discouraging necessary social relationships and intact families.

The home must be the principal teacher of Black history. When it succeeds in planting a foundation, then schools, where the children spend most of their day, can and must complement and supplement the narratives and values taught in the home with invaluable classes such as A.P. African American history. I am grateful for my mom. Despite only a sixth-grade education, she brilliantly taught African American history in the home. She understood enough about people in our history such as Harriet Tubman, Frederick Douglass, and Booker T. Washington to push us to pursue the lofty heights of “somebody-ness.” “They” may forever “be trapped” in ignorance fed by racism, greed, and fear. However, that should not stop us from freeing America to become, in James Baldwin’s words, “what America must become.” Let us strive to live by the vision statement of the great Abyssinian Baptist Church, so eloquently stated by the Rev. Dr. Calvin O Butts: “Education and faith are the Tigris and the Euphrates of our liberation: twin rivers at the source of our redemption.”

8 The Positive Community Winter Issue 2023 www.thepositivecommunity.com
REV. DR. CORNELL EDMONDS ESQ. GUEST EDITORIAL
Rev. Dr. Cornell Edmonds Esq. is Interim Pastor of The Church of the Covenant, E. 42nd St NYC (around the corner from United Nations).

Our American Story

READ

The African American Cultural Narrative

African Americans are a unique people with a peculiar history in this land. Brought to these shores in chains from Africa in the early 1600s, our people toiled and suffered as captives in brutal bondage for a quarter of a millennium (250 years).

On January 1, 1863, two years into the Civil War, the Emancipation Proclamation, signed by President Abraham Lincoln, became law, signaling an end to slavery. On that day, the African American community of the United States of America was born.

One hundred years later, in August, 1963 at the height of the Civil Rights Movement, Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. stood in front of the Lincoln Memorial, as he led hundreds of thousands to a March on Washington, seeking an end to discrimination and 90 years of Jim Crow segregation in the South. It was a demand for full and equal citizen’s rights for the people in what has been called “the Second Emancipation.”

Forty years after Martin Luther King’s tragic assassination in 1968, America elects its first black president, the Honorable Barack Obama (2008).

In the 100 years between the first and second emancipation, in the midst of bitter persecution, humiliation, lynching; enduring the denial of basic human rights, the resiliency of the African American spirit continued to shine brightly in religion, business, education, medicine, invention, sports, and in the creative arts—music, fashion, dance, language, literature, and theater. Indeed, original American art forms and a popular culture which has become the envy of the world were founded upon the souls of a forlorn people! And that is our story—the Truth, Beauty and Goodness of a loving and gifted race—revealed!

An Extraordinary History

Ours is an extraordinary history of trial, tribulation, and triumph that we must never, ever forget! This is the very story we must tell our children and ever be remembered for all future generations. We the people, descendants of the Great Emancipation must tell our story and sing our greatest songs to each other and to the entire world! We must remind ourselves over and over again of the noble struggle, human dignity, sacrifices and wisdom of our torch-bearing forefathers; of our goodly heritage, our divine inheritance; our great music legacy—Positive Music Matters!

This is our story—the cultural narrative— a new language of freedom; a springboard toward a great and prosperous future; a spiritually enlightened ideal. A vision of hope, opportunity, and progress; liberty and happiness; health and wholeness—peace and goodwill!

WE’VE COME THIS FAR BY FAITH…! —Adrian A. Council, Sr.

The Great African American Cultural Narrative

Teach the Truth! Teach the children their American story in just 281 words! . . . And may they commit this very narrative to memory,and pass it along.

Affirm the positive—our claim on the American Dream! Own this beautiful 25x19 poster with a rich, majestic, presidential blue background color in large print; which includes images of two American presidents, alongside images of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr, poet Maya Angolu and the Queen of Soul, Aretha Franklin.

Frame this poster and proudly display it on the walls of your home, office, places of business; in the classrooms and your houses of worship; in barbershops, beauty salons and restaurants. Your $10.00 investment will pay dividends one thousand fold when you teach it to a young child and in return, they speak it back to you. It’s the gift that keeps on giving!

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Cannabis Justice for All

Legalizing cannabis was a major step forward for equity and justice in our city. But legalization is about following the new laws, not a free pass to sell unregulated cannabis products. Over the last few months, illegal cannabis retailers have taken advantage of decriminalization efforts, with unlicensed smoke shops popping up all over the city. This “Wild West” attempt to gain market share will not be tolerated. New York City has changed the laws, but we intend to enforce them—fairly, equitably, and thoroughly.

For many years, people of color in our communities were routinely targeted when it came to cannabis law enforcement. Cannabis criminalization was used to harass, arrest, and prosecute our brothers and sisters. Advocates rightly pushed for an end to these practices, and fought hard to put racial equity at the center of New York's cannabis legalization efforts. Past convictions were automatically expunged or suppressed. People with past convictions for marijuana and their family members are being given priority for these licenses. 50 percent of licenses have been set aside for social and economic equity applicants.

An open and democratic process resulted in the progress so many wanted to see—an end to the “war on drugs” mentality, the establishment of a safe and sanctioned cannabis industry for adults, and a pathway to restorative justice for those who were unfairly prosecuted in the past. Legal cannabis is expected to be a $1.3 billion industry that will create thousands of jobs and generate approximately $40 million per year in tax revenue for our city. And 40 percent of the tax revenues from legal cannabis will be invested back in the communities that were most harmed by prohibition. We have a moral obligation to make sure the people who were adversely affected by marijuana criminalization get their fair share of this emerging market. That’s part of the mission of the new CannabisNYC Office. This is a city agency that will make New Yorkers aware of opportunities to participate in this industry, promote equity, and help applicants navigate the licensing process.

In the last month, the first licensed cannabis

with HIV and AIDS; the other by a formerly incarcerated entrepreneur who received priority for a license because he is one of countless Black men who were harmed by the drug war in the 1990s. But these legitimate businesses are facing stiff competition from shops that are not following the rules. Instead of respect for the law, what we have seen recently is the proliferation of storefronts across New York City selling unlicensed, unregulated, untaxed cannabis products.

Those who flout the cannabis tax laws and regulations are robbing the very communities that are finally on the cusp of benefiting from a just and equitable system. We cannot allow that. We’re not going to take two steps back by letting illegal smoke shops take over this emerging market, especially when so many of them are selling unlawful and unlicensed products that could seriously harm consumers. It is time for the operation of illegal cannabis dispensaries to end.

Sheriff Miranda and our partners at the N.Y.P.D. recently took direct action to counter this trend. Over a two-week enforcement blitz, the Sheriff's Office issued 566 violations and seized $4.1 million worth of product at 53 locations. And this week, the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office sent letters to approximately 400 unlicensed smoke shops in Manhattan. The letters state the city will commence legal eviction proceedings against commercial tenants who are engaged in illegal business activity. That includes the unlicensed sale of cannabis, the sale of untaxed cigarettes, and the sale of adulterated products. If owners and landlords fail to initiate timely eviction proceedings against these commercial tenants, the Sheriff's Office will take over and pursue eviction proceedings.

While we are not ruling out criminal prosecutions for tax evasion, money laundering, or the sale of cannabis to minors, the focus of this initiative at this time is civil enforcement. We want to give New York's legal cannabis market a chance to thrive—and deliver on the vision of safety, equity, and justice advocates demanded for so long.

10 The Positive Community Winter Issue 2023 www.thepositivecommunity.com
NYC MAYOR ERIC ADAMS Op-Ed

In His Grandfather’s Footsteps...

While patrolling the same East Village streets that his namesake did more than 50 years ago, NYPD Police Officer Gregory Foster can’t help thinking of the grandfather he never met.

“There are lots of challenges out there and, as I face them, I always keep his strength in mind,” says the young cop. “I use it for motivation. I ask myself, what would he do?”

In January 1972, Patrolman Gregory Foster was assassinated along with his partner Rocco Laurie in an ambush by members of the Black Liberation Army – one the most heinous cop-killings of the second half of the 20th century. Foster and Laurie had served together in the Marines and teamed up again in the Ninth Precinct, where now every rookie who walks into the stationhouse is told of the Foster-Laurie history, and the duo are accorded the reverence they deserve.

The younger Gregory Foster would never have been able not to remember them. His grandmother wouldn’t let him.

Jacqueline Foster was determined to keep the memory of her

martyred husband alive. “She would talk about him all the time,” he says. “About how he was a man’s man, about how strong he was, how he took care of the family, how he had served both his country and his city. And how she wanted me to be just like him. ‘You wanna be that guy,’ she would tell me.”

So, eventually, Gregory Foster III set out to be that guy. He started off, like his grandfather, by joining the military. He served seven years in the Army National Guard, working in anti-terrorism, protecting hot zones like airports and transit systems. In the period following his active service in the military, he wasn’t so sure about undertaking a police career. But finally, the appeal of his heritage became too great.

On Dec. 28, 2019, Gregory Foster III graduated from the NYPD Police Academy and, wearing his grandfather’s shield, soon started serving in the Ninth Precinct and literally walking in his grandfather’s footsteps as he patrols the East Village.

Grandma Foster would have approved.

Inc.
Police Benevolent Association of the City of New York,
| Patrick J. Lynch, President

Tri-State Ballroom Robert Treat Hotel

THE GREAT AMERICAN EMANCIPATION DAY AWARDS 2023 HONOREES

Dionne Warwick is currently celebrating her seventh decade in entertainment. From the works produced/written by Burt Bacharach/Hal David to the recently aired CNN documentary, “Dionne Warwick: Don’t Make Me Over”, Ms. Warwick is a trailblazer in music, the performing arts, Civil Rights and her humanitarian efforts. She scored two number one pop hits - one with the Spinners, "Then Came You" (1974), then with her Friends (Elton John, Stevie Wonder, Gladys Knight) with "That's What Friends Are For" (1985) – with sales from the latter benefiting amfAR, the Foundation for AIDS Research. A five-time Grammy-winner, Warwick earned a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Recording Academy in 2019, and continued recording into the 2020s.

Robert "Kool" Bell

Robert “Kool” Bell Is the co-founder, leader and master bassist for the legendary Pop/R&B group Kool & the Gang, the seven-time Grammy award-winners who also earned many American Music Awards. Bell and his family moved to Jersey City NJ in the early 1960’s, where he and his late brother Ronald (Khalis Bayyan) formed Kool & the Gang. A multi-platinum-selling group and the most sampled band of all time, Kool & the Gang has sold over 80 million albums worldwide and influenced the music of generations with 25 Top Ten R&B hits, 9 Top Ten Pop hits, and 31 gold and platinum albums. Kool’s business ventures include the successful Le Kool champagne and with his departed wife, Sakinah, co-founded the non-profit music education initiative, the Kool Kids Foundation.

Fourth-generation leader of faith and social justice; CEO of FPWA, an antipoverty, policy and advocacy organization; radio host; public speaker; author of Consider It Pure Joy; and editor of God in the Ghetto: A Prophetic Word Revisited. Visiting Scholar at the New York University Silver School of Social Work and Scholar in Residence at Alliance University Center for Racial Reconciliation (CRR). Chair of the NYC Racial Justice Commission, which developed and passed three unprecedented amendments to the city’s constitution to: 1) dismantle structural racism 2) embed racial justice and equity in all government functions 3) end solitary confinement in New York City jails. Vice-chair of the NAN Board; founding member of the NYS 400 Years of African-American History Commission; Fordham University Feerick Center for Social Justice Advisory Board member; and member of the Center for Law, Brain and Behavior Advisory Board at Harvard University.; Co-chaired Bill de Blasio Mayoral Transition, and lead advisor Full Day UPK expansion, and 20202021 NYPD Reform and Reinvention Collaborative.

Dionne Warwick Jennifer Jones Austin, Esq.

Rev. Dr. Valerie Durrah

A capacity builder, a ministers’ minister, a nonprofit prophet, and a gifted creative strategist, Rev. Dr. Valerie Oliver Durrah fosters unique partnerships. The philanthropic advisor, nonprofit coach and manager, corporate, and faith-based consultant’s work involves diverse ethnic populations and the underserved. Founder and President of Neighborhood Technical Assistance Clinic (NTAC), Dr. Durrah consults with philanthropists, foundations, organizations, institutions, seminaries, agencies, and healthcare entities seeking help to improve their programs addressing the needs of low income and service-starved neighborhoods. Member of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Bethany Baptist Church, and Church Women United, Dr. Durrah is an ordained global minister and the first African American trustee of the Brooklyn Historical Society. Dr Durrah published Lead Me, Guide Me: Capacity Building Resource Guide, for clergy women. An advisor to NYC Mayor Eric Adams, Durrah works to establish NYC’s Office of Faith and Community Partnerships and aid pandemic recovery in New York City.

A. Curtis Farrow

A. Curtis Farrow left his illustrious career on Wall Street to pursue a lifelong dream of owning an entertainment company in 1986. That dream became a reality and today Irving Street Rep, a full service agency, provides marketing, public relations, and event planning for major corporations. McDonald’s Gospelfest and Farrow teamed up and the small community event originally hosted in 1983 by the McDonald’s Tri-State Owner/ Operator Association grew to international acclaim and recognition. Forty years, 3 Emmy awards and 14 nominations later, McDonald’s Gospelfest, produced and directed by A. Curtis Farrow, fills arenas and attracts participants from all over the world. As facilitator of McDonald’s African American Future Achievers Scholarship, Farrow oversees the distribution of four-year scholarships to deserving high school graduates. Multiple year grants to the students has resulted in a 99.1% college graduation rate for all the awardees.

The General Baptist Convention of NJ

In 2024 the General Baptist Convention of New Jersey, Inc. will celebrate 120 years of service. As we approach that historic milestone, I am grateful on this occasion to have six of the immediate past presidents and the membership at-large share recognition by The Positive Community. Rev. Dr. Calvin McKinney [President Emeritus], Rev. Dr. William McKinley Freeman, Rev. Dr. Perry Simmons, Jr., Rev. Dr. Guy Campbell, Jr. Rev. Dr. Lester W. Taylor, Jr. and Rev. Dr. George A. Blackwell III. We are a fellowship of Baptist Churches throughout the state of New Jersey. We have a great history and a great future. We are building on the foundation of our past that which is relevant for today. As we move further into this second century of service, let’s remember from whence we have come, and to prepare to go where the Lord would have us to go, and where the world needs us to be. Our prayer is that we remain faithful in doing more to further the cause of Jesus Christ, in our personal lives, in the life of our churches, and in communities that we are called to serve.

United Missionary Baptist Convention of NJ

Three presidents have served the UNITED with spiritual maturity and distinction since it’s founding in April 2013: Rev. Dr. Kenneth D.R. Clayton, Rev. Dr. Robert L. Curry, and Rev. Dr. Marilyn M. Harris. On Saturday December 10, 2022, Rev. Andre’ W. Milteer was installed as the convention’s fourth president.

United Missionary Baptist Convention’s journey together has been dynamic, nurturing, uplifting, and inspiring. As a gifted potter fashions shapeless clay into works of art, God has sculpted UNITED into more than one could have imagined. As a corporate body of believers, United Missionary Baptist Convention of New Jersey, Inc. continues to seek and expect the manifestation of God’s presence and power in all that we do UNITED for His glory and honor.

Jacob Walthour relocated billion-dollar Blueprint Capital to Newark from tony midtown Manhattan in 2018 to be closer to and address racial and economic equality in New Jersey. He coined the phrase “Two New Jerseys” to shine a spotlight on the stark wealth and income disparities that rival statistics in the deep south. He has quietly trained an army of local kids to work at Wall Street firms and continues to generously support a variety of local causes and organizations. A South Orange resident, Jacob has over 30 years of experience in financial services. Prior to founding Blueprint, he served as a vice chairman in the investment management division of Cowen & Company. Black Enterprise magazine recognized him as one of their “Most Influential Blacks on Wall Street” when he was 39 years old.

Rev. Dr. Albert Morgan

Reverend Dr. Albert L. Morgan, affectionately known as “God’s Mailman,” is a native of Brotmanville, New Jersey. Elected pastor of Union Baptist Temple in 1986, Pastor Morgan manages a Christ-centered, worshiping, purposeful, and innovative ministry. A past moderator of the Bethany Baptist Association, Pastor Morgan is also a past elected member of Bridgeton’s City Council and serves on the Board of Education. He is the chairman of the Board of Directors of the National Convention of Choir and Choruses, also known as the Thomas Dorsey Convention. Pastor Morgan serves as the president of the New England Missionary Baptist Convention, the oldest Black Baptist convention in the country. He revitalized and refocused the convention, which is prospering even through the pandemic, with innovative online and in-person sessions.

HOST AND MUSICAL GUEST

Rev. Jacques DeGraff-Host

Reverend De Graff served as the first Vice President of the One Hundred Black Men, New York, where he has been a founding member of two public high schools; The Eagle Academy for Young Men and the Bronx School for Law, Government and Justice (Urban Assembly). As chief of protocol in the National Action Network, Reverend DeGraff traveled with Reverend Al Sharpton to the Sudan to spotlight abuses against Christians, and to Cuba to meet with Premier Fidel Castro to discuss the U.S. embargo. DeGraff has been an outspoken advocate for economic and social justice for communities of color. Well-known and respected in New York leadership circles, he has been a tireless advocate for Minority and Women owned businesses which create jobs in our communities, and he helped to lead the passage of Local Law1 to create municipal opportunities for MWBE contracts.

Alexis Jessica Morrast, is a native of Newark, now resides in Plainfield, New Jersey began singing at the age of three. Since that time, she's performed on several stages: the U.S. OPEN, NJPAC with Christian McBride and Dizzy's Coca-Cola Club with jazz legend Barry Harris. Her resounding tone has been heard on the Millennium Stage of The Kennedy Center, Lincoln Center, abroad in Europe and Africa; The Coltrane Jazz Festival put it this way: "The voice, the song, the stage presence is all astonishing!”

She’s worked with greats like Greg Phillinganes, Steve Jordan, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Ray Chew, Lisa Fischer, Michael Feinstein, Christian McBride and toured with Wynton Marsalis and JLCO Band.

Jacob Walthour Jr. Alexis Jessica Morrast-Musical Guest

Transport Workers Union Local 100 celebrates

BLACK HISTORY MONTH

In the 1930s, when the Transport Workers Union was in its infancy, African-Americans could only work in the transit system as porters, cleaning stations and trains.

Managers who were racist wouldn’t hire African-Americans into higher-paying positions.

TWU, led by our founder, Michael J. Quill, fought back.

By organizing and agitating, TWU kicked open the doors of opportunity, so all transit jobs in the subway and bus system could be available to everyone.

During Black History month, Transport Workers Union Local 100 reflects on the past struggles and advancements. We also recommit ourselves to the ideal of an America that is unburdened by racism, discrimination and hate, where everyone has a fair chance of reaching their full potential.

TWU Local 100 • We Move New York

Richard Davis President John V. Chiarello Secretary-Treasurer LaTonya Crisp Recording Secretary Lynwood Whichard Administrative VP

Forging a Path to Achieve an Equitable Clean Energy Future

Climate change is an existential threat to our planet and to our communities. Our government and companies that provide lifesustaining energy need to work together to solve.

In December, the Climate Action Council (CAC)—a wide-ranging panel of experts appointed to prepare a plan for meeting New York’s climate change goals—released their Final Scoping Plan for meeting the ambitious emissions reduction targets laid out in the Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (CLCPA) of 2019.

This plan is an important step toward a clean energy future that meets the challenge of climate change. As our leaders in Albany implement its recommendations, it is critical that communities that have historically been left behind are not just considered, but centered in our plans for the future.

A just energy transition requires sweeping emissions reductions across all sectors, including how we generate electricity, fuel our vehicles, and heat our homes. At the same time, we must make sure we maintain safe, reliable, and affordable service for all—particularly for the New Yorkers who already struggle with energy costs.

