Archive for News

Tell Obama and Clinton: Stop attacks on Zelaya!

from Philly Activists.

At this moment the Embassy of Brazil in Tegucigalpa where President Manuel Zelaya has been staying since he returned to his country on September 21, together with his family and close to 100 supporters, is being blockaded and attacked with chemical and electronic noise-producing weapons by the Honduran military. Poisonous chemicals and gases are being thrown from helicopters. The entrance is guarded by heavily armed troops who do not allow the delivery of food or other necessities. Water and electricity have been cut off several times in an effort to starve and hurt those inside.

We demand the immediate cessation of these terroristic measures and the re-installation of President Zelaya to office.

We also demand the end of all acts of repression and violence by the illegitimate government of Roberto Micheletti against the people of Honduras and the immediate release of all the people detained for protesting the military coup.

Sincerely,

(Add your name here)

Send your message or call:

President Barack Obama at: info@messages.whitehouse.gov or info@barackobama.com

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton at:   Main switchboard State Dept. 202-647-4000; (202) 647-3482 or email doing the following:
To e-mail the U.S. Department of State, please visit the following website: http://contact-us.state.gov/cgi-bin/state.
If it does not allow entrance, go to their main website: http://www.state.gov and then click “contact us” (http://contact-us.state.gov/cgi-bin/state.cfg/php/enduser/std_alp.php) and then select “1 How can I contact the U.S. Department of State?

Leave a comment »

The Philadelphia Libraries

Received from Angel Hogan:
From today’s MSN main page…
Philadelphia libraries to close Oct. 2
Pennsylvania’s budget deadlock also means 3,000 city employees could get pink slips on Friday.
Posted by Elizabeth Strott on Wednesday, September 16, 2009 10:16 AM

The City of Brotherly Love isn’t showing much to book lovers.

All 54 of Philadelphia’s libraries are scheduled to close because the state of Pennsylvania has not been able to pass a budget to fund the library system.

“All branch and regional library programs, including programs for children and teens, after school programs, computer classes, and programs for adults, will be cancelled,” the Free Library posted in a notice on its Web site. All 250,000 books, disks and other items that have been borrowed are now due Oct. 1, and nothing can be borrowed after Sept. 30.

Pennsylvania lawmakers are still deadlocked over a proposed state budget that was supposed to have been enacted on July 1.

Gov. Ed Rendell on Monday said he would veto a legislative budget plan proposed last Friday, calling the $27.9 budget proposal an overestimation of the sources of revenue needed to balance the budget.

Philadelphia had been banking on a 1% sales tax increase and a change in pension payment plans to help it fund library operations. If the budget does not pass within the next two weeks, the city said it will lay off all library employees.

The state budget mess could also force Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter to move forward on his so-called “Plan C” doomsday budget, beyond the closure of the libraries. Plan C would lay off 3,000 city workers, eliminate court-system funding and shut down all recreation centers. The city will send out pink slips to the 3,000 employees on Friday unless the budget passes before then.

Philadelphia’s library system is the sixth-largest public library in the nation. Benjamin Franklin created its precursor, the Library Company of Philadelphia, which was the first public library in the country.

Join us Friday.  Steps of the Main Branch Library. 5:30pm. Speak-out / Open Mic –share your thoughts on how this and the cut of our social services has or will affect you.  Bring signs. Bring friends. Bring hope.

Leave a comment »

NPP Reading July 24!!

New Philadelphia Poets in July

Friday, July 24th 7:00PM

Benefit Poetry Reading and Open Mic

for Wooden Shoe Books

with the New Philadelphia Poets

On Friday, July 24th, 7:00-9:00 pm, the New Philadelphia Poets will hold a reading to benefit Philadelphia’s 32-year-old, all-volunteer, collectively-run Wooden Shoe Books (508 S. 5th St. Philadelphia, PA 19147). The evening will include readings by Sarah Heady, Patrick Lucy, Debrah Morkun, Jamie Townsend, Angel Hogan, Marion Bell, Greg Bem and Carlos Soto Román.

The featured readers will be followed by an open mic session. Audience members are encouraged to bring their own poems, stories, voices, instruments…anything they’d like to share! There will be a $5 suggested donation at the door, as well as drinks and appetizers for a small price.  All proceeds will go directly to the Wooden Shoe’s “Moving Fund” campaign.

The Wooden Shoe is an all-volunteer collectively-run Infoshop located in Philadelphia, PA that seeks to embody the principles of anarchism and other movements for social justice. We strive to provide our local community with radical and non-traditional sources of written, digital, and spoken information. We wish to be an empowering resource for activism, organizing, art, self-education, dialogue, community-building, and the anti-capitalist struggle.

