Posted on August 25, 2006

New Black Panthers Are United And Defiant

Robert Moran, Philadelphia Inquirer, August 23, 2006

The area around the 3100 block of North Sheridan Street in North Philadelphia is menacing. Seventh and Clearfield Streets is around the corner, or as the graffiti declare it: “7th and Killfield.” In April, a 33-year-old man died after being shot 15 times on Sheridan.

Then a group dressed in black uniforms and berets showed up at a rowhouse in early June and declared it the headquarters of the New Black Panther Party for Self Defense.

Resurrecting memories of the original Black Panthers of the 1960s and ‘70s, the New Black Panthers call for black unity and empowerment.

They also take a hostile stance against the police. In June, three members were arrested after a confrontation with officers. Police say one party member was wearing a bulletproof vest. A handgun was confiscated from their rowhouse.

On Friday, the New Black Panthers spoke publicly outside their headquarters and decried what they called police harassment and brutality against their members and against the black community.

“We’re not here for warfare,” Minister King Samir Shabazz, chairman of the party’s Philadelphia chapter, insisted. “We’re not starting any trouble with the police. We’re here to defend our people.”

But shortly after the announcement, gunfire erupted. Someone came up along Clearfield and started shooting, causing residents to scatter. No one was injured and there were no arrests.

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Despite the episode, Atwood, who counsels pregnant teens in school, said she welcomed the New Black Panthers and believed they would have a positive impact on black youth.

Others are undecided.

“The Black Panthers carry a heavy name,” said Clark Propel, 25, who lives next to the headquarters opposite Atwood. “You just can’t be sitting here saying, ‘We’re the Black Panthers.’ “

Propel said the New Black Panthers need to be taking visible action in the community, which he has yet to see.

Shabazz said the headquarters offers educational programs and free HIV testing. He listed various efforts that are being planned, including a breakfast and an after-school program for children.

The New Black Panthers are also planning to open a school, he said, so black children don’t have to be taught by “the cracker named Paul Vallas,” the head of the Philadelphia School District.

“That’s why they out there killing themselves,” Shabazz said of black youth and the city’s educational system. “They don’t see the greatness in themselves.”

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Minister Divine Allah, the party’s national youth minister, stood with Shabazz on Friday and supplied more of the inflammatory rhetoric for which the party has gained notoriety.

He called President Bush and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld “devils” and African Americans who work with them “boot-licking Negroes.”

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The New Black Panther Party was founded in Dallas in 1989 and maintains chapters across the country. It gained prominence when Khalid Abdul Muhammad joined during the 1990s. Muhammad was a spokesman for the Nation of Islam, but fell out of favor after a 1993 speech in New Jersey in which he referred to Jews as “bloodsuckers” and called for genocide against whites.

After assuming the leadership of the New Black Panther Party, he led a 1998 rally in Harlem that turned into a riot with police. Muhammad died in 2001 of a brain aneurysm.

Since then, the party has sporadically gained headlines, most recently during the Aug. 8 primary defeat of U.S. Rep. Cynthia McKinney (D., Ga.), in which the New Black Panthers provided security for the controversial politician and threatened reporters.

Meanwhile, some members of the original Black Panther Party formed in the 1960s have denounced the New Black Panthers, who they call a “questionable band of self-appointed leaders.”

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