The CAC’s plan correctly notes that increasing energy efficiency and expanding the use of electricity into areas currently powered by oil and natural gas will be crucial to meeting New York’s clean energy commitments. However, it also makes clear that electrification alone cannot meet New York’s needs.

As we move from plans to policies, we need to focus on:

1. Modernizing our electric system and expansion to enable electric transportation and incorporate electricity from renewable

sources like wind and solar.

2. Decarbonizing heating for buildings and large industrial facilities.

3. Expanding programs that help homeowners and businesses adopt energy efficiency measures that save money and protect the environment over the long term.

4. Providing financial assistance for families and small businesses struggling to pay their energy bills.

National Grid has been hard at work on a plan to transition to a zero-emission electric and gas system, both in New York and across all of our service areas worldwide. Our Fossil Free Vision lays out our plan for meeting New York’s climate change goals using a hybrid approach that incorporates all fossilfree options available. In particular, we need to incorporate renewable natural gas (RNG) and green hydrogen into our plans for a hybrid clean energy system. These fossil-free fuels allow us to leverage our existing gas network to immediately start cutting emissions. Even more importantly, it ensures people and businesses who cannot afford to electrify aren’t left behind.

Our experience clearly shows that achieving a fair and safe clean energy future will require using every tool in the toolbox to ensure affordability, choice for our customers, and reliability across the system. National Grid is dedicated to ensuring an equitable and safe clean energy transition that meets the threat of climate change while providing reliable, affordable energy for all New Yorkers. We look forward to working with our partners in Albany to achieve the CLCPA’s goals without leaving anyone behind.

Money business, finance + work www.thepositivecommunity.com Winter Issue 2023 The Positive Community 17
Rudy Wynter, President, National Grid New York

Celebrating Black History Month: Q&A with JPMorgan Chase’s Jason Patton

In celebration of Black History Month, we sat down with Jason Patton at JPMorgan Chase to discuss what Black History Month means to him, how the firm is advancing racial equity and how is team is working to make a difference in New York.

What does Black History Month mean to you and how are you celebrating?

Black History Month is a time for both reflection and celebration across communities; a time where we honor the history, legacy and contributions of Black Americans to our society.

With my children, we research and discuss the achievements of Black people who have made significant advancements in their field. We will pick an industry like farming or aeronautics, learn about it together and talk about how that person made a difference. This year, they chose space exploration and we’re learning about the accomplishments of ‘Hidden Figure’ Katherine Goble Johnson and her contributions to NASA during the Space Race.

How is JPMorgan Chase making an impact to advance racial equity?

Diversity, equality and inclusion have been an important part of the culture at JPMorgan Chase and we wanted to take a look at what else we can be doing. While our work to advance racial equity has been longstanding, in October 2020, we made a $30 billion commitment to advance racial equity that took a look at additional ways to address affordable housing, small business, financial health, among other critical financial needs within unbanked and underbanked communities.

We’ve opened 14 Community Center branches – locally-inspired and built with extra space to host free community events and financial health workshops – across the country and hired nearly 150 Community Managers.

The firm’s first ever Community Center branch and Community Manager began in Harlem in 2019. Since that time and as part of our commitment to New York, we’ve hired 28 from Flatbush to the South Bronx to Mt. Vernon and Rochester. These leaders connect community members with the many free resources we’ve created to support financial health education, first-time homebuyer education, and many other resources.

We’re invested in making an impact in New York, throughout

the city and around the state, and are committed to supporting underserved communities, helping them reach their financial goals.

How should other companies and individuals be thinking about advancing racial equity?

We all can make an effort to help advance racial equity within our community—including by investing in or shopping with local diverse-owned businesses, supporting philanthropic efforts in our community and participating in community events.

Consider looking for diverse initiatives and business resource groups within your company that focus on supporting underserved or underrepresented communities, and asking if there are opportunities to support those initiatives or groups. For instance, JPMorgan Chase’s Advancing Black Pathways initiative works to support the economic empowerment of the Black community globally. Through our Global Supplier Diversity program we’re using our purchasing power to build economic equity in diverse communities, foster the success of underrepresented business owners, and promote equity, inclusion and sustainability across the wider business community. We also have initiatives focused on other communities, and business resource groups that share our company commitment to equity and equality and create opportunities for employees to be engaged.

Sponsored content from

JPMorgan Chase & Co.

During

www.thepositivecommunity.com
Black History Month, we come together to recognize that Black history is American history. We are steeped in the resilience, ingenuity, and optimism of our ancestors who helped to build this great nation.
East Orange lives Black History 365 days a year. We take time to recognize the trailblazers, creators, and survivors who made it possible for us to call this city our home. That’s why we’re proud of where we’re from—and excited about where we’re going.
As the Mayor of East Orange, my biggest success is helping my community transcend. Black History Month means thankfulness to the leaders who came before, those we stand beside, and those to come.
Montclair State University 1 Normal Avenue Montclair NJ 07043 June 15, 2023 9:00 A M - 6:30 P M SCAN TO REGISTER www aaccnj com 379 West State Street Trenton NJ 086 8 609-57 -1620 JUNETEENTH BLACK BUSINESS EXPO B L A C K E N T R E P R E N E U R I A L E X C E L L E N C E P A S T P R E S E N T A N D F U T U R E C E L E B R A T N G MATCHMAKING & BREAKOUT SESSIONS Persona ized matchmaker sessions with ead ng experts and Breakout sessions on topics rang ng from talent Acqu sition to digital l teracy Interactive and historical exhib ts on Black Excellence past present and future PERFORMANCES & ENTERTAINMENT Live Mus ca Performances & Fash on Show Experience the newest innovat ons & techno ogy by black creators Food emporiums with tast ngs of delicious fus on cuis ne Keynote remarks from a world-renown business trai blazer KEYNOTE SPEAKER CELEBRATING HISTORY We have come a long way since Booker T Washington founded the Negro Business League and since the formation and subsequent destruction of Black Wall Street; however, more must be done to create opportunities and partnerships for Black business owners That is why our Expo will display the products and services of over 80 major corporations and Black businesses Most importantly, the Business Expo is a great way to network promote your business and learn about new business opportunities for your company J o h n E H a r m o n S r , I O M F o u n d e r , P r e s i d e n t & C E O A A C C N J S P O N S O R S H P O P P O R T U N I T I E S A V A I L A B L E Receive professional headshots crit ques on your capab lity s presentation e evator pitch BUSINESS CORNER
Mayor Ted R. Green

New Jersey Legislative Black Caucus Foundation Announces Senator Ron Rice Endowed Scholarship

At a tribute gala, the New Jersey Legislative Black Caucus Foundation, the New Jersey Legislative Black Caucus, and Rutgers University Newark thanked retired Senator Ron Rice for his many years as a leader and mentor.

Over 300 distinguished guests came together to share personal experiences and memories with Senator Rice and his family at the Ruth Bader Ginsburg Hall on the campus of Rutgers Newark. The event, on December 3,

2022, included elected officials and civil rights leaders from across the state. The highlight of the event was the announcement of the Senator Ron L. Rice Endowed Scholarship Fund and the $50,000 check presented to the honoree for the fund. The New Jersey Legislative Black Caucus Chair, Assemblywoman Shavonda Sumter, and the New Jersey Legislative Black Caucus Foundation Chair, Assemblywoman Angela McKnight, served as co-chairs of the gala.

www.thepositivecommunity.com Winter Issue 2023 The Positive Community 21
L-R: ASW & Chairwoman NJLBC Shavonda E. Sumter, Rutgers Newark Gourmet Dining Services Director Sandra Draper, NJLBCF Treasurer and Rutgers Vice Chancellor Shante Palmer, and NJLBCF VP and Rutgers Assistant Chancellor Dr. Diane Hill, VP New Jersey Legislative Black Caucus Foundation members presenting $50,000 check to the Senator Ron Rice Endowed Scholarship Photos by: Karen Waters Senator Ron Rice receives check for Endowed Scholarship

A Fourth Ward Christmas

Holiday songs floated in the air, a live gospel choir sang, and Santa took pictures on a reindeer sleigh float spraying bubbles into the sky. Newark’s Fourth Ward residents enjoyed free food, Starbucks coffee, hot chocolate, fried oreos, and zeppoles; and an outdoor fire-pit for s’mores.

The countdown to the tree lighting was led by Newark Council Members Patrick Council, Larry Crump, Louise Roundtree, Mike Silva, Essex County Commissioner

Distribution of over 1,000 toys thrilled the wideeyed children. COVID testing, books, and raffles for autographed memorabilia from the NY Giants and Jets, as well as resource tables manned by volunteers from the Liberty Science Center made for a delightful Winter Festival in Newark.

Newark Leaders Host Fundraiser for Unite PAC

Miles Berger, president and CEO of the Berger Organization, hosted a fundraiser for Unite PAC on December 14th at Dutch’s restaurant located in the Tryp Hotel by Wyndham Hotel in Newark. Berger stated “I am proud to be associated with Unite PAC and happy to support their goals and mission.” Newark Mayor Ras J. Baraka was quest speaker.

22 The Positive Community Winter Issue 2023 www.thepositivecommunity.com
President Wayne Richardson, Mayor Ras Baraka, and Council President LaMonica McIver. South Ward Council Member Patrick O. Council welcomes everyone to the holiday celebration. L-R: Berger Organization CEO/President Miles Berger and Newark Museum Director/ CEO Linda C. Harrison Dutch’s Manager Valentino L-R: Newark Mayor Ras J. Baraka and Berger Organization CEO/Pres. Miles Berger Photos by: Raymond Hagans Photos by: Raymond Hagans

Essex County Executive Sworn Into Sixth Term

Joseph N. DiVincenzo Jr. was sworn into his sixth term as Essex County Executive by NJ State and Essex County Democratic Committee Chairman LeRoy Jones on Tuesday, January 3, 2023. “This is my sixth term, but it still feels like my first term,” DiVincenzo said. “I love coming to work. Every morning I wake up and think about what we can do to continue moving Essex County forward.

In the November issue, Bishop Ronald L. Owens’s church was misidentified. Bishop Owens is senior pastor at New Hope Baptist Church in Metuchen, NJ. He is the Uncle in Faith of Bishop George and Pastor Mary Searight of Abundant Life Family Worship Church in New Brunswick NJ.

For a NYC Education Council Run /nycschools schools.nyc.gov/elections2023 | 311 January – February 2023 Help shape our children’s education and become an advocate for what is important to you as a parent! Sign up to run for a seat on a NYC Education Council. www.thepositivecommunity.com Winter Issue 2023 The Positive Community 23
L-R: Essex County Executive Joseph N. DiVincenzo Jr., NJ Governor Phil Murphy, DiVincenzo’s son Joseph, Essex County Democratic Committee Chairman LeRoy Jones Photo by Glen Frieson
Correction

the art + science of learning

Morehouse College: Makes Men of Consequence

A“Morehouse Man” is a brand. Since its establishment in 1867, the HBCU has garnered a reputation for producing extraordinary leaders and visionaries. Morehouse is the only historically Black college dedicated to educating men. Morehouse Men impact their communities, the nation, and the world. Politicians, educators, lawyers and judges, businessmen, medical doctors, scientists, realtors, entertainers, military, media, data scientists, software engineers, and spiritual leaders—each proudly represent Morehouse ideals. The Atlantabased institution is the top producer of Black men who receive doctorates, the top producer of Rhodes Scholars among HBCUs, and one of the leading U.S. institutions that produced the most Fulbright Scholars in 2019-2020.

In other nationwide academic rankings, Morehouse College ranks as the number one Small College in Georgia, the number one Liberal Arts College in Georgia, number one Online HBCU, and the 28th Liberal Arts College nationwide.

There currently are more than 18,000 Morehouse alumni in 14 countries. Morehouse College educates 2,300 students annually. Approximately 60 percent of rising Morehouse men come from families with a household income of $40,000 or less. They want to be Morehouse Men.

“Morehouse College is the only institution of higher learning in the nation that produces Black male excellence at scale and is well-known for producing outcomes of excellence,” said Morehouse President David A. Thomas, Ph.D. “Our alumni have become leaders of influence in every field and industry, making an impact that has changed the status quo for people around the world.”

“Making Men of Consequence” is the theme of Morehouse College’s $500 million capital campaign. The campaign’s goal will allow Morehouse College to expand its legacy of producing innovators who address diversity, equity, and inclusion across industries to address disparities in public health, K12 education, and racial injustice. The capital campaign will fund scholarships for top students nationally, support faculty research, expand innovative academic programs and access to global learning experiences, and construct world-class, technologically-advanced learning and living facilities on the college’s historic, 66-acre campus. Already, Morehouse has raised $200 million in contributions for the campaign. “It is a monumental investment in the development of leaders of color who will reshape society as we know it,” announced Dr. Thomas.

Morehouse College has been pivotal as a leader on civil rights and its commitment to addressing the

24 The Positive Community Winter Issue 2023 www.thepositivecommunity.com
Education

inequities caused by institutional racism, which has created social and economic disparities for people of African descent. Prominent Morehouse alumni include: Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., former U.S. Surgeon General Dr. David Satcher, Award-Winning American filmmaker Spike Lee, the first African American Mayor of Atlanta Maynard H. Jackson, former U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Jeh Johnson, former U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary and Founding Dean of the Morehouse School of Medicine Louis W. Sullivan, Attorney and CNN Political Analyst Bakari Sellers; youngest elected Birmingham Mayor in 120 years Randall Woodfin, and Georgia Senator Raphael Warnock. Celebrity alums also include actors Samuel L. Jackson and John David Washington, who co-starred in the recent Broadway hit revival of August Wilson’s The Piano Lesson.

While Morehouse College positions itself for another 155 years of producing leaders, it continues innovative program initiatives. The program Morehouse in the Metaverse, led by Dr. Muhsinah Morris, creates a nextlevel college experience by providing a digital replica of the campus so students can use virtual reality to transform learning when the student is on campus or learning remotely. The Black Men’s Research Institute, headed by two-time former HBCU President Dr. Walter

Kimbrough, is the first research institute of its kind focusing on the cultural, economic, personal, and social outcomes of issues affecting Black men. The Ida B. Wells Society for Investigative Journalism,has relocated from UNC-Chapel Hill to Morehouse College after the controversial tenure denial of one of its founders, Pulitzer Prize-Winning Journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones. “This partnership helps our young organization settle more deeply into our mission, which is to increase the number of investigative reporters of color,” announced Hannah-Jones, who directed the 1619 Project at The New York Times. “Coming to Morehouse just as it gets its journalism major off the ground provides a tremendous opportunity for us to increase our impact on the field and society.”

No wonder Morehouse ranks number one HBCU for First-Year Experiences. “The heart of a college is the faculty and their ability to engage students. One of the important ways in which faculty engages students is with the vibrant work they do both teaching and through their scholarship,” said Provost Kendrick Brown, Ph.D. “Scholarship drives the best teaching. It benefits the students because they can engage with faculty doing interesting and important work. This collaboration and care extends beyond graduation as our students become leaders in their fields.” For more information, contact https://morehouse.edu.

www.thepositivecommunity.com Winter Issue 2023 The Positive Community 25

BAMkids Celebrates MLK Day: Courage Takes Creativity

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. encouraged the use of time creatively, saying, “The time is always right to do what is right.” Knowing that courage takes creativity, a family-friendly program co-curated with the BAMkids Parent Advisory Circle immersed young people in art forms that have been important expressions of social justice movements. Creating art helps to raise awareness, build community, and challenge power structures. Throughout the day on January 16, 2023, families drummed, danced, crafted, colored, and even

put themselves in moments of civil rights history from Dr. King’s lifetime.

The goal was to remember and reflect on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s message of peace and unity and inspire the courage to create positive change in the world. Each activity in the program was inspired by how Dr. King was a pursuer of dreams and needed a big imagination as a civil rights leader. Dr. King cared about community partnerships, so the activities involved Brooklyn-based artists and organizations.

26 The Positive Community Winter Issue 2023 www.thepositivecommunity.com
Photos by Rebecca Greenfield Soul Energy Dance for BAMkids Celebrate MLK Day
Wear Your Values activity station for BAMkids Celebrate MLK Day
Families particpate in the Beloved Community Circle
PARENTS! Get help working with your child. STUDENTS! Call and get help in: Reading • Math • Writing • Science 1•212•777•3380 FREE HELP WITH HOMEWORK! A teacher will answer, ready to help. 2023-0126-3138 We also speak: Armenian, Bengali, Chinese, French, Haitian Creole, Korean, Russian, Spanish, Tagalog Call on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday or Thursday 4:00-7:00 p.m. United Federation of Teachers (UFT) • 52 Broadway, New York, NY 10004 Department of Education • 52 Chambers Street, New York, NY 10007 Anthony Harmon - Director, Dial-A-Teacher

NEW Sussex Ave Campus

Step inside KIPP’s newest building in Newark, from the early days of construction, to the first day of school!

Following an extensive renovation in 2021, KIPP Newark opened their new Kindergarten through 8th grade campus on Sussex Avenue in August 2022. Some highlights from the new campus include a performing arts space, science labs, a gymnasium, cafeteria with on-site kitchen preparing fresh food, and a lounge where families connect with one another, or access a computer room and laundry. Collectively, these spaces allow students to discover and explore their passions inside and outside the classroom.

KIPP Newark parent, Ashley Carter-Anderson, was thrilled her son Carter was able to start the school year in the new campus.

“My husband and I are ecstatic that our son will have an opportunity to attend middle school in a state of the art facility. Every year we look forward to the start of the school year, but this year we anticipated that day with a new level of excitement, knowing we watched the campus transform right before our eyes.”

KIPP Newark Public Schools are currently enrolling for the 2023-24 school year. You can learn more about applying to our schools at WWW.KIPPNEWARK.ORG
SCAN & APPLY
KIPP NEWARK PARENT
SPECIAL SECTION Calvin O. Butts III
Doctor JULY 19, 1949 – OCTOBER 28, 2022 TRIBUTE TO A HARLEM LEGEND
Reverend Photos by Bob Gore
his legacy inspire the pursuit of excellence in ministry & education in present and future generations. 4 5 0 E A S T E R N P A R K W A Y • B R O O K L Y N , N Y 1 1 2 2 5 • 7 1 8 . 7 7 8 . 1 2 0 0 • M Y F B C C H . O R G R e v e r e n d R a s h a d R a y m o n d M o o r e , P a s t o r R e v e r e n d D r . C l a r e n c e N o r m a n S r . , F o u n d i n g P a s t o r c e l e b r a t e s t h e l i f e & l e g a c y o f o u r f r i e n d
May

Calvin Butts

Some people will tell you they were put on this earth to do one thing and do it well. Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts III strives to do all things well, and it shows. It’s not surprising once you get to know him a little bit, “I was concerned about getting good grades and pleasing my parents,” he reminisced of his adolescent self. “I had wonderful, hardworking parents and together they poured a lot into their only child.” Seemingly, the essence they poured into young Calvin not only nourished and nurtured him, but filled and fueled him to affect change and impact thousands of lives through his.

