Category: Red Ink


Red Ink – May Day Celebration

Friday, April 1st, 2011
May ’11
1
2:00 pm

Sunday May 1, 2pm – Film, Discussion & Exhibit of Collages
Red Ink May Day Celebration
Political Prisoners, Isolation & Torture in America
With Hakim Green, Bonnie Kerness, Ojore Lutalo, Luis Sanabria & TJ Whitaker


Hakim Green is Hip-Hop. He uses it to address the ills affecting black culture and he founded the For Life Initiative, a non-profit that promotes Hip-Hop as a positive lifestyle. Hakim has recorded albums with Channel Live, leactured for Human Education Against Lies (H.E.A.L.), Stop the Violence Movements, and the International Youth Organization.

Bonnie Kerness serves as Coordinator of the American Friends Service Committee’s Prison Watch Project and has worked as a human rights advocate in US prisons with a focus on torture, isolation (no-touch torture), and use of devices of torture in US prisons. She contributed to Our Children’s House (testimonies on juvenile imprisonment): Torture in US Prisons (Evidence of Human Rights Violations): The Prison Inside the Prison (Control Units, Supermax Prisons and Devices of Torture).

Ojore Lutalo is a former New Afrikan Anarchist political prisoner who served 28 years in prison for clandestine activities during the 1970′s and 1980′s. 22 of those years were in isolation in the Management Control Unit at New Jersey State Prison, for entertaining thoughts that the NJ Department of Correction/Homeland Security didn’t approve of. During this time, Ojore created collages of political and social commentary on the neo-slavery of US prisons.

Luis Sanabria is a member of the National Boricua Human Rights Network, Philadelphia chapter (which works to free Puerto Rican political prisoners) and the Movimento de Liberacion Nacional – MLN – (which spearheaded the campaigns for freeing two generations of Puerto Rican political prisoners). He was the founding member of the National Committee to Free Puerto Rican Political Prisoners and the Juan A. Corretjer Centers in San Francisco and in Philadelphia.

TJ Whitaker is the National Secretary and the New Jersey Coordinator for the Jericho Movement, a national organization dedicated to raising awareness and support for US political prisoners and Prisoners of War. He is currently completing his PhD in Global Affairs at Rutgers University, Newark, where his research focuses on human rights violations and political activists.

Red Ink May Day Celebration

Sunday, March 20th, 2011

Sunday, May 1, 2pm
Red Ink May Day Celebration

Marx In Soho by Howard Zinn With Bob Weick as Karl Marx, Directed by John Doyle

Friday, April 9th, 2010
May ’10
3
7:30 pm

MONDAY MAY 3, 7:30pm – $10. – THEATER
by Howard Zinn
With Bob Weick as Karl Marx, Directed by John Doyle

“Bob Weick captured Marx and his ideas with the proper strength and subtlety, moving very effectively through a range of moods: humorous, angry, poignant. We admired Weick’s transitions, change of pace, the nuances of feeling. In short, I am very happy with what Bob has done. John Doyle directed the play brilliantly “. Howard Zinn author of Marx in Soho & The People’s History of The United States

“This production does several different things with great skill, subtlety, and professionalism. The audience will encounter a Marx who remains passionate about injustice, critical of inequality, and combative with his rivals … but also a Marx who is loving toward his family, saddened by their poverty, and willing to rethink some of his ideas. Bob Weick is a gem of a performer, taking the audience on a whirlwind tour of different moods, attitudes, and ideas. Whether you’re a novice undergraduate, a Marxist scholar, a social justice advocate, or an interested citizen, you will find much of value in this production.” Steve Buechler,
Minnesota State University, Mankato

“Going to see Marx in Soho I wasn’t quite sure what to expect. Neither, I think were most of other students or professors that attended the show but most, I think, enjoyed it immensely. Marx is often seen as dull, dry and outdated – a difficult writer to understand, but Marx in Soho was fresh, fiery and entertaining. Enjoyable to many, interesting to others and no doubt offensive to somebody (as all great theatre should be). Marx in Soho brought a long dead revolutionary to Columbus Ohio. Perhaps he should visit more often.” Amanda Mielke, College Student

Iron Age Theatre is dedicated to intense, passionate, creative, theatre focused on the human condition and social justice and created organically and collaboratively. Iron Age Theatre is A Non-profit 501(c)3 organization.

