Following 52nd Black Solidarity Day – Vote 110th mayor 
 Brooklyn Borough President, Eric Adams.   Photo by Stefano  
 Giovannini 
 Caribbean Life, OCTOBER 22-28, 2021 11  
 “Black Solidarity Day is celebrated  
 to remind the nation of  
 the collective strength and political  
 power of the Black community.” 
   CUNY Newswire Oct.  
 30, 2014 
   
 Created by Panamanian activist  
 Carlos E. Russell in 1969,  
 Black Solidarity Day was created  
 as a demonstration of Black liberation. 
 Celebrated on the first Monday  
 in November, its genesis was  
 to institute a 24-hour memorial  
 period when Blacks  could  exercise  
 the  impact  of  their  presence. 
 Inspired by “Day of Absence,”  
 a fictional play by Douglas Turner  
 Ward who envisioned a society  
 void of participation from a  
 resistant segment, Russell, a historian, 
  activist, immigrant and  
 intellectual tailored his Black  
 consciousness day to a myriad  
 of observances. 
 Russell encouraged pride in  
 Blackness,  acknowledgement  
 of power, privilege, oppression  
 and white supremacist view  
 that suppresses Black wealth in  
 America. He also advocated an  
 economic boycott, dissuading  
 shopping, riding the subways or  
 spending money. 
 Marked by cultural and heritage  
 festivals, initially, students  
 were particularly drawn to the  
 ideals proposed. Intellectuals  
 and activists also embraced the  
 agenda. 
 Many hosted forums on campuses, 
  discouraged attendance  
 to classes and held a moratorium  
 on  capitalist  activities  
 deemed business as usual. 
 In time, the commemoration  
 broadened universally to attract  
 Blacks of every ilk. 
 Mostly Russell wanted to  
 highlight the disparity between  
 advantaged whites and disadvantaged  
 Blacks. 
 The historian exposed pervasive  
 racism which he said inhibits  
 fair elevation in corporate  
 enterprises. 
 The annual commemoration  
 precedes the election of mayors,  
 senators,  congressional  representatives  
 and presidents on the  
 very next Tuesday. 
 This  year  following  BSD,  
 Brooklyn  Borough  President  
 Eric Adams is poised to rewrite  
 history becoming the second  
 successful Black mayoral candidate  
 — since David N. Dinkins  
 emerged the 106th in 1990. 
 If elected Adams will be the  
 110th. 
 A  former  NYPD  captain,  he  
 emerged the favorite after a  
 heavily-contested ranked voting  
 primary election he championed  
 over seven worthy Democratic  
 candidates. 
 Since winning he has been  
 talking proposals to reform the  
 NYPD, re-energize the economy, 
  restore faith in government,  
 implement affordable housing,  
 healthcare, childcare and completely  
 revolutionize the quality  
 of life here. 
 Adams’ arguments have been  
 mostly  rebuffed  by  Republican  
 rival Curtis Sliwa who describes  
 himself as an avenging Guardian  
 Angel with a proven record  
 of fighting crime in the streets. 
 Sliwa’s main aim is to “refund  
 the police,” a mantra he adopted  
 against Mayor Bill de Blasio’s  
 advocacy for a “defund the  
 police” program initially proposed  
 by the Blacks Lives Movement  
 after a Minnesota police  
 officer casually pressed his knee  
 against the neck of George Floyd  
 for nine minutes and 29 seconds  
 until there was no more breath  
 in his body. 
 Sliwa has placed his record on  
 the line repeatedly reminding  
 potential voters that wearing a  
 red beret while patrolling the  
 subways  with  an  army  of  volunteer  
 Guardian Angels did not  
 deter him for being targeted for  
 murder and shot. 
 In fact, there’s truth to his  
 assertions. 
 The ambitious Angel boasts  
 the fact he recruited volunteers  
 willing to walk unarmed  
 through danger zones in the  
 city.C 
 atch You On The Inside! 
 Inside Life 
 By Vinette K. Pryce 
 Early Action is Key! 
 Ask Your Doctor About Monoclonal Antibody Treatment 
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 exposed to someone who has had COVID-19. Monoclonal Antibody Treatment: 
  	
		
	  
 
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