In addition to his parents, education and religion played important parts in molding Butts. Both encouraged his curiosity and sense of justice, which would later serve him well as a minister and an educator. As pastor of the historic Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem, Butts shepherds his flock from a thorough knowledge of scripture. As president at SUNY at Old Westbury, he advocates for his students, faculty, and community. A humble yet confident man, he encourages congregants and students to ask questions and challenge theories. He welcomes their curiosity.

www.thepositivecommunity.com Winter Issue 2023 The Positive Community 33
SPECIAL SECTION | REV. DR. CALVIN O. Butts III: TRIBUTE TO A HARLEM LEGEND Originally appeared in The Positive Community September 2019 Issue
cont’d on page 35
Bob Gore

The Mosque of Islamic Brotherhood Inc. Honors Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts

On behalf of the Mosque of Islamic Brotherhood Inc., the Board of Directors honors Harlem’s late and beloved brother, leader, and pastor Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts III. He consistently extended love and respect to Harlem’s Muslim community, in the spirit of the historic and reciprocal bond of faith between Christians and Muslims in 7th century Abyssinia, East Africa. May Almighty God bless him.—Imam Al-Hajj Talib Abdur-Rashid

The Mosque of Islamic Brotherhood Inc.

130 West 113th Street

New York, N.Y. 10026

Phone: (212) 662-4100

Facebook: MIB Village Youtube: MIB Harlem

34 The Positive Community Winter Issue 2023 www.thepositivecommunity.com

“Ignorance is the biggest impediment to the improvement of our society,” he says. “So I am encouraging, pressing every day that people strive to get a good education—that’s why we work so hard to provide access and accountability.” There’s no doubt he works hard. He’s done so all of his life. Inspired at the age of 12 by a speech by Morehouse College Alum Rev. Dr. William E. Gardner, Butts set his sights on a Morehouse education and after attaining his Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy there, went on to earn a Master of Divinity from Union Theological Seminary and a Doctorate of Ministry in Church and Public Policy from Drew University. His experience as an Urban Affairs instructor, professor of African American Studies at City College, and teaching Black Church History at Fordham University in addition to his ministerial acumen made him a logical choice to helm Old Westbury back in 1999; or perhaps that was divine intervention. His personal mantra states: “Education and faith are the Tigress and the Euphrates of our liberation; twin rivers at the source of our redemption. Without a trained mind and an inspired heart, you will go nowhere.”

Twenty years later as he prepares to retire, Butts reflects fondly on his time and accomplishments at Old Westbury. “Our diversity has brought more opportunity to young men and women,” he said fondly.

“Now we have a legacy… in some families three generations have attended our school.” That’s no small feat considering Old Westbury was once one of New York’s best kept secrets. “We were sequestered; people didn’t know we were here. But as a result of the cabinet I serve with and the activities I was involved in before I got here, we are now better known across Long Island, the state of New York, and the country… we have a much broader reach.”

Butts combined his leadership skills with the school’s increased visibility to boost enrollment and diversity. He used those numbers to make a case for more and better facilities and followed through to make incredible improvements to the campus. “We’ve built a new academic building, new dormitories, a new student union building, and a new police headquarters,” he explained. But wait, there’s more. “We continue to build; and we’re looking now at building a large, $130 million STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) center for our students.” Butts stressed the importance of access for these students especially. “Our students are smart enough to go to Harvard and those other schools, but they can’t afford it. So we aim to provide these students with the best opportunities, the best faculty, and the best facilities.” He takes education seriously and his passion is fed by the knowledge that education beyond high school is a pathway to better employment and better standards of living. “We need to come together as poor people in this nation,” he said, “and begin to DEMAND that our government provide for us equal opportunities in terms of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.”

Perhaps one of the major benefits of Butts’ leadership at Old Westbury is his religious calling in the church and how he is able to seamlessly combine the two without overstepping the boundaries be-

cont’d on page 37

www.thepositivecommunity.com Winter Issue 2023 The Positive Community 35 SPECIAL SECTION | REV. DR. CALVIN O. Butts III: TRIBUTE TO A HARLEM LEGEND
Calvin Butts cont’d from page 33
In addition to his parents, education and religion played important parts in molding Butts. Both encouraged his curiosity and sense of justice, which would later serve him well as a minister and an educator.
Bob Gore

The Legacy of Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts

“Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts III has left a legacy from which faith communities in Harlem will draw inspiration for generations. He challenged white supremacist power structures and confronted our nation’s historic and current racist reality. The Riverside Church joins with our sister churches in Harlem, across the nation, and around the globe as we continue to witness to the work of this prophetic giant, which was ultimately the work of Jesus Christ. Dr. Butts will be greatly missed and we are honored to join our community in celebrating him.”

Rev. Adriene Thorne, Senior Minister, The Riverside Church in the City of New York 490 Riverside Drive, New York, NY 10027 www.trcny.org

Reverend Dr. Calvin O. Butts In Memoriam III

On behalf of the officers and members of the General Baptist Convention of New Jersey we are honored to join the Positive Community in paying tribute to Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts III. He was truly an inspiration to our faith community.

Rev. Dr. J. Michael Sanders, President Rev. Dr. James A. Dunkins, General Secretary
116 Glenside Avenue, Summit, NJ 07901 www.gbcofnewjersey.org 908-273-1199 | Fax: 908-273-0489
The General Baptist Convention of New Jersey
36 The Positive Community Winter Issue 2023 www.thepositivecommunity.com

tween a secular education and spiritual guidance. A devout Christian, he encourages others to embrace their own religious beliefs and faith practices and acknowledges the similarities between most major faiths. “I know God through Christ,” he explained. “But because a person says, ‘I am Muslim and I know God through Allah and the revelation He gave the Prophet Muhammad and I am going to seek peace, love, and justice,’ we’re the same people… we believe fundamentally in the same thing.” Butts supports his congregants’ curiosity and thirst for information equally as much as he does his students’. His approach creates space for people to learn, explore, and grow.

Butts also possesses a certain amount of cultural currency among the student body. In addition to being known for his ministry, teaching, and community building, many of Old Westbury’s students know him through some of their favorite music. Butts has been name checked in songs by several major rappers including Bone Thugs-N-Harmony and Ice Cube. He also held his own in a debate with Ice-T regarding the content of hip hop music.

As he prepares to close his chapter as president at Old Westbury, Butts reflects upon what he considers one of his greatest accomplishments in his 20 years there. “Reviving the spirit and mission of Old Westbury, to treat it like it’s a pearl of great value and nourish it so it can speak to the needs of poor peo-

ple.” He recalled an interview upon his arrival at the school when someone commented, “the school is dead.” Without missing a beat Butts replied, “Well you have somebody in the right business, resurrection.” He leaves the position of president of Old Westbury with the largest enrollment and highest admissions standards in its history, making it more competitive than ever. But in the true fashion of a dedicated educator and activist he said, “I’ll never stop working for Old Westbury, or the State University, or the City University; I’ll be an advocate for public higher education.”

While he is technically retiring, Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts III will undoubtedly continue his work as an educator, a minister, a husband, father, and grandfather. He’ll continue to touch lives, shepherd souls, improve communities, and spread both knowledge and love. “One of the driving forces in my life has been to make my parents proud and happy with the things I was doing,” he explained. “At another point in my life it was elevated to pleasing God.” While I can only speak as an earthly being, I think it’s safe to say Butts has done exactly that. Well done, Sir; mission accomplished.

SPECIAL SECTION | REV. DR. CALVIN O. Butts III: TRIBUTE TO A HARLEM LEGEND
Bob Gore Bob Gore
www.thepositivecommunity.com Winter Issue 2023 The Positive Community 37
Calvin Butts cont’d from page 35

Remembering Our President

The SUNY Old Westbury campus community honors the memory of

Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts, III

Throughout his 21-year tenure as President of Long Island’s only public liberal arts college, Dr. Butts lent his leadership, vision and passion to help SUNY Old Westbury change the lives of the nearly 20,000 students who graduated from its programs under his watchful eye.

His passion, drive and commitment to human and community development, to educational access, and to the empowerment of those traditionally by-passed by the powerful remained key to his success from his appointment in 1999 until his retirement in 2020.

His memory lives on in our commitment to social and environmental justice and to the empowerment of people through education.

Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts, III at the announcement of the naming of the campus library in his honor at SUNY Old Westbury
www. oldwestbury.edu

Dr. Calvin 0. Butts Ill President of SUNY at Old Westbury

He wears many hats. He is a mover and shaker in the church, education, business and community service. And, though he might shy away from the subject, his political prowess is well known. Dr. Calvin O. Butts III is a native New Yorker and New Yorkers are truly blessed that he is there to serve them in so many different capacities. He is active in the total life of New York. The Positive Community caught up with Dr. Butts recently and sat down for a brief conversation. Here is a glimpse of this man on the move.

Butts left New York only long enough to attend Morehouse College in Atlanta, Georgia, where he said he was “a real Morehouse man.” Today, he is a man of tremendous influence.

As senior pastor of the historic Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem, he minsters to a flock of

thousands. With his goal of “moving forward in faith for the maintenance and expansion of its continuing Christian mission,” under his leadership Abyssinian has embarked on a series of projects designed to improve the quality of life of the people of Harlem. One of the founders of Abyssinian Development Corporation, Butts has already seen the completion of senior citizen housing, moderate income condominiums, and the acquisition of the Renaissance Ballroom and Small’s Paradise—two major historic landmarks in Central Harlem.

Deeply committed to education, he first pursued his own. After graduating from Morehouse with a degree in philosophy, young Calvin returned to New York and earned a Master of Divinity Degree in Church History from the Union Theological Seminary, and a Doctor of Ministry in Church and Public Policy from Drew University. With a penchant for education, Butts also turned his attention to teaching others—Urban affairs and African Studies at City College where he served as adjunct professor of Black Church History at Fordham University. The establishment of the Thurgood Marshall Academy for Learning and Social Change, a public intermediate and high school under the direction of the Abyssinian Development Corporation, was due in great part to his commitment.

In October, 2000 Dr. Butts was inaugurated as President of SUNY College at Old Westbury in Nassau County, Long Island. Just 20 miles from New York City, the college provides a small-town environment for its students, and a short commute for Dr. Butts, allowing him to wear his many hats most efficiently and effectively. Statistics bear out the fact Old Westbury has one of the most diverse populations of any school of higher learning in the U.S. The diversi-

cont’d on next page

www.thepositivecommunity.com Winter Issue 2023 The Positive Community 39 SPECIAL SECTION | REV. DR. CALVIN O. Butts III: TRIBUTE TO A HARLEM LEGEND
Originally appeared in The Positive Community March 2001 Issue

ty of this country is manifest here: Fifty-seven percent of students are female, 29% African American, 8% Asian-American, 34% Caucasian, 15% Hispanic American, 0.4% Native American, and 1% international students.

Butts says at Old Westbury “leadership is the focal point of our academic experience. “By leadership,” he says, “we mean not only preparing our students to become captains of the 21st century, but also providing the social, practical, and analytical tools that will enable them to become pillars in their communities, be recognized for the virtue of their deeds and ethics, and flourish as part of an increasingly diverse, internationally savvy marketplace.”

And he practices what he preaches. If his students were ever searching for a role model, he is it. A day in the life of Calvin Butts is a whirlwind of activity. In addition to his demanding duties at Abyssinian and Old Westbury, administering to the needs of more than 3,000 students and thousands of congregants, Butts finds time to serve as president of the Council of Churches of the City of New York, vice chair of the Board of Directors of the United Way of New York City, chairman of the National Affiliate Development Initiative of the National Black Leadership Commission on AIDS (BLCA), and a founding member of the organization’s Board of Commissioners.

Sitting in his well-appointed office at Abyssinian Baptist Church, we couldn’t help but be impressed by Pastor Butt’s cool, gentle manner. It happened that the alarm system was being repaired at the time of our meeting. A blaring bell interrupted our conversation once or twice. An aide suggested we move to another office, but Dr. Butts motioned to us to say put. No excitement, no flailing of arms, or raising of voices. He calmly dialed the foreman on the job asking him to cease the bell ringing until we were finished with our meeting. The man is in charge. He gets things done. He wears many hats… and wears them well.

40 The Positive Community Winter Issue 2023 www.thepositivecommunity.com October 2008 April 2011 March 2001 September 2019 SPECIAL SECTION | REV. DR. CALVIN O. Butts III: TRIBUTE TO A HARLEM LEGEND
SUNY at Old Westbury cont’d from previous page

Choose Healthy Life Celebrates the Life of Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts

Choose Healthy Life Founder Debra FraserHowze, Co-Chair Rev. Al Sharpton, and members of the National Black Clergy Health Leadership Council join the community in celebrating the life of Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts III, who transitioned to the Lord this past October. Rev. Butts served as a founding co-chair of Choose Healthy Life’s National Black Clergy Health Leadership Council with Rev. Al Sharpton.

“My pastor and friend for more than 40 years, he had a profound impact on all those he touched,” said Debra Fraser-Howze. “Rev. Butts raised money for the Black church to address teenage pregnancy and worked with me and the ministers to change the face of AIDS—just by the magic of getting tested from the pulpit and encouraging others to do so. Most recently, he did the same for COVID-19, getting tested publicly. He moved mountains with a single touch, grace, and dignity. The community is safer because he lived. Firmly rooted with God, his faith never wavered. We pray for his wife Patricia and his entire family.”

“Rev. Butts was a major pillar in the Harlem community and is irreplaceable,” said Rev. Sharpton. “Over the last three years, he and I worked closely as co-chairs of Choose Healthy Life’s national campaign

to help the Black community fight COVID. We spoke often about this important work in our community to address health disparities through the Black church. He will be tremendously missed.”

A strong advocate for the health of the community, Rev. Butts served on the United States Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS (PACHA) and chaired the National Black Leadership Commission on AIDS (NBLCA) as a founding member of the Board of Trustees. In November 2020, Choose Healthy Life established the National Black Clergy Health Leadership Council to help guide the non-profit organization. His leadership contributed to a highly successful effort to administer nearly 100,000 COVID-19 tests and vaccines through 120 Black churches across 13 states.

Rev. Butts’ commitment to enhancing the kingdom of God on earth, evidenced by his loyal dedication to the church and community development initiatives including homelessness, senior citizen and youth empowerment, cultural awareness, and ecumenical outreach proved to be unbounded. Choose Healthy Life offers its sincere condolences to the family, congregation, and to all those who knew Rev. Calvin O. Butts III.

L-R: Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts, Debra Fraser-Howze, First Lady Jill Biden, and Dr. Anthony Fauci

National Black Clergy Health Leadership Council

Rev. Jacques DeGraff

New York, N.Y.

CHL New York Leader

Rev. Que English

New York, NY

Bronx Christian Fellowship Church

Rev. Darrell Griffin

Chicago, Ill.

Oakdale Covenant Church

Rev. David Jefferson

Newark, N.J. Metropolitan Baptist Church

Rev. Nelson Rivers North Charleston, S.C. Charity Missionary Baptist Church

Rev. Horace Sheffield

Detroit, Mich.

New Destiny Christian Fellowship

Rev. Mitchell Stevens

New Orleans, La. Pilgrim Baptist Church

Rev. Frank D. Tucker

Washington, D.C. First Baptist Church

Rev. Raphael Warnock

Atlanta, Ga. Ebenezer Baptist Church

Rev. Matthew Watley

Silver Spring, M.D. Kingdom Fellowship AME Church

Choose Healthy Life Medical Advisory Board

Donna Christensen, MD

U.S. House of Representatives (1997-2015)

Tom Frieden, MD, MPH President and CEO Resolve to Save Lives

Marcella Nunez-Smith, MD, MHS Assoc. Dean, Health Equity Research Yale School of Medicine

Fatima Cody Stanford, MD, MPH, MPA, MBA

Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Louis Sullivan, MD President Emeritus Morehouse School of Medicine

Reed Tuckson, MD, FACP Co-Founder

Black Coalition Against COVID-19

*of blessed memory

Rev. Calvin O. Butts, III* Co-Chair Rev. Al Sharpton Co-Chair Debra Fraser-Howze Founder

Originally appeared in The Positive Community April 2011 Issue

Dr. Butts Receives Honorary Doctorate from Morehouse

On March 2, 2011 Dr. Calvin O. Butts III, president of SUNY College at Old Westbury, received an honorary doctorate of Humane Letters degree from his alma mater, Morehouse College. Dr. Robert M. Franklin, president of Morehouse College, presented Dr. Butts (class of 1972) with the degree during a celebratory reception hosted by Old Westbury and the Morehouse Manhattan Alumni Association. In his remarks, Dr. Franklin noted that Butts had earned the degree based on his unyielding commitment to educational justice and economic empowerment in the global community. During his tenure as president of Old Westbury, Dr. Butts has garnered recognition for preparing students to succeed in the global marketplace, earning accreditation from National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education, and securing funding to continue expansion of its campus.

One of the most diverse public colleges in the United States, SUNY College at Old Westbury is located in Nassau County, New York and has over 4,300 students with an emphasis on liberal arts and professional fields. In addition to his twelve years leadership at Old Westbury, Dr. Butts is the pastor of Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem, and sits on several boards including Abyssinian Development Corporation, Youth On The Move, National Black Leadership Commission on AIDS, the American Red Cross of Greater New York, and the Levin Institute. He received a master of divinity degree in Church History from Union Theological Seminary in New York and a doctor of ministry in Church and Public Policy from Drew University in New Jersey.

Joining Dr. Butts in celebration was the program’s master of ceremonies, Garrick Utley, president of the Levin Graduate Institute of International Relations and Commerce; Davon Snipes, Manhattan Morehouse Alumni Association president; Johanna Duncan-Portier, vice chancellor for Community College and chancellor’s deputy for the Education pipeline; and Gerri Warren-Merrick, a member of the SUNY Board of Trustees who delivered a congratulatory message to Dr. Butts on behalf of the State University of New York system. The reception was held at the SUNY Global Center in Manhattan

44 The Positive Community Winter Issue 2023 www.thepositivecommunity.com SPECIAL SECTION | REV. DR. CALVIN O. Butts III: TRIBUTE TO A HARLEM LEGEND
L-R: Gerri Warren-Merrick, SUNY Board member and Mrs. Patricia Butts Well-known attorney and philanthropist Charles Simpson presents a gift of $10,000 for the SUNY College at Old Westbury to Dr. Calvin O. Butts Ill Dr. Calvin O Butts Ill receives honorary doctorate of Humane Letters from his alma mater, Morehouse College. Dr. Robert M. Franklin, president of Morehouse, makes the presentation.

Pastor & President

In 1989 Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts III assumed leadership of the world renowned Abyssinian Baptist Church, a large and influential congregation in Harlem with a history of community leadership. Providing moral and spiritual leadership to more than 4,000 congregants is a Herculean undertaking in and of itself. Proving that “to whom much is given much is required,” God called on Dr. Butts to give more. Described as one of the most highly-skilled administrators of our time, he was “called” to be president of the dynamic and diverse public liberal arts college that is SUNY College at Old Westbury. As pastor and president, Rev. Dr. Butts is a living example of the benefits of hard work and dedicated effort. He leads with professionalism and passion that have placed both institutions in the world view. And as

one of a generation of highly educated, activist ministers, carries the triple crown in his fight for civil rights, social justice, and economic development in New York City.

“I see what I do—the pastorate, the college, the development corporation—as vocations,” he remarked. “They are not occupations because I was called by God to do these things. It is He who gives me the strength and stamina to go from day to day. In addition, I owe this debt to my ancestors.” A proud liberation theologian, Dr. Butts declares: “The revolution is not over for us as African people. So as a servant of the people, I feel a sense of determination to work for the liberation and full redemption of people of color.”

A native New Yorker and an only child who grew up in the Lillian Wald Projects in Lower Manhattan,

cont’d on page 48

46 The Positive Community Winter Issue 2023 www.thepositivecommunity.com
Originally appeared in The Positive Community April 2011 Issue
SPECIAL SECTION | REV. DR. CALVIN O. Butts III: TRIBUTE TO A HARLEM LEGEND

THEOLOGICAL SCHOOL

DREW THEOLOGICAL SCHOOL Celebrates the Life of The Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts III T’82

CELEBRATES THE LIFE OF The Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts III T’82

A lifelong and reverent advocate for social justice and civil rights

Drew celebrates Dr. Butts’ ministry as we reflect upon his illustrious legacy and his lifelong commitment to social justice, civil rights, and community.