Red Ink: Celebrating the Radical Tradition and honoring Howard Zinn

Saturday, March 27th, 2010
May ’10
2
2:00 pm

SUNDAY, MAY 2, 2pm – RED INK
Red Ink: Celebrating the Radical Tradition and honoring Howard Zinn

with Photography, Music, Theater, Poetry & Prose, featuring
Urban Nomads: A Photo Documentation of the Kensington Welfare Rights Union by Harvey Finkle
Galen Tyler, Coordinator for the Kensington Welfare Rights Union and Cheri Honkala, Poor People’s Economic Human Rights Campaign
John Doyle, director, and Bob Weick actor, on working with Howard Zinn in producing Marx In Soho
AnitaFix+ReturnTheLand singing songs of resistance and freedom, bringing the street to the stage and the stage to the streets.
Ewuare X. Osayande on Howard Zinn and African American history
Open Mic for poetry and prose of protest

A Photo Documentation of the Kensington Welfare Rights Union by Harvey Finkle is a documentary still photographer who has produced a substantial body of work concerned with social, political and cultural issues. His work has been extensively exhibited and published, including three books entitled, “Urban Nomads,” “Still Home: Jews of South Philadelphia” and “Reading.”
His recent work includes a documentation of the Kensington Welfare Rights Union (KWRU), a poor people’s movement emanating from the poorest neighborhood in Pennsylvania which will be on display from April 28 to May 22, May 2 will be the opening; and “The Jews of South Philadelphia,” interviews and photographs of the remnants of what once was among the largest Jewish communities in the nation.
His ongoing work includes documenting the activities of many progressive organizations including a death penalty abolitionist group, ACT-UP, ADAPT (disabled activists), KWRU, and other groups concerned with housing and homelessness. Also, his work includes an extensive inventory of images depicting all aspects of life in Deaf culture, plus a substantial collection of photos dealing with education.
Works in progress are about the new wave of immigrant and refugee families who have settled in urban areas and the evolving Transgender community. Visit Harvey Finkle on the web.

Galen Tyler, The Kensington Welfare Rights Union and Cheri Honkala, Poor People’s Economic Human Rights Campaign is a progressive social justice, political action, and advocacy group of, by, and for the poor and homeless operating out of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and led by Galen Tyler. The group was formed in Philadelphia’s Kensington neighborhood in April of 1991. KWRU is a part of the national organization the Poor People’s Economic Human Rights Campaign a coalition of grassroots organizations, community groups, and non-profit organizations committed to uniting the poor across color lines as the leadership base for a broad movement to abolish poverty. KWRU is also a member of the steering committee of the A.N.S.W.E.R. coalition. The KWRU was written about in the book Myth of the Welfare Queen by writer and journalist David Zucchino.

John Doyle, Director and Bob Weick, Actor on working with Howard Zinn to produce Marx In Soho – With Bob Weick as Karl Marx, Directed by John Doyle
Sunday Bob and John will talk about working with Howard Zinn and do an excerpt. On Monday May 3 at 7:30 Moonstone and Iron Age Theater will present a full presentation of Marx In Soho, Tickets, $10.

“Bob Weick captured Marx and his ideas with the proper strength and subtlety, moving very effectively through a range of moods: humorous,angry, poignant. We admired Weick’s transitions, change of pace, the nuances of feeling. In short, I am very happy with what Bob has done. John Doyle directed the play brilliantly “. Howard Zinn author of Marx in Soho & The People’s History of The United States

Check out the Iron Age Theatre web site.

AnitaFix+ReturnTheLand are a Z gender anarchic folk performance group from Pittsburgh/NYC singing songs of resistance and freedom, bringing the street to the stage and the stage to the streets. Sprung from the vibrant Rickety counter-culture rock- and-roll collective, we stand against the corporatocracy that uses the U.S. government and its silent, compliant masses to occupy, subjugate and exploit a large portion of the world. We stand for freedom of expression and lifestyle, joy in creation, wild love and the rule of nature.

Ewuare X. Osayande is a political activist, award-winning author, cultural analyst, poet, essayist, publisher and internet radio talk show host. The Quarterly Black Review has called Osayande “one of Black America’s newest insurgent intellectuals coming to the table with enough mental firepower to be a David Walker for our time.” He is co-founder and director of POWER (People Organized Working to Eradicate Racism) and creator of Project ONUS: Redefining Black Manhood. Osayande is creator and host of “The Resistance,” a bi-weekly talk show that made its international internet debut on gtownradio.com on February 9, 2010.

Open Mic for poetry and prose of protest