Dr. Butts, who received a Doctor of Ministry from Drew, served simultaneously as senior pastor of the renowned Abyssinian Baptist Church, chair of the Abyssinian Development Corporation, and president of SUNY College at Old Westbury for two decades—a testament to his character and commitment to his community.

As Drew’s 2021 Commencement speaker, Dr. Butts asked the graduates “What is character?”

“You want to measure your education? You want to know if you really got what I got from Drew? Then measure it according to those standards—is your character strong? Oh, you learned something. You can’t come through Drew and not learn something. You can’t come through Drew and be sitting in front of me listening to my speech and not have learned something … Character. I hope that Drew has drilled that into you.”

Drew Theological School

Drew Theological School is a place where you can find your own voice and character for social justice. We honor the legacy of the Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts III as we follow in his example of character, community engagement, education, and activism. Join with us on the journey as you take the next steps—together.

Drew University

Theological School

Madison, New Jersey 973.408.3111

gradm@drew.edu I drew.edu/theo

www.thepositivecommunity.com Winter Issue 2023 The Positive Community 47
Innovative.
Rooted.
Courageous.
DREW
UNIVERSITY / MADISON, NEW JERSEY

he learned the value of hard work from his parents and grandparents. When he received his call to the ministry at the age of 20, Butts will tell you he did not hear “a voice from heaven.” In his experience, the stars aligned in such a way that the patterns pointed straight to the pulpit. Unsure of a career even while in college, he admits to having a taste for corporate America. “I thought it would probably be nice to work in a big company and beyond that to teach at the college level,” he recalled. “This desire is what I think has some influence on what I am now doing as a college president.” Since 1999, he has served as the president of SUNY College at Old Westbury. Under his leadership the college has gained funding for five new residence halls, a student union, and new academic center, as well as technology enhancement for the classrooms and dorms.

An old adage says, “Men make plans and God laughs.” Indeed, God must have had a hearty laugh at young Calvin’s endeavors to be a corporate executive. As the master architect, He knew Calvin’s date with destiny was on the horizon. With his steps divinely ordered, he attended Morehouse College in Atlanta, one of the preeminent historically Black colleges in America. It was there that his philosophy was fashioned and shaped and his passion nurtured. “Morehouse represents a kind of crucible in which I was shaped and formed and then let loose on the world,” he said. “I was studying philosophy, but when I discovered the Black Church was always at the vanguard of human rights for people of African descent, I took up religion as a minor. This was my introduction to some of the luminaries in the field who first started influencing my decision to attend seminary.”

This was the first star in the “Calvin Constellation.” Next was when he stumbled upon the book Black Theology and Black Power in the reading room at Morehouse. “This book by James Cone was and still is a heavy influence in my life. It was my introduction to liberation theology, and today I consider myself a practicing liberation theologian,” Butts explained. The stars that followed opened the doors to

the seminary and subsequently an introduction to Abyssinian Baptist Church. Just out of seminary, the young minister was recruited to Abyssinian in 1972 and what followed was a veritable training for leadership. He was taken under the wing of then Senior Pastor Dr. Samuel DeWitt Proctor. “Much of what I know about the practice of ministry was learned from Dr. Proctor,” he reflected. “Even as other ministers on staff left for other churches, Dr. Proctor ensured that I stayed.” Essentially, he grew up in the pastorate and moved through the ranks as youth minister, assistant minister, associate minister and executive minister. He eventually took over the pulpit when Dr. Proctor retired in 1988.

With the decade of the 90s looming, it was the best of times and it was the worst of times. Inheriting a church rich in colorful history and celebrated for its contributions was indeed a blessing. But mixed into the bag of blessings was the fact that the community was rapidly deteriorating. “The building across the street from the church was abandoned by its landlords and people had to move on to other residences,” said Butts. “We were also faced with the challenges of deteriorating schools and failing businesses. The reverse migration of people heading back to The South had started and under these conditions, we were rapidly losing even our stable members.”

cont’d on page 50

48 The Positive Community Winter Issue 2023 www.thepositivecommunity.com SPECIAL SECTION | REV. DR. CALVIN O. Butts III: TRIBUTE TO A HARLEM LEGEND
Pastor & President cont’d from page 46

Pastor & President cont’d from page 48

There is nothing more powerful than a man walking in his destiny. Fueled by the nourishment he says comes from his own family and is strengthened by the support of the church family, Butts responded to the challenge by creating the Abyssinian Development Corporation (ADC)—a comprehensive, not-for-profit community corporation that has developed schools, commercial facilities, and housing. ADC has generated $700 million in investments and is considered by many to be one of the economic engines contributing to the development of Harlem.

“We were not only concerned with the revitalization of Harlem, but also with maintaining a community where working people can afford to live,” explained Dr. Butts. “So we got involved in commercial development, which can be seen in the Pathmark supermarket and the Harlem Center on 125th Street. Our housing development programs include housing for homeless families, mixed income homes, as well as market-rate condominiums.”

ADC’s educational development puts the icing on the cake as a model of excellence. Liberation through education is evident in ADC’s education pipeline, which extends from Head Start to high school. With several Head Start centers and three schools—the Thurgood Marshall lower, middle, and high schools— students have an opportunity to travel through this educational pipeline all the way to college.

Dr. Butts’ position as president of the College at Old Westbury is an opportunity to extend the pipeline, therefore providing for a complete educational experience. In its mission and with Dr. Butts at the helm, the College at Old Westbury is an institution that cultivates critical thinking, empathy, creativity, and intercultural understanding. In so doing, the college provides an environment that stimulates a passion for learning and a commitment to building a more just and sustainable world.

This Februar y, Dr. Butts joined the ranks of other great Morehouse graduates including Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., when he received an honorary doctorate from his alma mater. He admits to still “being on cloud nine” from the experience. “Morehouse is more than just a place where I went to college,” he opined adding, “It is a place where I got my full introduction to who I am as a man of African descent. It was at Morehouse that I became a Pan Africanist and began to understand the strength and power of our people. Getting an honorary doctorate and being among some of the great men who have graduated from Morehouse is a very high honor for me.”

In a world consumed with the ravages of wars and natural disasters, Dr. Butts offers a voice of reason and encouragement to young people. “I know there are young men and women living in fear that at any time they may be swallowed up by a tsunami, destroyed by radioactivity, or killed by a mad man with a bomb. But at every opportunity I try to remind them we have lived through crises at all times and in all places,” he said. “I remember my days of being in fear about the Cuban missile crisis. In my time, every day we thought that Russians were coming. But yet, we are here! The one constant that has sustained most men and women has been their trust in God. The arrows flyeth by day and terror by night, but those of us who wait on the Lord see our way through,” he continued, paraphrasing the scripture.

“So I want young people to go to school; make plans for tomorrow,” advice he gives with the assurance that: “I may not know about tomorrow. But I know who holds tomorrow. The problem is that too many of our young people do not have a sense of history. That’s why they need to know about the struggle of African people. What could have been more fearful than living at the time of slavery?” he asks. Yet we survived. So we can’t give up hope, because, Rev. Dr. Butts said quoting the Rev. Jesse Jackson, “we must always ‘Keep hope alive!’”

50 The Positive Community Winter Issue 2023 www.thepositivecommunity.com SPECIAL SECTION | REV. DR. CALVIN O. BUTTS III: TRIBUTE TO A HARLEM LEGEND
“So I want young people to go to school; make plans for tomorrow,” advice he gives with the assurance that: “I may not know about tomorrow. But I know who holds tomorrow. The problem is that too many of our young people do not have a sense of history. That’s why they need to know about the struggle of African people.

ADC PULSE

Issue: November 2022

The Positive Community embraces the very best in Harlem the individuals and families that fill our churches, support our businesses, and define our history. Abyssinian Development Corporation is honored to join with the Positive Community in paying tribute to Rev. Butts. He was the heart and soul of the Abyssinian Development Corporation for over three decades, and while we are extremely saddened by his untimely passing, the services we support in education, affordable housing, and for seniors will forever endure.

“Our education teaches us not to judge people by the color of their skin but by the content of their character; not to judge people by where they come from but by what they contributed to the betterment of humanity.”

-Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts, III, Jolli Humanitarian Award, Riverdale Country School, 2022. Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts, III, 1949 –2022

Tributes to Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts III

I am sure I speak the sentiments of all the daughters and sons of Abyssinian when I simply say, “Thank you.” Thank you, Dr. Butts! Thank you, Mrs. Patricia Butts, The Butts Family, Abyssinian family for sharing him. Thank God for Calvin Butts! For his ministry, his mentorship and model. For his preaching and teaching. For his vision and for being a voice crying out in the wilderness, making straight the way of the Lord, building a highway in the desert for our God. None other quite like him. Dr. Calvin Otis Butts III.

Calvin Butts taught me how to take my ministry to the streets because he understood the church’s work does not end at the church door.

That’s where it starts.

He preached here on Sunday, but his actual pulpit was the public square. So whether the issue was affordable housing or

the inordinate amount of cigarette and alcohol advertising on billboards in poor, Black and Brown communities or educational equity or police brutality, he knew how to raise the issue and put it in a moral and ethical frame. His pulpit was the public square.

What a clear and courageous voice for justice. In the words of James Weldon Johnson he was one of “God’s Trombones.” Climbing up on billboards and painting over them. Marching on City Hall. Getting arrested while getting in good trouble. And when preachers were too scared and too confused and too homophobic to say the words HIV and AIDS, Calvin Butts was confronting the issue, organizing clergy and other leaders to start the National Black Leadership Commission on AIDS. His pulpit was the public square.

He was a prophet with the heart of a priest. Prophets afflict the comfortable. Priests comfort the afflicted. Good pastors know how to do both. He visited the sick, married and counseled couples, comforted the bereaved, rejoiced with those who rejoiced, wept with those who wept. Cheered us on! He shepherded his flock. And I am blessed to have been among them.

Let me tell you about my pastor. Last fall, I was in New York raising money for my campaign and my pastor pulled himself up out of his sick bed to come and introduce me at a fundraiser in Harlem. On September 29. 2022, he sent me his last text message. He said “I see that Ian (the storm) is maybe headed to Savannah! [Your] hometown. Thinking about you; praying for you, always! Just know we love you! PEACE.”

Sometimes I am tossed and driven, Lord, Sometimes I don't know where to roam, I've heard of a city called heaven,I've started to make it my home.

— Traditional Hymn

SPECIAL SECTION | REV. DR. CALVIN O. BUTTS III: TRIBUTE TO A HARLEM LEGEND
— U.S. Senator Raphael Warnock

Our community, Abyssinian Baptist Church and the country have lost a great leader. I have lost a dear friend, Rev. Dr. Calvin Butts III. I join with the Abyssinian family, friends, and all of Harlem, in mourning and paying tribute to him—not only in his leadership as senior pastor at Abyssinian, but also as president of SUNY College at Old Westbrook.

As a true trailblazer, he was always a beacon of hope and spiritual light for the village of Harlem. He preached against hate and bigotry, and for our voices to be heard.

He grew up in public housing in Manhattan, and later a house in Queens; and graduated from the predominantly white Flushing High School. After graduating from Morehouse College in 1972, where he joined the Pi chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc., with a degree in philosophy, he went on to earn a Master of Divinity in church history from Union Theological Seminary and a Doctor of Ministry in church and public policy from Drew University. During his fifty years of service to Abyssinian Baptist Church, his church became the prototype for investments in the community, channeling $1 billion in housing and commercial development into Harlem neighborhoods through the Abyssinian Development Corporation.

At the same time, he was blazing an historic trail of higher

O, how blessed have been both the people of the historic Abyssinian Baptist Church of New York City and New York City itself, not to leave out SUNY with the divine placement and vision of one Calvin O. Butts III.

He was indeed what Martin Luther called “rara avis “ (rare bird). He was unique in his demeanor, preaching, and casting a vision. He fit into the rich history of leadership at Abyssinian,

education impact at the State University of New York College at Old Westbury over more than twenty years, as the college experienced historic enrollment, its first graduate programs, and $150 million in capital projects during his tenure. A highly respected and influential leader in the National Baptist Convention, Inc., he also served as president of Africare NYC, which worked to improve the life of people in rural Africa.

After coming to Abyssinian at the young age of twenty-two, he spent decades advocating, promoting, and advancing housing initiatives in Harlem that helped shield residents in danger of being pushed out by gentrification.

Even beyond his work for the masses, Rev. Dr. Butts took the time to mentor the next generation of pastors and theologians. Many have gone on to positions of leadership in the clergy and the country. His life of leadership and service has been the personification of the Abyssinian mission and the Black social gospel social justice tradition. He will be missed and never forgotten.

My heart goes out to his wife and family. May God Bless him for the tremendous work he has done for his parishioners, students, community, and mankind.

further proving the fact that God has a “miracle” to fit your need without mass production.

He will be missed but never matched—our son, our brother—Dr. Calvin O. Butts III. God be praised for your presence and impact.

Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts III, a man of faith, deeply believed in his community, his beloved. His broad social impact is one for the history books. Rev. Butts stabilized a broken Harlem that the country had turned its back on: shoring up its infrastructure through the development; preserving affordable housing to provide homes to low-income black and brown families; providing vital advocacy and social services at a time when no one was taking action; sponsoring the construction of the first new high school to be built in over 50 years, Thurgood Marshall Academy for Learning and Social Change; building an educational pipeline from kindergarten to college through the Thurgood Marshall Academies; spearheading the development of Abyssinian Towers for low-income seniors and people with disabilities; revitalizing businesses on the 125th

Street economic corridor and throughout Harlem. Rev. Butts’ indelible footprint is everywhere.

These broad strokes came together to embrace the Harlem community at a critical time. Through Rev. Butts’ vision people knew they mattered and dared to dream they could do anything. His moral compass was a beacon of light that led Harlem through economic challenges and social neglect to the Harlem you see today—a vibrant community that attracts people the world over. Though Rev. Butts’ physical light may have dimmed, his spiritual light lives on in every family who can still call this community home, and every young child who dares to dream of one day being President.

SPECIAL SECTION | REV. DR. CALVIN O.
BUTTS III: TRIBUTE TO A HARLEM LEGEND
— Congressman Charles B. Rangel — Bishop Johnny Ray Youngblood ....... Senior Pastor, Mount Pisgah Baptist Church, Brooklyn

Have you ever received an invitation that caused you to wonder if it was meant for you? I have had quite a few of those and even long after having had the experience, it’s hard to believe they happened. One such experience was being asked to be a guest lecturer for a college course taught by my late mentor Dr. Samuel DeWitt Proctor. The second was being invited to be the year 2000 speaker for the Martin Luther King Commemorative by Mrs. Coretta Scott King. But still among the most humbling and surprising was the occasion of celebrating the 20th pastoral anniversary of Rev. Dr. Calvin Butts as senior pastor of the Historic Abyssinian Baptist Church of Harlem. When I got the message that I was being asked to speak at this incredibly distinguished banquet to be held at a five-star hotel in midtown Manhattan, I was confused and honored.

I was confused because Dr. Butts certainly had access to any speaker he would want to participate in his celebration. As a Morehouse College alum, he certainly could tap into the collegiality of the global Morehouse network that included some of the most famous names in African American religion, politics, and business. All of them knew and respected Calvin Butts. And many of them attended the event. It seemed strange to me that I would be speaking rather than one of these prestigious HBCU luminaries.

I was also honored because Dr. Butts was highly admired and respected beyond his Morehouse College network. As a college president, he had credentials and credibility in the higher education community nationally. His academic leadership achieved such noteworthy results that future generations of higher education leaders will embrace his style and strategy of faculty engagement and student empowerment that turned his campus into what Martin

Dr. Calvin O. Butts III was one of my first sources of inspiration when I came to this area. On Sunday mornings preparing for worship, I searched the radio looking for something inspirational.. I came across Dr. Calvin Butts on 98.7 FM where he shared his ministry “Direct From the Pulpit.” Thereafter, driving to church on Sunday morning I listen to Dr. Butts teach and preach relevant, challenging, and encouraging messages. His voice became my Sunday morning stimulus. As time progressed, I was blessed to be in his presence. His demeanorDignified, cultured, a man of class, impeccable taste,

Luther King, Jr. would describe as a “beloved community.” In that sense, Butts treated his college campus as an extension of his pastoral ministry.

And it seemed to me that Calvin Butts knew everyone, and everyone seemed to know him. He garnered much respect from both Republicans and Democrats. He was as admired at the National Baptist Convention, USA Inc. as he was at the New York Stock Exchange. As I sat in my seat awaiting my time to speak at his banquet, I was seated between former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and actress Cicely Tyson! Butts was a giant in the community, the culture, and the church.

So I was surprised to be his choice for speaker. But we had been friends since the mid-seventies, and we believed in the same principles. While we were not friends who spoke every week, when we spoke it was always about something serious. No gossip. No dirty jokes. No negative news. Always focused on something that we thought would improve life for Black people—in Harlem, New Jersey, and everywhere else. When I was asked to serve as New Jersey Secretary of State, Calvin Butts was one of the people I called for advice. He was a reliable, rational, and realistic voice.

I will never forget that day when we celebrated the leadership of Calvin Butts. And I will always count it as one of the highlights of my life to have been the speaker for such a significant leader and influence in our community.

“Job well done my brother and friend. I’ll see you in the morning.”

but a man centered, humble, and gracious. He preached for my 22nd pastoral anniversary. and the Community Baptist Church of Englewood was packed at an 8 a.m. service anticipating the message from his voice that would come directly from our pulpit!

— Dr. Lester

Northeast Region Vice President, National Baptist Convention , USA, Inc.

Community Baptist Church of Englewood

Many historical giants have captured and mastered the landscape of Harlem over the past century. Rev. Calvin O. Butts III is unquestionably at the top of that list. Dr. Butts partnered on many initiatives and events with The Greater Harlem Chamber of Commerce and HARLEM WEEK, Inc. Over that time, we worked collectively on educational and public safety initiatives, senior citizens events, arts and culture programs, and on political and community forums.

It is important for the chamber to acknowledge, thank, and recognize the beautiful wife of Dr. Butts, and Patricia, for her warm spirit, bright vision, and leadership.

Calvin Butts will remain in our minds, our hearts, our thoughts, and our planning as we move forward to elevate Harlem.

— Lloyd Williams President, Greater Harlem Chamber of Commerce

— Rev.
SPECIAL SECTION | REV. DR. CALVIN O. BUTTS III: TRIBUTE TO A HARLEM LEGEND

Calvin O. Butts III was a diamond among men. He will be greatly missed by his beloved family, the Abyssinian Baptist Church, and by me. He was my brother, friend, and ultimately my pastor. For many years we were colleagues in Harlem. I met him just a few years before he assumed the pastorate of Abyssinian; he was especially close to those of us in the Movement. We had a fellowship then—Sharpton, Butts, myself, Mayor Adams, Carl Redding, Maddox, Mason, etc. New York was a hotbed of racism and we were coming into our own leadership, under the veterans of that day. Jesse Jackson, Louis Farrakhan, Percy Sutton, William Augustus Jones, Wyatt Tee Walker, and Samuel Dewitt Proctor. I was about 10 years behind Sharpton, and 15 years younger than Pastor Butts, so they were like big brothers to me. He had a keen interest in the Movement and was fully committed. That’s what I loved about his ministry. We’d talk at the 5th Ave parlor where Mr. Henry Stalling cut our

Rev. Dr. Calvin Butts, the preacher, the professor, and the politician. Although these are accurate descriptors of my friend, Rev. Dr. Calvin Butts, he readily called himself “a minister, one called to serve.” Rev. Butts was the quintessence of a servant leader! As a dedicated community leader, distinguished pastor, and college president, he wholeheartedly served the people. This year I celebrate 40 years of pastoring and one of the highlights etched in my memory was the invitation by

Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts III’s life’s work, legacy, and activism leave distinguished marks in many areas of our lives, including health, education, housing, economic development, and social justice. Through his years of service, leadership, and participation we experienced the depth of his commitment and dedication to his beloved community. When many leaders and voices of

hair (when I couldn’t get to brother Yusef or Hassan at the Shabazz Barber shop), and we both sat there to allow the best shoeshine man in Harlem, Mr. Charley, to shine our shoes. I liked him; he seemed unlike many preachers of that era—a real brother. When he steam rolled rap albums, and the rappers were furious with him, I knew he was morally correct, and while I was more popular with the hip-hop crowd than he was, I stood with him! At a pivotal moment in my life during a crisis of faith, he returned the favor and welcomed me home to the church—nurtured, helped me heal, licensed, and ordained me to preach the Gospel! I honor him. I will forever be grateful for his friendship. SIP.

Grace and Peace,

— Rev. Conrad B. Tillard Sr., M.Div., Th.M., radio host, activist, politician, and author

Rev. Butts to speak at Abyssinian Baptist Church. And when Rev. Butts preached at The Cathedral, we heard from a true servant leader who challenged us to go and serve as Christ served.

God bless the memory and service of Rev. Calvin Butts.

influence in our community turned a blind eye, he led with courage and compassion. He was my spiritual leader, mentor, political supporter, and confidant. Memories are far too numerous to express and will be forever cherished.

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As dean of the Martin Luther King Jr. International Chapel at Morehouse College, one of the honors I have is participating in the intellectual and spiritual development of Morehouse students who have been called or are exploring a call to the ministry. Through our Chapel Assistants Program, we help students learn and practice what it means to foster and lead effective, ecumenical ministries.

Over the years, the Chapel Assistants Program has earned a reputation as one of the nation’s leading

undergraduate programs, sending young men to premier seminaries and university-based theology or divinity schools. Among the institutions to which we send our students is Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York. For more than three decades, those we sent to Union, we also sent to Rev. Calvin Butts and Abyssinian Baptist Church. This relationship between the Chapel and Abyssinian was so strong that Butts and I were often jokingly referred to as co-conductors of the Union Seminary Underground Railroad. I determined who got on. He determined who got off. Under Rev. Butts’ watchful eye, some Morehouse students served as pastoral interns or in the music ministry; others were active members of the congregation. All of them benefitted from Butts’ example of leading a full guidance ministry—one that is committed to working for economic, educational, political, and social equity for Black people, as well as for the salvation of their souls. Butts’ ministry was a modern-day example of the Morehouse College Prophetic Social Gospel Justice tradition in action—a legacy embodied by Martin Luther King Jr., Howard Thurman, Benjamin Elijah Mays, Mordecai Wyatt Johnson, and others who have, for decades, used the Gospel to manifest Christ’s teachings in the contemporary world as moral cosmopolitans.

Thanks to Rev. Butts, the Morehouse Men who were blessed to serve and worship with him had their educations greatly enhanced by learning from one of the nation’s most influential religious leaders. This honored son of Morehouse was a loyal friend and supporter of the Chapel’s mission to empower transformational, nonviolent ambassadors of peace who work to reveal and create the “Beloved” cosmic, spiritual, economic, and cultural community as a reflection of the healing social justice of Jesus Christ.

While we miss Rev. Butts’ physical presence, we are ever grateful that his spiritual light still shines with, for, and through us.

SPECIAL SECTION | REV. DR. CALVIN O. BUTTS III: TRIBUTE TO A HARLEM LEGEND
— Rev. Dr. Lawrence E. Carter Sr. Dean, Martin Luther King Jr. International Chapel, Morehouse College

It often seemed to me Dr. Calvin O. Butts III was ordained at birth to be the pastor of the Abyssinian Baptist Church. He embodied the elements of the Black social gospel, a liberation theology nurtured and passed along from the Abyssinian pulpit by Adam Powell Sr., Adam Powell Jr., and Dr. Samuel Proctor. Like them, his vision went well beyond the pulpit. Calvin Butts refused to rest behind the safe security of stained glass windows. Recognizing that his gospel of redemption had a strong social component, he was deeply engaged in struggles for equity, justice, and righteousness wherever those efforts took him. They took him into the streets. We marched challenging the economic injustice of major corporations; we exposed the inequities of the criminal justice system, and the racist violence of the police. We marched against the self-inflicted gang violence within the Black community. Calvin stood

firmly with individuals and organizations fighting against the ravages of racism and racial abuse on its various levels, from health care to public education, from the distortion and weaponization of hip-op, to the selling of toxic food and toxic ideas to Black children. In those battles Dr. Butts was a constant ally.

In this era of prosperity preachers with their “name it and claim it” theologies, Calvin Butts stood above and apart. He chose, instead, to remain committed to Dr. King’s mandate to be a drum major for justice. Calvin Butts’ life and career were distinguished by his faith in God, his commitment to righteousness, and his uncompromising integrity. He was one of the dearest friends I ever had.

Calvin O. Butts III was entrusted with one of the most treasured institutions ever built by African Americans, and his stewardship was all anyone could have hoped for. He became pastor of the Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem, NY after working alongside a man of extraordinary achievement and distinction, and for the half-century he served in different capacities in that institution—youth minister, executive minister and senior pastor—every action he took was intended to preserve the best of the church’s heritage and reputation as a vital agent for social transformation and community improvement.

We know that Harlem, like all places human beings inhabit, is subject to change (It is changing now). But it is certain Dr. Butts’ legacy as a leader in Central Harlem, in so many aspects of life, is indelible. And while just considering his role in Harlem says plenty about his passion and resolve to make a difference, he wasn’t content to stop there. Higher education in the State of New York was a beneficiary of his tireless pursuits, in a role he had seen filled by men whom he admired, like Benjamin Elijah Mays, the legendary president of Morehouse College; and Samuel DeWitt Proctor, his predecessor as senior pastor of Abyssinian. Both Mays and Proctor were revered college presidents and ordained Baptist preachers.

At times, Butts was controversial. He bucked the tide to do things others would advise him against, but as time passed, one could always see a laudable motive—positioning himself to serve in the best tradition he would claim for himself.

He was my friend; we are both sons of Morehouse. And for readers who know something of that institution, you know it produces men who are not so inclined to go along to get along. We met after he came back to New York to attend Union Seminary; I had graduated the spring before he arrived in Atlanta. And almost from the day we met, I knew he was determined not to be ordinary We talked often about what differences we wanted to make, what our contributions would be.

More than his highly visible public persona, he was a man who loved his family His home was his refuge, and the nurture he received from his relationship with his wife, Patricia, the children and the grands, goes a long way to explain his energy, the will to just keep going even as his health was failing. So many younger leaders of consequence in the church and elsewhere around the country drew from his example or were directly mentored by him at Abyssinian. His approach to community ministries and the way he carried himself as a leader remain their Polaris, and in that sense, he lives through them in the service and model they still provide. He and I embraced for the last time May 22nd at the pulpit in the church he loved, as he hosted the ordination of Dr. Raschaad Hoggard, one of the many well-prepared and committed bearers of the torch as we face the future. It is brighter because he walked this way.

— Rev. Dr. M.W. (Bill) Howard, Pastor Emeritus Bethany Baptist Church, Newark NJ

SPECIAL SECTION | REV. DR. CALVIN O. BUTTS III: TRIBUTE TO A HARLEM LEGEND

It is an honor and privilege to reflect on the life and legacy of Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts III.

Beyond our ecclesiastical connection, Calvin Butts was my friend! He never got caught up in the loftiness of his title, the list of his accomplishments, nor his pedigree. The notion that he pastored one of the most historic churches in the nation while standing on the shoulders of giants before him like Rev. Adam Clayton Powell Sr., Rev. Adam Clayton Powell Jr., and Rev. Dr. Samuel Dewitt Proctor was always a humbling honor and not a platform of selfish pride. The sacred time he spent in his “secret place” sculpted within him a heart to serve the people of God. With dignity and grace and without ever compromising his integrity, he served well.

Although he sometimes appeared very formal, he was personable and friendly. Dr. Butts and I were close. Our families spent time together. I remember during the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta, Linda and I spent an entire week with

From the very beginning of my time in New York City to begin my theological studies at Union Seminary, I have been acquainted with Abyssinian. I was only in the city two weeks when I was invited to assist with spiritual programming there. Within weeks, Rev. Butts invited me to “hang out” at the church as one of the Intern ministers. I did not know what opportunities this would open up for my ministry, even to become a part of the history of Abyssinian in significant ways. It was because Rev. Butts was willing to share a part of the Abyssinian ministry that I was allowed to become the church’s first female Assistant Pastor; the first woman to preside over the ordinances: Baptism by water immersion and Holy Communion. As time went on, I would marry my

As a teenager growing up in Bedford-Stuyvesant, I first heard Rev. Butts’ voice on 98.7 KISS on Sunday mornings. No subject was off limits in his preaching, from tackling sex and drugs to demanding academic excellence from the students at Old Westbury. I was so inspired by his preaching that I downloaded his sermons and listened to them on my way to school, a practice I continued throughout college. I went from

As we celebrate African American History Month, it is fitting we pay tribute to Reverend Dr. Calvin O. Butts III, one of our heroes. I am honored to share my memories of our strategy meetings and implementation that served our beloved Harlem community. Reverend Butts was a visionary. He worked to make his visions, ideas, and thoughts become reality—the Abyssinian Development Corporation, opening the first high school in District 5 (Thurgood Marshall

Calvin and Pat. My God did we have fun! Dr. Butts was with me when I launched my ministry here at Metropolitan BC in Newark. He always accepted my invitations to preach or speak. When Mayor Ras Baraka proclaimed Newark as the nation’s first “Choose Healthy Life City,” I invited Dr. Butts. Although he was strained by significant health issues he said, “For you Jeff I'll be there.” In the twilight of his suffering, I invited him to preach; I was deeply touched when he said, “Jeff, you know if I could, I would, but I just can't stand.” Calvin was a giant among men who recognized there was nothing greater than God's grace. And all who enjoyed the pleasure of his company were made the better because of God’s grace. There will never be another like him…because God only made one, Dr. Calvin O. Butts III.

—Rev. Dr. David Jefferson Sr., Esq.,''''''''''''''' ....... Pastor Metropolitan Baptist Church, Newark, NJ

husband there while serving as Assistant Pastor and our first child would be Blessed from that very pulpit. I continue to be amazed to this day, at all the wonderful experiences and ministerial training I received while serving at Abyssinian.

I can remember standing at the lectern saying how I appreciated the leadership, mentorship, and friendship of Rev. Butts, many times over. A titan of the gospel of Jesus Christ has gone to be with the Lord and now we move forward in faith, celebrating God’s unconditional love.

listening to his voice on the radio to sitting next to him for eight years as an assistant minister. Even in death, I still hear his voice calling us to walk taller, think higher, and love more.

Academy); day care facilities, food pantries, and so much more to serve the community. All of his accomplishments centered on the teaching of Jesus. He made the scripture plain by doing the work. We are all better that Reverend Dr. Butts touched our lives in so many ways and left a legacy for us to carry on the work for equality and justice.

SPECIAL SECTION | REV. DR. CALVIN O. BUTTS III: TRIBUTE TO A HARLEM LEGEND
— Rev. Rashad Raymond Moore Senior Pastor, First Baptist Church of Crown Heights — Dr. Hazel N. Dukes, President New York State Conference NAACP Executive Program Minister, Christ Church United Methodist of New York —Rev. Violet L. D. Lee, Ph.D...... ............

The Rev. Dr. Calvin Butts was a strong tower of wisdom, Christian spirituality, and Black culture in Harlem and beyond. He cried aloud for adequate housing, healthcare, and quality education; and used his powerful position as senior pastor of the Abyssinian Baptist Church to speak truth to power on our behalf.

At his recent funeral, a clergy member said of Rev. Butts, “He was our everything.” When I was a community organizer, I worked with him on combating police brutality. For decades

“So to bind each son the other. Into ties more brotherly.”

I distinctly remember our initial meeting in front of Graves Hall, a landmark on the Morehouse College campus. Both from New York City, we were "homeboys," and we instantly solidified a brotherly relationship lasting more than 50 years.

With Abyssinian Baptist Church as his pulpit, he has had a significant impact on education, economic and community development including homelessness, senior citizen and youth empowerment, cultural awareness, and ecumenical outreach. I am honored to have been called upon by Rev. Butts to bring leadership skills to the Men's Ministry, and serve as a member of the Trustee Board. Lastly, Rev. Butts' final request of me was to join the search committee for the next senior minister/pastor of Abyssinian Baptist Church.

As I reflect over my years with Rev. Butts, it is with much admiration and a heartfelt thanks for his time on earth, always saving and winning souls for Christ. I vividly recall the numerous times he preached at Union Chapel in Oak Bluffs on Martha's Vineyard, to a standing room only congregation. On these Sundays it was as if the Messiah spoke to the multitudes. How far my brother has come, his time cut short, as he continued to toil in God's vineyard.

Deeply missed and irreplaceable, he leaves an indelible mark on his beloved Harlem and the global community. God bless you, Calvin Otis Butts III for your accomplishments, your memory will live on.

since then I have valued his leadership, benefitted from his mentoring in ministry, and have treasured his friendship.

Ministering to men and women in prison and those persons returning to the community.

SPECIAL SECTION | REV. DR. CALVIN O. BUTTS III: TRIBUTE TO
— Stephen Ross Johnson Trustee, Abyssinian Baptist Church
A HARLEM LEGEND
— Rev Diane Lacey, Pastor The Church of Gethsemane Park Slope, Brooklyn

The distinguished educator, Dr. Benjamin E. Mays once stated: “Every man and woman is born into the world to do something unique and something distinctive and if he or she does not do it, it will never be done.” Dr. Calvin O. Butts, III may have been influenced by the prophetic words of Dr. Mays. He appeared to have been divinely inspired to perform unique and distinctive services to humankind. The question presented here is, would many of his deeds have been done by someone else, were it not for his remarkable life? I think not!

My introduction to Dr. Butts was a Eulogy eulogy that he delivered when he was assistant to the distinguished Dr. Samuel Dewitt Proctor. Later, I remarked to my wife that Abyssinian had an outstanding preacher as its assistant pastor. That observation preceded his social activism within the Harlem community.

The history of The Abyssinian Baptist Church is legendary in its historic role as the leading religious institution for Black Americans. As a young man growing up in the segregated south, I considered Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. to be my congressman and eagerly visited Abyssinian as soon as I moved to New York City. Who could have known that Dr. Butts would bring, both to the church community and to Black America, a level of dedicated service that was unique to his protean level of leadership.

His commitment to community uplift led to the Abyssinian Development Corporation (ADC), which developed an elementary school, along with the first New York City high school in more than fifty years. Of note is the fact that ADC was, at one point, the largest sponsor of affordable housing in Harlem. Concurrently, in 1999 he was appointed to the

I talked to Reverend Butts not long before he passed. We had been friends a long time. I came here seeking his support and I didn’t get it the first time, and then when I won, he said ‘You know you have to remember this is an active church and I have an active faith. The Book of James says

I have known him since he graduated from Morehouse College, and we became friends. My last talk with him was a few weeks ago and spiritually we always met on common ground. I shall miss him as my brother and friend and I pray that Allah’s (God’s) Peace will be with his family, his

He motivated each of us through his teaching to be an active and exemplary member of Harlem. Uplifting communities while giving back through service, engagement and social reform.

position as president of a unit of the State University of NY (SUNY). At the time of his appointment, the campus was slated for closure, ; but under his leadership, the campus was fully resurrected to full vitality. By the time of his retirement in 2020, Old Westbury University enrolled the largest number of students in its history. President Butts was recognized by SUNY presidents for his unique success in generating significant sources of funding, both from the public and private sectors, which strengthened the university’s financial viability.

ALL OF THIS WHILE SERVING AS SENIOR PASTOR OF THE LARGEST BLACK CHURCH IN NEW YORK CITY!

To quote the distinguished theologian, Dr. Howard W. Thurman, “There is something present in the spirit of man, sometimes even taking the form of great arrogance, sometimes quietly nourishing the springs of resistance to a great tyranny – there is something in the spirit of man that knows that the dualism, however apparently binding, runs out, exhausts itself, and leaves a core of assurance that the ultimate destiny of man is good.” I have encountered nothing more descriptive of Calvin Butts than the assurance that he believed in the ultimate destiny that PEOPLE ARE GOOD.

AREN’T WE FORTUNATE TO HAVE KNOWN A MAN AS EXCEPTIONAL AS HE!!

that faith is fine but without work it’s dead, so I will know your faith by your works. The power of his living example, he demonstrated his faith by his wonderful words from this sacred pulpit but also by his works.

congregation and his friends. His was a job well done and a life of service well lived. I shall keep him in my heart until Allah (God) calls me in. Peace Be Unto You All.

— Nation of Islam Minister Louis Farrakhan

We all have an expiration date, we all going to reach a moment when we’re going to transform from the physical into the spiritual. I love Dr. Butts and I’m going to miss him. There’s a hole in my heart that I don’t think is going to heal for a long time.

SPECIAL SECTION | REV. DR. CALVIN O. BUTTS III: TRIBUTE TO A HARLEM LEGEND
— NYC Mayor Eric Adams — Congressman Adriano Espaillat — Former U.S. President Bill Clinton

I was privileged to interview Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts III on multiple occasions. We had a rapport. He was friendly, wise, learned, and generous. In a time of need, I and my family were enveloped by his generosity when he officiated my dad’s funeral in 2018.

It’s never easy to lose a parent. Despite a prolonged illness, we simply never thought the larger-than-life giant who was O.T Wells Sr., would ever leave us. While Dad’s death wasn’t shocking, it did shake our family’s foundation. Beyond that, family members, friends, colleagues, fraternity brothers, club members, military veterans, and wellwishers were flying in from across the country and around the world to pay their respects. We wanted a dignified, personal, service; but we needed a place large enough to accommodate a crowd.

Enter Rev. Dr. Butts and the historic Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem, only blocks from where we lived as children and where Dad lived until his death. What better place to host his Homegoing? And Rev. Dr. Butts officiating? It was perfect. Rev. Dr. Butts wouldn’t be fazed by the number of people, nor the luminaries from legal, government, and church circles. He would perform his duties and lead the service Dad would have wanted, the service our family needed.

On a day filled with so many emotions, there were also logistics, travel, and egos to be considered. But Rev. Dr. Butts seemingly had no ego. He welcomed and greeted our family in a sober yet caring manner. He assured us he would honor Dad’s life as we laid him to rest. His words were comforting, yet rousing, strong, and hopeful. He stressed the importance and satisfaction of a life of service and a life well-lived, which reassured us all and lent a sense of muchneed solace.

After the service our family shook hands, shared hugs, and accepted condolences with the capacity mass of more than 1,000 people. The reality of saying goodbye to Dad was emotionally draining and interacting with all of those people left me, a notorious introvert, emotionally and physically exhausted. Just as I thought I had said my final “thank you,” shaken the last hand, and muddled through enough hugs to last me the rest of my life, I heard a familiar voice, then glanced a pair of kind eyes just before a strong but gentle, robed arm encompassed and consoled me.

Thank you, Rev. Dr. Butts for your grace, wisdom, strength, dedication, and tenacity, but most of all,

your kindness. You were a titan of faith, education, and development. But most of all, you were a beautiful human. You once told me, “One of the driving forces in my life has been to make my parents proud and happy with the things I was doing. At another point in my life it was elevated to pleasing God.” I am sure you succeeded in completing both tasks and your welcome was one for the record books. Rest easy, please continue to watch over us, and say hello to Dad.

SPECIAL SECTION | REV. DR. CALVIN O. BUTTS III: TRIBUTE TO A HARLEM LEGEND
SPECIAL SECTION | REV. DR. CALVIN O. BUTTS III AND FRIENDS
With Barbara Walters With Sheena Wright With Valerie Simpson and Nick Ashford With Harry Belafonte Jr. With First Lady Rev. Linda Jerfferson and Rev. Dr. David Jefferson Sr. With Senator Raphael Warnock With Cornell West and Tavis Smiley With grandsons Calvin V and Reed Harris Butts and First Lady Patricia Butts
SPECIAL SECTION | REV. DR. CALVIN O. BUTTS III AND FRIENDS
With Oprah Winfrey With Jesse Jackson With Rabbi and Imam Al-Hajj Talib Abdur-Rashid With Dr. Lester W. Taylor and Rev. Dr. Butts With Rev. Dr. DeForest B. Soaries Jr. With President William H Clinton, Mrs. Patricia Butts, and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton With Nane Maria Annan and Kofi Annan With Cicely Tyson, Jenifer Holiday, Mrs. Patricia Butts, and Charles Rangel

Empire Bap tist Missionary Conventio n of New York, Inc.

Reverend Dr. Carl L. Washington Jr., Convention President

171

clwashington@empirebaptistconvention.org

General Recording Secretary

Reverend Dr. Frank Bostic 716-381-7429

Assistant General Recording Secretary

Reverend Dr. Gilbert Pickett, Sr. 516-924-3273

Financial Secretary

Reverend Dr. Donald E. Butler

516-697-9499

Assistant Financial Secretary

Reverend William E. Morgan 518-229-7924

Treasurer

Reverend Dr. Jeff ery S. Thompson 317-979-6234

Assistant Treasurer

Reverend Jeffrey M. Crenshaw 212-368-4754

Corresponding Secretary

Deaconess J. Patrice Burwell

518-312-0152

Assistant Corresponding Secretary

Ms. Gabrielle Ballou 518-250-8876

Parliamentarian

Reverend Dr. Darren Morton 914-667-2333

Executive Assistant to the President

Reverend Sandra Baker 914-497-3403

Historian

Brother Walter Powell 914-356-5576

Statistician

Ms. Joann Simmons

516-322-6764

Congress of Christian Education

Reverend James R. Banks, II 716-572-1648

Women’s Auxiliary

Deaconess Rosalyn Johnson 516-754-3760

Ministers’ Wives & Widows Auxiliary

Lady Ella Harris

585-589-4398

Ushers & Nurses Auxiliary

Ms. Darnell Capers

585-415-4399

Laymen’s Auxiliary

Deacon Anthony T. Eaddy

518-253-8341

Youth & Young People’s Auxiliary

Ms. Elyse Fears

716-994-0982

Reverend Dr. Elgin Joseph Taylor Sr. Convention Vice President at Large

Tribute to Reverend Dr. Calvin O Butts, III

“There are some who bring a light so great to the world that even after they have gone the light remains.”

Reverend Dr. Calvin O. Butts III lived his life with energy, passion and an unmeasurable amount of love. . . love for his family, love for the Gospel Ministry, love for his church, and love for his community. It was a joy and privilege to know such a great and honorable man as Dr. Calvin Butts.

It is with great esteem that we remember Dr. Butts as an ecclesiastical giant in the Gospel Ministry. Dr. Butts was a stalwart preacher of the gospel and a faithful servant of God having served for over 30 years as the Senior Pastor of the historic and renowned Abyssinian Baptist Church. A consummate theologian, Dr. Butts was always giving sage advice and modeling what it meant to be a Christian. He was humble, resourceful, ingenious, loving, obedient, ecumenical and most of all a faithful man of God. He has preached and led with a sense of urgency, compassion and winsome humor

Over his 50 years of ministry, Dr. Butts provided stellar leadership in social action and financial empowerment. Dr. Butt s ’ ministry was perpetually effective in that its approach remained relevant and relatable in a constantly changing, and very often, hostile society, transforming individual lives, both spiritually and practically. It has built and sustained thriving institutions designed to benefit the community. Such institutions as the Abyssinian Development Corporation, chaired and founded by Dr. Butts, was an arm of the church that undertook community projects. Because of his vision and leadership in the community, he has left a legacy that will long be remembered.

As a mentor, he possessed an innate standard of excellence for education, shaping and developing exceptional associate clergy that are making significant impacts on the world stage. He was one of the world’s most capable defenders and promoters of the gospel. He was everything the church, the Harlem community and the world needed during challenging times!

Dr. Butts’ way of life has provided a blueprint of a life filled with love of mankind and service to God. The Bible reminds us “to be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord” and while Dr. Butts may be gone from this side of heaven, he will continue to live on in our hearts and minds.

West 140th Street  New York, New York  917.566.4510
2 Timothy 4:5 | Matthew 25:25-40 | Luke 11:1-4 |1 Chronicles 28:9 | Romans 16:26 | 2 Timothy 2:15
Building our Convention to Meet 21st Century Ministry through Evangelism, Missions, Prayer, Imagination, Revelation and Education”

Congratulations to

POSITIVE COMMUNITY

as you celebrate 22 Years !

We proudly celebrate with you and celebrate Black History Month and honor the memory of our dear friend , Reverend Dr. Calvin O. Butts III

the May God’s richest blessings be yours!

Reverend Dr. Carl L. Washington Jr., Convention President and the members of the Empire Baptist Missionary Convention of New York, Inc.

Reverend Dr. Elgin Joseph Taylor Sr. Convention Vice President at Large Reverend Dr. Frank Bostic General Recording Secretary

“The New York Urban League joins the village of Harlem, the Abyssinian family, and the nation in mourning the loss of Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts, III. He was a spiritual leader, community champion, and friend of the New York Urban League. His work and life transformed New York City and inspired other communities and neighborhoods around the country. He will be sorely missed.”

66 The Positive Community Winter Issue 2023 www.thepositivecommunity.com
CELEBRATE THE LIFE OF
Dr.
O. Butts www.nyul.org Think Critically • Act Justly • Lead Faithfully Justice is the demand of the Gospel. Allprogramsnowavailable fullyonline! Equipping leaders since 1784 M.A. | M.A.T.S. | M.Div. | Doctor of Ministry Certificate Programs www.nbts.edu | 732-247-5241 | New Brunswick, NJ Discover the Seminary for you . In the indomitable spirit of the Reverend Dr. Calvin O. Butts, III, we continue to take a stand against privilege and power.
Rev.
Calvin

Saving lives

Money

The Mount Sinai Robert F. Smith Mobile Prostate Cancer Screening Unit

buiness, finance + work

Health ideas for wellness Education the art + science of learning

The National Black Church Initiative Launches its Responsible Drinking Campaign in Harlem

Members of the National Black Church Initiative (NBCI) from the New York area joined NBCI President Rev. Anthony Evans to launch a Responsible Drinking Campaign during a news conference in front of the Apollo Theater on December 17. The live on social media event brought a simple message to New Yorkers: If YOU ARE GOING TO DRINK, DO IT RESPONSIBLY. Since COVID, alcohol abuse, violence, and deadly vehicular accident rates have risen. The NBCI ministers preached and the theater group, IMPACT, performed to draw attention to the problem of alcoholism in the community.

Rev. Dr. Calvin R. Kendrick, pastor, Grace Baptist Church, Bronx, NY

As men age, the cells in the prostate gland can become cancerous. Every year in the United States, more than 30,000 men die from prostate cancer, second only to skin cancer. About one in eight men in America will develop the condition at some point in their lives, and about one in 40 will die from it. Age is the greatest risk factor for prostate cancer. While only one in 10,000 men under age 40 will be diagnosed, that number leaps to one in 14 for those ages 60 to 69. About 60 percent of all prostate cancers are diagnosed in men over the age of 65, and 97 percent occur in men 50 years of age and older.

All of these facts are reasons for concern, but Black men must be particularly vigilant. Black men have a 70 percent higher rate of developing high-risk prostate cancer, and are more than twice as likely to die from it. Prostate cancer usually has no noticeable symptoms. The first sign of disease is often found during a routine screening exam. This is why screening is important.

But there is good news; with early detection, prostate cancer can be treated successfully and thanks to billionaire businessman and philanthropist Robert F. Smith, the lives of more Black men in New York City can be saved.

Rev. Dr. Sheldon E. Williams, pastor, Co-Op City Baptist Church, Bronx, NY

The Mount Sinai Robert F. Smith Mobile Prostate Cancer Screening Unit, a state-of-the-art mobile facility equipped with advanced scanning and trained staff, enables early detection of prostate cancer for at-risk Black men. The mobile

Bishop Peggy Smalls, Change a Life Ministries, Inc. United Clergy of NY

Black men have a 70 percent higher rate of developing high-risk prostate cancer, and are more than twice as likely to die from it.

NBCI, a partner of the Diageo Multicultural Consortium for Responsible Drinking (MCRD) Initiative, is a coalition of 150,000 African American and Latino churches working to eradicate racial disparities in healthcare, technology, education, housing, and environment. The mission of NBCI is to provide critical wellness information to all of its members, congregants, churches, and the public. NBCI partners with major organizations and officials to reduce racial disparities. The programs—guided by credible statistical analysis, science-based strategies and techniques, and methods that work—offer faith-based, out-of-the-box, and innovative solutions to stubborn economic and social issues.

Six public service announcements (PSAs) featuring the ministers (see below) will air on local television and radio beginning in 2023. Powerful messages encouraging responsibility and moderation, the PSAs begin a three-year effort to change the impact of alcohol in these communities.

Rev. Dr. James N. McKoy, Springfield Baptist Church, Beacon, NY

Rev. Dr. Allen Paul Weaver, Jr., Bethesda Baptist Church of New Rochelle, NY

Rev. Reginald E Paris, pastor, United Christian Baptist Church, Bronx, NY

68 The Positive Community Winter Issue 2023 www.thepositivecommunity.com
NBCI President Rev. Anthony Evans in front of the Apollo Theater on 125th Street

Love of Self

How important is love? We discuss it a lot during the month of February, and the most powerful form of love is agape: love of mankind. Agape is the love God shares with us—free of judgement and conditions. This is the love we model back when we love God and other people. Did you know you are supposed to love yourself, too (Matthew 22:37-39 NIV)? Let’s discuss!

How do we show love of self? Step one is accepting yourself exactly as you are. Do this assignment: stand in front of a mirror nude and look at yourself. Can you love this person with no artificial covering or pretense? Accepting yourself as you are is a powerful way to begin honoring self. No efforts succeed without self-acceptance, an honest acknowledgement of all your attributes, both positive and negative. From here you can build selfesteem and self-love, which affect your conscious mind and your choices. You will choose to live well in your mind, spirit, and body!

Self-love in the mind minimizes stress and anxiety. Toxic levels of stress and anxiety are prevalent in the African American community and can contribute to many health problems such as high blood pressure, heart disease, obesity, diabetes, and decreased performance levels. Self-love and gratefulness add a positive spin and help give you joy. Joy doesn’t just make us feel better, it improves our health. It helps us make better choices— eat healthier, be more active, and sleep better. Because happiness leads to healthier behaviors, it can lessen the risk of high blood pressure, excess body fat, stroke, and cardiovascular disease.

Love of self will lead you to the doctor’s office. It’s early in the year, please schedule checkups with your primary physician, dentist, OB/GYN, et al! Annual physical evaluations by a medical professional can identify troubling trends before they become chronic conditions. Get checked annually and know your numbers—be proactive regarding your health.

During your physical, ask your doctor about starting to exercise. Start slow with home exercises and build up speed. Try my workout and modify it based on your

needs: https://youtu.be/E625Kq64XmQ Invest in some barbells and develop exercise routines to your favorite song with arm curls, split squats, lunges, leg raises, planks, and stretches. Don’t forget to walk; walking is aerobic, low impact, and strengthens your bones. It’s a great way to ease back into exercise.

Love of self will cause some diet changes. We will all make decisions about what works for us individually, but the main principle is increase whole, unprocessed foods; eliminate sugar and junk foods. They are called junk foods for a reason; they fill you with toxins, potentially leading to high cholesterol, kidney damage, liver disease, dental cavities, and more—and they have little to no nutritional value. Please value yourself by increasing leafy greens, vegetables, and lean proteins. Strive for improvement, not perfection.

Live well and prosper.

Fitness training is available through the Live Well Church FITCARE program, offered at the Fitness Doctor Studio in Somerset, New Jersey. Please call Karen Beasley at 732-912-4435 to schedule a free assessment.

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 Winter Issue 2023 The Positive Community 69 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.

Being a healthier New Jersey starts with greater health equity.

Delivering solutions to address health disparities.

As care providers, we see firsthand how differences in access to quality care can affect the health of individuals and entire neighborhoods. So we’re taking action by focusing on five areas: Economic Stability, Education, Employee Engagement & Volunteerism, Global Health, and Neighborhood Environment. We’re in more urban areas than any other health system in the state, and the only one in multiple urban locations throughout. A community is only as strong as its least healthy residents.

If you’d like to learn more about our initiatives, visit rwjbh.org/healthequity

Matters of the Heart

How women can help prevent heart disease at any age.

Heart disease is the number one killer of women, accounting for more women’s deaths than all forms of cancer combined. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), more than 314,000 women in the United States died of heart disease in 2020. “One in nine women over age 45 has heart disease,” says Howard Levitt, MD, Medical Director of Ambulatory Cardiology and Director of the Cardiovascular Training Program at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center (NBI) “That number jumps to one in three for women over 65.”

The statistics are sobering. But the good news is that there are many things women can do to avoid becoming one of those statistics.

Dr. Levitt likens the prevention of heart disease to a card game. “Much of it has to do with knowing how to play the hand you’re dealt,” he says. “There are some risk factors that can’t be modified, like genetics, and some that can, like lifestyle. You can win with a bad hand if you play properly, just as you can lose with a ‘good’ hand if you play poorly.”

When it comes to heart disease, some women make the mistake of thinking that they don’t have to worry because they have “good genes,” while others think there’s nothing they can do to prevent what they consider inevitable due to a family history. “Both of those views are inaccurate,” says Dr. Levitt.

Here are some things every woman can do to lower her risks of heart disease:

Blood Pressure: High blood pressure is known as “the silent killer: because it often shows no symptoms but can lead to heart disease, heart failure, or stroke among other things. “That’s why it’s important to know your blood pressure and, if it’s high, to get it treated and/or make lifestyle changes to lower it.” says Dr. Levitt

Cholesterol: A study published in 2021 in JAMA Cardiology indicates that low density lipoprotein (LDL), or “bad” cholesterol, poses a major risk for coronary heart disease and that its e ects are cumulative. “Know your cholesterol numbers,” says Dr. Levitt. “At your annual physical, talk to your doctor about how to reach your target range.”

Diet: Eat a heart-healthy diet, which generally means one that is rich in whole grains, lean proteins, fruits, and vegetables, and low in saturated fat and cholesterol. Reduce salt and sugar, and skip processed foods.

Exercise: “Most people should do cardiovascular exercise three to four times a week,” says Dr. Levitt. Talk to your provider about a regimen tailored to your specific needs and goals.

Smoking: “If you smoke, stop,” says Dr. Levitt. “It will do so much to improve your heart health.” Research has shown that after just one year of quitting, your risk of developing heart disease will be cut by as much as 50 percent.

Whoever Your heart beats for, our hearts beat for you. To connect with a top cardiovascular expert at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center, call 888-724-7123 or visit rwjbh.org/heart

Young Athletes and Heart Health

What is sudden cardiac arrest?

Sudden Cardiac Arrest (SCA), an abrupt loss of heart function in a person who may or may not have previously been diagnosed with heart disease, is a serious medical condition and requires immediate medical attention. SCA can also be caused by an underlying heart disorder, such as abnormal heart rhythms.

An electrical malfunction causes an irregular heartbeat that triggers SCA, also referred to as an arrhythmia. With its pumping action disrupted, the heart cannot pump blood to the brain, lungs, and other body parts. Seconds after SCA, a person loses consciousness and has no pulse. Death occurs within minutes if the victim does not receive treatment.

What are the reasons SCA happens in young athletes and how can it be prevented?

Between 100 and 150 athletes die annually from sudden cardiac arrest, according to the American College of Cardiology. Thought to be the leading cause of death in young athletes, studies show Black male youth are at higher risk of sudden cardiac death than other populations. Disparities in healthcare and a lack of appropriate screenings for underlying heart conditions can cause serious problems for athletes in certain communities, especially young basketball and football players.

One possible cause for SCA in young athletes, commotio cordis, happens when a sudden blunt impact to the chest causes an abnormal heart rhythm in otherwise healthy athletes. Though a rare phenomenon, it has happened when a ball, stick, elbow, or helmet hits the chest wall within a window of about 40 milliseconds. Properly fitting protective equipment can help prevent SCA.

Young athletes must get annual cardiac screenings to

help detect any abnormalities. The state of New Jersey and the New Jersey Department of Education require all school athletes to have a full physical by a primary care physician at least once per year including heart screenings. Electrocardiograms (EKGs), not yet a state requirement, can diagnose many conditions other tests cannot.

What to do if a cardiac arrest occurs? What roles do CPR and AEDs play in saving lives?

Someone must immediately administer CPR to keep blood flowing to the brain and other vital organs and use an Automatic External Defibrillator (AED) promptly to restore the heart’s normal rhythm. The longer the deprivation of blood flow to the brain, the higher the risk of death or neurological damage. CPR certified individuals at all youth sporting events and an easily accessible working AED in the case of an emergency can help save lives. CPR training classes are available across our area. Visit the Red Cross for more information.

Where can my child receive a cardiac screening?

The Matthew J. Morahan III Health Assessment Center (MJM) for Athletes at RWJBarnabas Health helps families take a proactive approach to their child’s cardiac health providing screenings for children aged 6-18. Included is a baseline EKG and resting blood pressure test with a thorough review of medical history and EKG interpretation by a pediatric cardiologist. Experts recommend screenings every two years. MJM is holding a free screening event on March 25 in West Orange. To learn more or request an appointment, visit https://www. rwjbh.org/treatment-care/athlete-screenings/requestan-appointment/ or call 973-322-7913.

72 The Positive Community Winter Issue 2023 www.thepositivecommunity.com
DO, MPH, MBA, Interventional Heart Failure Cardiologist, Newark Beth Israel Medical Center, an RWJBarnabas Health facility

The Great Debate: Cardio vs. Strength Training

We know that exercise is good for the heart. But what is most beneficial for optimum heart health—cardio or strength training?

When it comes to cardio vs. strength training for heart health, the scientific evidence is still building around which form of exercise is best to prevent chronic disease. Historically, aerobic (or cardio) exercise was always recommended for heart and lung health with little attention paid to strength (or resistance) training.

What’s clear now, however, is that strength training is as important to heart health as aerobic exercise and that a combination of both yields the best heart outcomes with regard to blood pressure, body composition, fitness, strength and metabolism.

What’s the best way to combine these exercises?

Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans, a 2018 report from the Department of Health and Human Services, recommends that each week, adults aged 18 to 64 do at least 150 to 300 minutes of moderate-intensity aerobic activity, 75 to 150 minutes of vigorous-

intensity aerobic activity or an equivalent combination of both. Strength training should be performed at least twice a week on nonconsecutive days to allow a period of rest for the muscle groups being stressed.

How does age affect the type of exercise(s) a person should do?

As we age, safety becomes an issue. The aging adult should do both forms of exercise, but participation should take into account chronic medical conditions, such as musculoskeletal disorders, that may place the individual at risk for injury. Research continues to support strength/resistance training for older individuals.

Whether the individual is new to an exercise program, choose something that you may find enjoyable and talk to your doctor before starting a new exercise routine.

Whoever your heart beats for, our hearts beat for you. To connect with a top cardiovascular specialist at RWJBarnabas Health, call 888-724-7123 or visit rwjbh.org/heart.

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23563141 NBI Positive Community Editorial Jan 2023_HALF PAGE_8.25x6_m1.indd 1 1/18/23 4:36 PM Quit hiding from your kids. Quit smoking and you quit everything that goes with it. When you quit, you win. Most adults are eligible for free nicotine patches and lozenges. Visit nysmokefree.com or call 1-866-NY-QUITS. Get free help.

Celebrating Extraordinary Women in Medicine and Science

On Saturday, November 12, 2022, The Williams Forum for Diabetic Education and Healthcare (a 501C3) held their 5th Annual Black Tie Gala at The Manor in West Orange, NJ. The nonprofit, founded in 2013 by Dr. Patricia Bennett, focuses on reducing health disparities in the greater Newark metropolitan area. The theme of the event was “Celebrating Extraordinary Women in Medicine and Science.”

This year’s honorees included NBIMC VP Administration Laura Budinick, PsyD (Clinical Psychology); Clover Health Senior Medical Director Maxine E. Facey-Cannon, M.D. (Internal Medicine),;

Director of Pharmacy Sandra Richardson, PharmD, RPh (Pharmacology); Public Health Diabetes Expert Patricia Thompson-Reid, MPH, MAT; and Nicola Pemberton, MD, OBGYN. The Moderator was Erica David-Park, M.D.

According to the American Diabetes Association, the cost of diabetes in New Jersey (with associated complications) is $9.2 billion yearly. It is the most expensive chronic disease nationally (more than cancer), with a national debt burden exceeding $327 billion. Diabetes education with a focus on prevention and socioeconomic considerations is critical to management of this disease.

74 The Positive Community Winter Issue 2023 www.thepositivecommunity.com
L-R: Patricia Thompson-Reid, MPH, MAT; Maxine E. Facey-Cannon, M.D.; Laura Budinick, PsyD; Sandra Richardson, PharmD, RPh; and Qaisra Saee, MD L-R: Dr. Ojirese Mohmoh and Dr. Patricia W. Bennett Erica David-Park, M.D.; Keynote Speaker R. Tara Adams Ragone, JD; and Patricia W. Bennett, DPM MS

DRIVING DIVERSITY FORWARD

At Hackensack Meridian Health, we’re committed to advancing our comprehensive strategy to eliminate disparities thereby ensuring health equity and quality outcomes for all people.

We’re honored to have been recognized on DiversityInc’s 2022 Top Hospitals and Health Systems list, ranking #4 in the nation. This acknowledgment is a reflection of our extensive initiatives to promote a diverse, equitable and inclusive culture for our team members and patients.

We’re committed to delivering high-quality perinatal care and eliminating maternal health disparities in New Jersey and beyond. And our ongoing collaboration with First Lady Tammy Murphy’s statewide awareness campaign, Nurture NJ, demonstrates our commitment to make New Jersey the safest and most equitable place in the nation to give birth and raise a baby.

Every Hackensack Meridian Health hospital was recognized by the Human Rights Campaign Foundation in the 2022 Healthcare Equality Index (HEI).

Eleven network hospitals earned the coveted “LGBTQ+ Healthcare Equality Leader” and two network hospitals earned the “LGBTQ+ Healthcare Equality Top Performer”.

The reach of our commitment spans outside of our hospital walls and into the local communities we humbly serve. We partner with clergy and community leaders from Asian, Black, Latinx and other diverse communities on important initiatives to address their unique concerns.

To learn how we’re continuing to drive diversity forward, visit HackensackMeridianHealth.org.

HMH-5660-DEI Positive Community Ad-8x10.5.indd 1 2/14/23 5:41 PM
76 The Positive Community Winter Issue 2023 www.thepositivecommunity.com Need health insurance? New Jersey residents are getting quality, affordable health coverage through Get Covered New Jersey, the state’s Official Health Insurance Marketplace. Established by Governor Murphy, Get Covered New Jersey is offering increased plan choices, and more savings than ever. Nine out of 10 people enrolling qualify for financial help to lower their costs, and many pay $10 a month or less for health insurance! Plans include free preventive care, coverage for prescriptions, emergency services and more. Hurry! Open Enrollment ends January 31st! Find your plan at GetCovered.NJ.gov 9 out of 10 get financial help for health insurance! Many pay $10 a month or less!

RWJUH New Brunswick Hosts Health Equity Symposium

In order to understand and address health disparities in the diverse communities we serve, RWJUH hosted its first Health Equity Symposium which included representation throughout NJ’s Northern & Southern region. The Symposium was held Friday, December 9, 2022 at RWJUH New Brunswick.

Keynote Speaker New Jersey Lieutenant Governor Sheila Y. Oliver shared her views on Understanding and Addressing Health Disparities in our Community. In addition, a series of panels outlined the rationale for adopting a comprehensive equity model to eliminate health disparities and discussed key aspects of workforce equity, harnessing a collaborative process that engages stakeholders at various levels of the organizational spectrum for equitable outcomes. Through this symposium, participants understood RWJUH’s strategic priorities in alignment with our system’s commitment for creating a culturally sensitive and inclusive model.

Panelists Included: Alan Lee (Senior Vice President, Chief Operating Officer, RWJUH), Dr. Meika Neblett, (Community Medical Center, Chief Medical Officer), Kathleen Arcidiacono, (Associate Vice President, RWJ and CINJ), and Dr. Gloria Bachmann (Associate Dean for Women’s Health), Dr. Keith Lewis (Chief of Anesthesiology, Rutgers Medical School), Dr. Courtney Vose (Senior Vice President and Chief Nursing Officer), Manny Gonzalez, (Chief Human Resources Officer), Bill Arnold (RWJUH President and CEO), James Cahill (Mayor, New Brunswick), and Kimyatta Washington (Regional Vice President, Oncological Services RWJBH & CINJ).

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Panel discussion RWJUH New Brunswick Symposium attendees L-R: RWJUH President and CEO Bill Arnold, NJ Lieutenant Governor Sheila Y. Oliver, and RWJUH Senior VP and COO Alan Lee Photos by: Karen Waters
NJ-21-08-04 | 097-21-53 NJ FamilyCare Guidance Center 959-299-3102 (TTY: 711) Healthcare Central Healthcare Central NOW OPEN Sign up for NJ FamilyCare Get assistance with finding a provider Understand the renewal process for NJ FamilyCare Understand your Aetna Better Health® benefits Monday–Friday 10AM – 6PM Why choose Aetna Better Health® of New Jersey Member Services We’re open every day, all day long. 1-855-232-3596 (TTY: 711) AetnaBetterHealth.com/NJ Access to New Jersey’s top hospitals No referral required for specialists Maternity benefits Focus on new moms Dedicated care manager Free Android smartphone Benefits

music, art + literature

survival!

Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM)

Health ideas for wellness

Tribute to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr A 37-Year Beloved Brooklyn Tradition

Black Theater Companies Pivot, Present | In-person Theatre is Back

Fproductions by African and African American artists, including Wolfe, rican writer Duma, Ndlovu and many more. Crossroads received the 1999 Tony Award for Outstanding Region al Theatre in the United States in recognition of its 22year history of artistic accomplishment and excellence.

Education

African-American and so they were bringing together two cultures,” said Kahn. “That’s ethically as well as geographically. Growing up, there was never a sense that we were solely identified by being Black kids in Camden, New Jersey. Yes, we were Black in Camden, but our roots are global. What I’ve always wanted to tell people through Crossroads is that it’s about our roots. As Black people in this country we should not forget or even allow people to think this is all of who we are.” He continued, “There’s much more! The sense of a connecting, having a theater like Crossroads that connects to many different communities in this country and around the world is in order for us to redefine who we are on a larger level.”

the art + science of learning

trious theater at the end of June.

On January 16, artists, activists, civic leaders, and community members from around the city and beyond came together in the BAM Howard Gilman Opera House to honor the legacy and share the dream of Dr. King. The celebration, one of the largest of its kind in the city, was presented in partnership with Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso and Medgar Evers College, and has been a BAM tradition since 1990.

“During the first part of the pandemic, March 2020, I had been thinking about retiring,” King revealed. “Then the pandemic increased in time. The offices closed down. Then people needed to have shots. I said, ‘Wait a minute, I don’t want to go back to work. I’m 83 years old. So, what should I do?’ I thought, I needed a young person to run it. And that person was Elizabeth Van Dyke, our artistic director. She’s experi enced and understands how to communicate with this generation. And getting that younger person to run it and work with me over the last year and five months, solidified it for me.”

The program, which was also live-streamed, featured keynote speaker Sherrilyn Ifill, civil rights attorney and former president and director-counsel of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund. The program also featured music performances by Grammy-nominated singer, songwriter, and activist Allison Russell and the award-winning Sing Harlem choir.

Across the Hudson River, one of the pioneering institutions integrating artists of color and women into the mainstream American theater, Woodie King Jr.’s New Federal Theater (NFT), faces major changes. Founded in 1970, NFT began as an outgrowth of a theatre program called Mobilization for Youth. The theatre’s first season opened in the basement of St. Augustine’s

As millions of people quarantined last year, the aters around the world temporarily closed their doors and we were forced to stay at home without live en tertainment. For the first time, the theater found the need to compete with social media and streaming platforms. NFT embraced change, deciding to shift theater to the digital space with pre-recorded and live

Other notable speakers included NY Governor Kathy Hochul, NYC Mayor Eric Adams, NY Senator Chuck Schumer, NY Congressman Hakeem Jefferies, and NY DA Eric Gonzalez and many other NY officials.

The celebration of Dr. King also included a digital billboardbased group exhibition on the corner of Flatbush Ave & Lafayette Ave. The exhibition titled “Freedom!” featured work by seven Black visual artists, paying homage to the legacy of Dr. King, and encouraged viewers to reflect on freedom and its meaning. Additional programs in celebration of Dr. King included a complimentary children’s program—featuring music, dance, and craft activities throughout the day.

Culture
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Ricardo Kahn Crossroads Theatre Company L-R: Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso, BAM President Gina Duncan, and New York City Mayor Eric Adams Sherrilyn Ifill L-R: BAM President Gina Duncan, Governor of New York Kathy Hochul, and Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) Photos by Roy Rochlin/Getty Images for (BAM)

UMBC Celebrates Decade of Service

The United Missionary Baptist Convention of New Jersey, Inc. (UMBC) celebrated its 10th anniversary on December 10, 2022 with the installation service of newly elected officers at Mt. Olivet Baptist Church in Newark, NJ. Presided over by Rev. Joann P. Collins, pastor of Mt. Zion Baptist Church in South Hackensack, NJ, Rev. Dr. Suzan Johnson-Cook delivered the installation sermon. Dignitaries from various local, state, and national organizations witnessed the installation of Rev. André W. Milteer as president and offered greetings during the

event. Pastor of Mt. Olivet Baptist Church for 23 years, Rev. Milteer holds undergraduate and graduate degrees from the University of Pittsburgh, PA. He succeeded Rev. Dr. Marilyn M. Harris as the president of the convention. Inspirational music sung by the convention choir under the direction of Rev. Glennis McCloud filled the sanctuary. The event marked a significant moment in the history of the United Missionary Baptist Convention of New Jersey, Inc., as the organization moves into its second decade of commitment to service and spreading the gospel of love.

80 The Positive Community Winter Issue 2023 www.thepositivecommunity.com
L-R: President Milteer’s mother Gwendolyn Milteer, Rev. André W. Milteer, and Rev. Dr. Suzan Johnson-Cook President Milteer and Cabinet L-R: Second VP Rev. Tracey L. Brown, Past President Rev. Dr. Marilyn M. Harris, and Rev. Dr. Suzan Johnson-Cook Past President Rev. Dr. Robert L. Curry Photos by: Vincent Bryant

gregory porter

Sat, Feb 18 @ 8PM

Gregory Porter returns to NJPAC: “One of the most amazing singing voices you’ll hear on planet earth” (The Guardian).

smokey robinson

Sat, Mar 4 @ 8PM

Acclaimed singer-songwriter and GRAMMY® Living Legend Smokey Robinson performs his Motown hits.

alvin ailey american

dance theater

May 12 & 13 @ 8PM; May 14 @ 3PM

This elegant, electrifying company celebrates its return to NJPAC with new works and the beloved Revelations.

trevor noah

Off The Record Tour May 23 @ 8PM

Emmy Award-winning Daily Show host Trevor Noah is back on tour with “the greatest stand-up show of the year” (The Times).

audra mcdonald

Sat, Apr 29 @ 7:30PM

The most Tony-winning actor of all time, Audra McDonald (Carousel, Ragtime) takes to the stage for this concert event.

george benson

Fri, Jun 2 @ 8PM

An evening with jazz guitarist, NEA Jazz Master and 10-time GRAMMY® winner George Benson.

@NJPAC • 1.888.MY.NJPAC • njpac.org Groups of 9 or more call 973.353.7561 One Center Street, Newark, NJ
jun 4 avery*sunshine
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, the Joan and Allen Bildner Family Fund, and the Smart Family Foundation/David S. Stone, Esq., Stone & Magnanini.
Feb_Positive Community .indd 1 2/1/23 3:34 PM

Community Cultural Holiday Festival at Old First Church

The African Heritage Festival Community Conversation Committee gathered to celebrate African heritage with a Community Cultural Holiday Festival at Old First Presbyterian Church (OFPC) in Newark on December 11, 2022. The Positive Community’s

publisher, Adrian Council, presented the organization with an African American Cultural Narrative poster for OFPC’s Sunday School children and L-T-C: ACCA Creates Teenagers to aid in their understanding of African American history.

82 The Positive Community Winter Issue 2023 www.thepositivecommunity.com
L-R: OFPC African Heritage Festival Community Conversation Committee and Trustee Board members: Trustee Dea. Francoise Ekambi, Essivi Kossouagni, Dolly Henry, Chair Gevevieve Goeh-Akue, Trustee Elder Jeanette Oliver, Yvonne Kluvi, Rev. Doris Glaspy, Dea. Abla KpogoEgoh, and Chair Trustee Pres. Komlan Egoh. L-R: Session Moderator Rev. Doris Glaspy, Social Justice Mission-Community Conversation Comm. Chair Jeanette Oliver, TPC Publisher Adrian Council Sr. L-R: Mission Community Conversation Committee Chair Elder Jeanette Oliver and Trustee Board President and Chair Komlan Egoh. OFPC’s Sunday School children and L-T-C: ACCA Creates Teenagers join Rev. Doris Glaspy, Jeanette Oliver, Adrian Council Sr. Youths L-R: Ezekiel Atoute, Daniel Egoh, Alaine Atoute, Felix Botobikpissi, Kodjo Goe, Jaydon Egoh, Patrick GoehAkue, Godwin Botobikpissi, Kokou-Mawunyo E. Goe, Evelyn Goe, David Ogunderu, Darasimi Ajayi, Adame Kassim-Bah, Fadima Barry, and Mohamed Barry. Photos by: Karen Waters
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L-R: Congressman Frank Pallone, Bishop Ronald L. Owens and Congresswoman Bonnie Watson Coleman L-R: Rev. James Kilgore, Rev. Dr. Geraldine Daniels President, Rev. John Scott, Rev. Shepard Lee L-R: NYS Senator Robert Jackson, Rev. Dr. Geraldine Daniels, Rev. Que English, Malcolm Punter, keynote speaker Rev. Micheal Waldron
Baptist Ministers’ Evening Conference Baptist Ministers’ Day Conference Ecumenical MLK Celebration at New Hope Baptist Church, Metuchen
L-R: TPC Publisher Adrian Council Sr. and Bishop Ronald L. Owens
Celebrating Martin Luther King Jr. Day 2023

Rev. Dr. W. Franklyn Richardson Honored by Black Democrats of Westchester

Rev. Dr. W. Franklyn Richardson received the M. Paul Redd Award from the Black Democrats of Westchester at their annual celebration. The Award, named for one of the key founders of the Black Democrats of Westchester, honors those who continue in Redd’s footsteps. He dedicated his life to the advancement of civil rights as a Gold Life Member of the NAACP and president of the Westchester/Putnam Affirmative Action Program. He helped train and place thousands of underrepresented individuals into gainful employment. Redd’s instrumental role in New York’s “Redd Bill,” set in motion a series of anti-discrimination housing legislation. Additionally, he purchased and maintained the first African American newspaper in Westchester County, The County Press.

“I am humbled and honored to receive this outstanding award,” said Dr. Richardson, senior pastor Grace Baptist Church in Mt. Vernon and chair of the Conference of National Black Churches. “It is a wonderful thing to have your contributions acknowledged. I had the pleasure to know Paul Redd. Not only a servant leader,

he was an advocate for social justice and a pillar of the community. I thank the Black Democrats of Westchester for recognizing my vigorous efforts to uplift and unite the Black community near and far. I live my life in the hope and joy that my living will not be in vain because I know that only what I do for the Lord will last.”

84 The Positive Community Winter Issue 2023 www.thepositivecommunity.com
L-R: Chairman Black Democrats of Westchester Hon. Terry Clements, Senior Pastor Grace Baptist Church in Mount Vernon Dr. W. Franklyn Richardson, Senior Pastor Mt. Hope AME Zion Church in White Plains Rev. Dr. Gregory Smith, and Westchester County Legislator Tyrae Woodson-Samuels

Recipe for Fun at Crossroads

An exuberant opening night audience showed their enjoyment of Chicken & Biscuits —not the ones your grandma used to make—the uproarious new play of the same name by Douglas Lyons. The play began a brief run at the Crossroads Theatre Company at the New Brunswick Performing Arts Center on Friday, December 23,2022.

Chicken & Biscuits is a family comedy full of laughter, love, and the Jenkins family coming together to celebrate their father’s life. The reunion comes apart when a family secret shows up at the funeral.

The Positive Community served as a media sponsor for the opening night performance and celebration. Popeye’s Franchisee Tashseen Mehman provided the refreshments for the celebration.

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Photos by: Karen Waters Chicken & Biscuits Cast L-R: Crossroads Team: Board Member/Membership Liaison Susan Settles, Board President Zackerie Lemelle, and Director of Operations and Marketing Monica Weeks enjoying the opening night festivities. Tashseen Mehman, (kneeling on left) owner of Popeyes franchises throughout New Jersey, with his leadership team and Crossroads team members. Crossroads Co-Founder and Artistic Director Ricardo Khan displays the gift presented to him by TPC Publisher Adrian Council L-R: Barbara Taylor, Yolanda Rodgers-Hawkins, JoEllen Bostick, and Ellen Dismus
86 The Positive Community Winter Issue 2023 www.thepositivecommunity.com

Lenox Road Baptist Church Triple Jubilee

On December 23, 1975, a fire totally destroyed Brooklyn’s Lenox Road Baptist Church. The church’s remarkable 150 -year history dates back to a prayer meeting in Schoonmakers Hall, at 893 Flatbush Avenue, with the first congregation consisting of 18 adults and 29 children.

In 1977, reflecting changing demographics, the first Black pastor was called to serve the Lenox Road church family. Senior Pastor Rev. Dr. Kirkpatrick Cohall, in service since 1993, focuses on his community through robust programming and events to address food insecurity, childhood education, health education/ access, and arts education.

Lenox Road Baptist, now located at 1356 Nostrand Avenue, celebrated its Triple Jubilee culminating with an anniversary gala on October 2, 2022. The joyful occasion included musical performances, celebratory speeches, a commemoration address by Pastor Cohall, and awards presented to the following honorees:

• Dr. Michael A. Wiltshire, a distinguished educator committed to excellence in education in the City of New York

• Dr. Camille A. Clare, a medical practitioner committed to women’s health in the City of New York

• Joan Lewis and Christopher Roberts, owners of The Door Restaurant in Queens, committed to excellent customer service and sustaining Caribbean culture through cuisine and entertainment to New Yorkers.

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L-R: Dr. Michael Wiltshire (Honoree) and Pat Wright (Presenter) L-R: Joan Lewis, Christopher Roberts (Honorees), and Rev. Dr. Kirkpatrick Cohall Renee McClue, National Grid (Sponsor) Rev. Dr. Kirkpatrick Cohall, Senior Pastor of Lenox Rd. Baptist Church L-R: Shmico Orosco, Rev. Dr. Tamara Henry (MC), and Ramona Moses Gala Attendees

The Kings and Queens Singles Holiday Soiree

An exclusive soiree for single kings and queens brought together eligible bachelors and bachelorettes from across the tri-state area for a night of dancing, dining, and speed dating. Successful mature singles over 50 years young had an opportunity to make new friends, network, and enjoy a night out at the beautiful and opulent Patterson Foundation in South Orange.

Guests enjoyed DJ Grace’s music mix, featuring the music you can hear on thepositivecommunityradio. com . The Positive Friday Social Mixer event on December 9; hosted by Janice C. Johnson, author of The Secrets of the Glass Slippers and The Positive Community , succeeded in bringing beautiful folks together. Stay tuned for future events. Come out to enjoy fun and food; see old friends and meet new ones at The Positive Friday Social Mixers.

88 The Positive Community Winter Issue 2023 www.thepositivecommunity.com
L-R: Stan Matthews, The Matthews Business Network; Event Hostess Janice G. Johnson; and Paul Clarke L-R: Tyrone Smith, Marcia Clark, and Julia Principe. Loren Johnson Tammy Felton on a speed date. L-R: Burton Waddy, Adrian Council Sr., and Artie Smallwood Photos by: Karen Waters

First Annual Pre-Watch Night Prayer Walk

It was a solemn time on December 31,1862—160 years ago, two years into the Civil War, which cost over 700,000 American lives, families held in bondage gathered, waited, and watched for the clock to strike twelve—when they would be slaves no more. They watched and waited for the midnight hour when their hopes would come true and the wicked walls of slavery in the USA began to crumble. Since then, generations have celebrated Watch Night with song and prayer. With the Emancipation Proclamation in effect, January 1, 1863 became “Freedom Day” for over 4 million of our people after almost 250 years of bondage in the Confederate South. It was, in spirit and in truth, the dawn of Freedom!

One hundred and sixty years later on December 30, 2022 at 3pm, a new American tradition was born in Newark, NJ. A candlelight pre-Watch Night prayer walk proceeded from the facade of Second Presbyterian Church in Lincoln Park to the steps of City Hall. This observance of the 160th anniversary of the Great Emancipation was a

prayer walk of remembrance, gratitude, faith, and hope!

On Saturday February 25th, all roads lead to the Robert Treat Hotel in Newark for TPC’s 4th Annual Great American Emancipation Awards Banquet — a celebration of and for the people! On this day we honor our community’s best and brightest. We honor leaders of diverse vocations who stand in unity on the front lines of loving service, progress, and good will—positive change!

Special thanks to the City of Newark, Mayor Ras J. Baraka, and Councilwoman Rev. Louise Scott-Rountree. We appreciate the support of the Newark Ecumenical Clergy Alliance; General Baptist Convention of NJ, Rev. J. Michael Saunders, president; United Missionary Baptist Convention of NJ, Rev. Andre Milteer, president; and New Garden State Jurisdiction Church of God in Christ (COGIC), Senior Bishop William T. Cahoon, State of NJ. We owe a debt of gratitude to many friends and encouragers—the forward thinkers!

Thanks to community partners for progress: Prudential and New Jersey visitnj.org.

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Newark Mayor Ras J. Baraka and TPC Publisher Adrian Council Sr. L-R: Kim Ford and Lincoln Park Executive Director Anthony Smith Newark Council Member Louise Rountree Pastor Brenda Byrd Pastor Bryant Ali Pastor Michael Carr Pastor Kevin E. Taylor Pastor Bernadine Byrd Photos by: Karen Waters
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Bits and Pieces current news + topics

Mama, I Want To Sing! Returns to Harlem

A 40th Anniversary production of Mama, I Want To Sing! opens at El Museo's El Teatro (formerly the Heckscher Theater) at 1230 Fifth Avenue at 104th Street for a limited engagement. This is a homecoming for the musical with a record 2,800 performances there over eight years, followed by off-Broadway in East Harlem and 1,000 performances throughout the United States, Europe, the Caribbean, and Japan. Returning to Harlem in 2011 at The Dempsey Theatre, it is the longestrunning Black off-Broadway musical in the history of the American theater.

director, and producer of The Mama Foundation for the Arts co-wrote, produced, and directed Mama, I Want to Sing! alongside her husband, Ken Wydro. The musical is based on the life of Doris Troy, Higginsen’s sister, and her dream of becoming a singer—beginning her musical journey singing in the choir at her father’s church. Despite her parents’ disapproval, Doris competed in and won amateur night at the Apollo Theater, jump-starting her career.

Performances begin February 23 and run through March 12. The musical opens on Sunday, February 26.

Roberta Flack’s First Piano Came from A Junkyard –Five Grammys Would Follow

After thrilling audiences with her music for over five decades, Roberta Flack’s inimitable voice has been silenced due to ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis). Though she can no longer sing or speak because of her illness, Flack is reaching new audiences with a children’s book, The Green Piano: How Little Me Found Music.

The book, co-written with Tonya Bolden and illustrated by Hayden Goodman, tells the story of how little Roberta’s father rescued a piano from a junkyard and made it hers. Playing piano since the age of four at church, nine-year-old Roberta watched excitedly as they fixed her new piano, painting it a grassy shade of green. The one-time public school teacher encourages young readers to find their own “green piano, ” e.g. something they love that inspires them to use their voices to bring joy to the world, just as Flack has done in the past and continues to bring today.

Have you ever wondered how the delicious world renowned dish chicken and waffles came to be? It’s not a Southern or West Coast creation, in fact you need only look to Harlem.

During the 1930s, New York jazz musicians, hungry and tired after playing all night long, traveled uptown to Wells’ Supper Club (aka Wells’ Restaurant). In the wee hours of the morning with the restaurant’s dinner service over and breakfast still a few hours away, how to feed these starving artists?

Owners Ann and Joseph Wells came up with a brilliant idea. Making use of their leftover fried chicken and adding freshly made waffles, both items already favorites with diners, the combination became something more

than the sum of its parts. Before long, word got out about the satisfyingly delicious meal and anyone looking for a place to find something good to eat after midnight, headed to Wells’ Supper Club, “Famous Home of Chicken and Waffles.”

Among the late nighters often seen there: Sammy Davis Jr., Frank Sinatra, Miles Davis, and Hollywood and Broadway stars galore. Opened in 1938, the restaurant saw hard times in the 1970s and closed its doors in 1982. After a few tries at reopening, Wells’ Supper Club closed for good in 1999 and Harlem lost one of its original gems. It is not often that a place has such an impact on the history of a neighborhood and the culinary world, but Wells’ did just that.

92 The Positive Community Winter Issue 2023 www.thepositivecommunity.com
Chicken and Waffles: Invented in Harlem
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“Boom” Where You’re Planted

African Americans; Black History Month; and the idea of persons sustaining, thriving, and excelling both racially and individually, are inextricably tied in the chronicle of our collective Black experience. As a people group with malevolent, “Middle Passage chattel, American beginnings, we exploded in ingenuity and a distinguishable hope, to become personified symbols of freedom. The triumphant history of America’s formerly enslaved ignites and codifies contexts that emblazon what it means to really be free. We are a people who literally “boomed” in our American “planting.”

My mother, Leesa P. Jones (the real writer in our family clan, I might add) is the serendipitously proud director and co-founder of the Washington Waterfront Underground Railroad Museum in Washington, NC, where she chronicles what she calls the “self-emancipating” feats of runaway slaves and their abolitionist supporters in her city’s National Park Service Underground Railroad Network to Freedom Site (NPS), which was designated in 2014.

I say serendipitous because Mom happily discovered this amazing, map-making piece of history inadvertently and only after the Burlington, New Jersey retiree returned to residency in her quaint “Original Washington” city she’d been enamored with as a child. It was Mom’s mix of love for our family, studying, writing, and her hometown that compelled her to volunteer to be the “historian” for our family reunions. But when mom’s intrepid venture vaulted her from affirmation of rich stories borne from a trunk-full of memorabilia harboring our family’s 18th century African, Cherokee Indian, and Scottish slave clan lineage to Underground Railroad links in her formerly Union-occupied hometown, Mom says that’s when “things got really exciting.”

“I’d grown up hearing different stories about the caves and homes in neighboring communities and towns like Aurora and Keysville and New Bern, NC that hid freedom seekers, along with lore about the Underground Railroad here in Washington,” Mom said, “but nobody really talked about Washington’s history.” And this is what made her hungry “to find out more facts.”

Mom’s self-directed fact-finding of the historic happenings in her hometown nestled on the Pamlico River estuary erupted into her establishment of local “Washington Afri-

can-American History Walking Tours.” This venture led to the next and most pivotal, her assistance with the Phoenix Historical Society in Tarboro—which led to new boons of information about her town’s waterfront that led out into the Atlantic Ocean with self-emancipating slaves “stealing away” through her town’s Underground Railroad portals. It was the tons of primary source details in books, journals, and documents detailing accounts of Civil War soldiers that proved Washington was a bustling Underground Railroad route that helped enslaved people harbor ships to freedom.

What Mom thought would be just a work of posterity to bless her grandchildren and relatives boomed into something of seismically larger impact that has become world known. Visitors of the Washington (NC) Waterfront Railroad Museum she established in 2016 come from Georgia to Germany and from Kansas to Korea to soak in her city’s freedom-seeker history. “This Underground Railroad history has given a beautiful facet to history that has gone unpolished before,” says Mom, “and shows the brilliance of the creativity of a people determined to be free.”

The Washington Waterfront Underground Railroad Museum is the only Underground Railroad Museum in North Carolina solely dedicated to telling the story of America’s famous “Freedom Train.” The museum is located in an actual 1965 Seaboard Coast Line caboose filled with authentic artifacts and documents, which make it an excellent segue to talk about the Underground Railroad. Mom says she’s just happy to educate others about her hometown’s history. I say she made her dream a reality, by bountifully “booming” where she was planted—what a lesson! BOOM!

For more information about North Carolina’s “Washington Waterfront Underground Railroad Museum” visit https://whda.org/underground.

94 The Positive Community Winter Issue 2023 www.thepositivecommunity.com
SONJA D. GRACY ONWARD
Sonja D. Gracy, author, playwright, and NYC public school teacher is currently working on her next book,God and the Girls. Washington Waterfront Underground Railroad Museum

Melba Moore at First Zion Hill Baptist Church

On Sunday, January 8, 2023, First Lady Tammy and Pastor Dellroger Dunmore of First Zion Hill Baptist Church in Newark, NJ welcomed Melba Moore as guest speaker whose career includes chart-topping hits and memorable roles on Broadway, in film and on TV. Few artists have stood the test of time like the Tony Award winner and Grammy nominee, one of Newark's own. Ms. Moore also performed a song from her new album, Imagine

www.thepositivecommunity.com Winter Issue 2023 The Positive Community 95
Photos by: Karen Waters L-R: Pastor Dellroger Dunmore, First Lady Tammy Dunmore, Melba Moore, and Albert Lewis.

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“The Positive Community has introduced a big deal playlist that roars with good music; there are no categories or distinctions between their flow: Doowop, bebop, hip hop are family members of the Black Diaspora sharing a cultural, historical and spiritual lineage of music. “We want to play all the music old and new,” said COO and co-founder Jean Nash Wells. “We want our music to influence younger people to broaden their musical palate and get excited about Black music in its many creative forms, as well as older listeners hearing other genres of Black music they wouldn’t ordinarily listen to.” It is a similar concept to Inner-City Broadcasting early on when it owned and operated WBLS-FM known as “The Total Black Experience in Sound,” a catchphrase used by its program director Frankie Crocker. The radio station WWRL-AM was known as The Sound of Soul/Progressive Radio.”

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LIVING THROUGH BLACK HISTORY

Iam old enough to have used landline phones, tube TVs with rabbit ears and no remote controls or cable subscription that played the National Anthem and went off-air after midnight, VCRs, payphones, and metal roller skates with a skate key. I remember penny candy, the Good Humor Man, walking to and from school, and being a regular kid who rode bikes and had adventures all day until the streetlights came on—now known as a “free range child.” All of those things are now history.

Whenever I think of “history” I think of cavemen, Kublai Khan, the Ming Dynasty, regal African kings and queens, Renaissance artists, politicians wearing powdered wigs, long ago wars, and the civil rights movement. I think of people like Benjamin Banneker, Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman, and Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King. They’re all people who died and events that took place before I was born. History seems long ago and far away, and yet I’ve lived and am living through some amazing history right now.

As a sixth-grade student I was honored to meet both Rosa Parks and Coretta Scott King. Activist Theodora Smiley Lacey was my teacher and her mother had been friends with Mrs. Parks since childhood. Her father was president of the board of directors of the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church, which chose their new pastor, Martin Luther King Jr.

The following summer I met then Vice-Presidential Candidate George H.W. Bush in a hotel elevator. Several years later I met President Bill Clinton at a Phoenix, AZ area fundraiser, and in 2007 I met then

Senator Hillary Clinton and soonto-be President Barack Obama at a Democratic Women of New York breakfast. I’ve yet to meet Vice-President Kamala Harris, but I’m working on it!

I’ve interviewed Oscar-winning Actor Denzel Washington; Grammy-winners Dionne Warwick and Roberta Flack, EGOT-winner Viola Davis, legendary Actor and Activist Harry Belafonte, Academic and Former Schomburg Center Director Dr. Khalil Gibran Muhammad, legendary Artist and Activist Amiri Baraka, Activist and MSNBC Host Rev. Al Sharpton, Astrophysicist Neil de Grasse Tyson, Congressman Charles Rangel, Senator Cory Booker, SUNY Old Westbury President Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts III, Rutgers President Jonathan Holloway, Kean University President Dr. Lamont O. Repollet, Billionaire Robert F. Smith, and countless other interesting and influential Black history-makers.

As of 2023, the 118th U.S. Congress is the most diverse in history with 28% of lawmakers identifying as Black, Hispanic, Asian American, American Indian, Alaska Native, or multiracial. There have been only 16 EGOT-winners; four of them are Black and three of those are Black women.

I say all of this as a reminder that Black history is both American and world history that is still being made fresh daily, and some of our best resources are elders in our own families and communities. My dad was a founder of the National Negro Golf Association and my uncle has a school named after him. Study our history and then make your own.

Happy Black History Month!

GOOD NEWS FROM THE CHURCH AND COMMUNITY Winter 2023 Vol. 23 No. 01
contents © The Positve Community Corporation. All Rights Reserved. This publication, in whole or in part, may not be reproduced, stored in a computerized or other retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, or by any means whatsoever without the prior written permission of The Positive Community Corporation. Any opinions expressed herein are solely the opinions of the writer(s) and not necessarily those of The Positive Community TM its management or staff. The Positive Community TM reserves the right to retain all materials and does not assume reponsibility for unsolicited materials.
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98 The Positive Community Winter Issue 2023 www.thepositivecommunity.com

Reverend DR. CALVIN O. BUTTS, III 1949 - 2022

As Carver salutes Black History Month, we remember Reverend Calvin Butts who was at the forefront of Harlem’s history as both a champion of change, and a defining leader through faith in action.

His transformational legacy built a foundation to uplift underserved communities by creating access to higher education, through political activism, and financial literacy as pathways to seize the American Dream.

BANK I N G W I T H CA R V E R IT’S THE RIGHT THING TO DO. BEDFORD STUYVESANT • CROWN HEIGHTS • FLATBUSH • FORT GREENE • HARLEM • ST. ALBANS @Ca r verBankNY C carverbank.com 855.217.3373

Celebrating the Life of Reverend Calvin Butts

Columbia University salutes the life and legacy of the Reverend Dr. Calvin O. Butts III, a beloved spiritual and community leader who directed more than $1 billion into local residential and commercial projects through the Abyssinian Development Corporation. A pillar of the Harlem community and forceful critic of racism and police brutality throughout his life, Dr. Butts led by example and exemplified the highest community values.

We remember and honor his leadership, which shaped Harlem and the lives of people across New York City and beyond.

To read more remembrances of Reverend Butts, visit neighbors.columbia.edu/remembering-rev-calvin-butts.

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Articles inside

The Last Word

2min
pages 98-99

Positive Community Radio

0
page 96

“Boom” Where You’re Planted

2min
page 94

Bits and Pieces current news + topics

2min
pages 92-93

First Annual Pre-Watch Night Prayer Walk

1min
pages 90-91

The Kings and Queens Singles Holiday Soiree

0
page 88

Lenox Road Baptist Church Triple Jubilee

0
page 87

Recipe for Fun at Crossroads

0
pages 85-86

Rev. Dr. W. Franklyn Richardson Honored by Black Democrats of Westchester

1min
page 84

UMBC Celebrates Decade of Service

1min
pages 80-81

Tribute to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr A 37-Year Beloved Brooklyn Tradition

2min
page 79

DRIVING DIVERSITY FORWARD

1min
pages 75-79

Celebrating Extraordinary Women in Medicine and Science

0
page 74

The Great Debate: Cardio vs. Strength Training

1min
page 73

Young Athletes and Heart Health

2min
page 72

Matters of the Heart

2min
page 71

Being a healthier New Jersey starts with greater health equity.

0
page 70

Love of Self

2min
page 69

The National Black Church Initiative Launches its Responsible Drinking Campaign in Harlem

2min
page 68

POSITIVE COMMUNITY

0
pages 65-66

Empire Bap tist Missionary Conventio n of New York, Inc.

2min
page 64

Tributes to Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts III

26min
pages 52-63

ADC PULSE

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page 51

CELEBRATES THE LIFE OF The Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts III T’82

6min
pages 47-48, 50

Dr. Butts Receives Honorary Doctorate from Morehouse

2min
pages 44, 46-47

Choose Healthy Life Celebrates the Life of Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts

2min
pages 42-44

Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts, III

3min
pages 38-40

The Legacy of Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts

2min
pages 36-37

The Mosque of Islamic Brotherhood Inc. Honors Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts

2min
pages 34-35

Calvin Butts

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page 33

NEW Sussex Ave Campus

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pages 29, 31-32

BAMkids Celebrates MLK Day: Courage Takes Creativity

0
pages 26-27

Morehouse College: Makes Men of Consequence

3min
pages 24-25

Essex County Executive Sworn Into Sixth Term

0
pages 23-24

A Fourth Ward Christmas

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page 22

New Jersey Legislative Black Caucus Foundation Announces Senator Ron Rice Endowed Scholarship

0
page 21

Celebrating Black History Month: Q&A with JPMorgan Chase’s Jason Patton

2min
pages 18-20

Forging a Path to Achieve an Equitable Clean Energy Future

2min
page 17

BLACK HISTORY MONTH

0
page 16

HOST AND MUSICAL GUEST

1min
pages 14, 16

THE GREAT AMERICAN EMANCIPATION DAY AWARDS 2023 HONOREES

5min
pages 12-14

In His Grandfather’s Footsteps...

1min
pages 11-12

Cannabis Justice for All

2min
page 10

Our American Story READ

2min
page 9

“What America Must Become”

3min
page 8
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