Leave a comment »

Down the Road

IN(VISIBLE) KEEPSAKES

Come witness the birth of a poem, the burial of another, and the wedding of word, music, and image, as the New Philadelphia Poets locate a collective tongue in the city of brotherly love. Featuring poetic fortunes, imbibements and prizes, In(visible) Keepsakes is an ecstatic celebration of language and community.

WHEN: Friday, September 4th, 6:00-8:00 pm

WHERE: Philadelphia’s Magic Gardens (the life’s work of artist Isaiah Zagar, featured in the recent film In a Dream )

HOW MUCH: $5 (includes refreshments)–buy tickets here, or at the door.

This will be part of Philadelphia’s Fringe Festival.

IN(VISIBLE) KEEPSAKES

Come witness the birth of a poem, the burial of another, and the wedding of word, music, and image, as the New Philadelphia Poets locate a collective tongue in the city of brotherly love.  Featuring poetic fortunes, imbibements and prizes, In(visible) Keepsakes is an ecstatic celebration of language and community.

WHEN: Friday, September 4th, 6:00-8:00 pm

WHERE: Philadelphia’s Magic Gardens (the life’s work of artist Isaiah Zagar, featured in the recent film In a Dream )

HOW MUCH: $5 (includes refreshments)–buy tickets here, or at the door.

Leave a comment »

Way Back: The MOLES NOT MOLAR Reading & Performance Series

The following is a video from the evening, and following the video, the website’s official description.

The goal of Moles Not Molar is to put writers and artists pursuing exciting, innovative and experimental textual projects into contact and dialogue with each other and their diverse audiences, creating exposure and engagement across regional and generic lines.

Emily Abendroth and Justin Audia have been co-curating this series out of various gallery and community spaces in Philadelphia since the Winter of 2004. To contact them, send an email to molesnotmolar@gmail.com.

—————————————————–
OUR NEXT & FINAL EVENT OF THE SEASON IS ON FRIDAY, MAY 22ND @ 7:30 PM.

All information is below.
——————————————————–

The Moles Not Molar
Reading & Performance Series

Consecrates Its Passage Into Summer Hibernation Via One Final Rowdy Sonic Celebration and Its Wild Gyrations of Poetic Spectacula!!!

on Friday, May 22nd, 2009
@ 7:30 PM
at the CRANE ARTS COMMUNITY SPACE
located inside The Crane Arts Building at 1400 N. American St.
(two blocks north of Girard Ave. between 2nd & 3rd streets)

Featuring
JENNIFER KARMIN (Poet; Chicago)
ISH KLEIN (Poet & Filmmaker; Philadelphia)
MATTHEW KLANE (Poet; Albany)

JENNIFER KARMIN’s text-sound epic, Aaaaaaaaaaalice, will be published by Flim Forum Press in 2009. She curates the Red Rover Series and is co-founder of the public art group Anti Gravity Surprise. Her multidisciplinary projects have been presented nationally at festivals, artist-run spaces, and on city streets. Karmin teaches creative writing to immigrants at Truman College and works as a Poet-in-Residence for the Chicago Public Schools. New poems are published in Cannot Exist, MoonLit, Otoliths, Come Together: Imagine Peace (Bottom Dog Press) and Not A Muse (Haven Books).

ISH KLEIN’s poems have been published in Bridge,The Canary, Gare du Nord, The Hat magazine, X-connect, Spork and Gut Cult. Her book, “Union!” came out April 2009 through the Canarium Press. Her films have screened all over the world and at Philadelphia’s ICA. You can see some of them on youtube by searching “ishkleinfilms.”

MATTHEW KLANE is founder and editor of Flim Forum Press. His new book is B_____ Meditations (Stockport Flats Press, 2008). Other recent work can be found in Absent, Otoliths, Open Letters Monthly and The New Chief Tongue. He currently lives and writes in Albany, New York. See: www.matthewklane.blogspot.com.

For directions please go to www.cranearts.com/visit_crane_arts.html

Leave a comment »

I am involver

Friday, July 24th

7:00PM

Benefit Poetry Reading

and Open Mic

for Wooden Shoe Books

with the New Philadelphia Poets

On Friday, July 24th, 7:00-9:00 pm, the New Philadelphia Poets will hold a reading to benefit Philadelphia’s 32-year-old, all-volunteer, collectively-run Wooden Shoe Books (508 S. 5th St. Philadelphia, PA 19147).

Formed in 2007, the New Philadelphia Poets are dedicated to creating new spaces for poetry in Philadelphia and supporting the city’s growing poetic community. They have previously been featured at Robin’s Bookstore, Germ Books + Gallery, Brickbat Books, and the BLAM! poetry series. Their alchemical performance piece In(visible) Keepsakes will be featured in the 2009 Philly Fringe Festival.

The reading will be followed by an open mic session. Audience members are encouraged to bring their own poems, stories, voices, instruments…anything they’d like to share! There will be a $5 suggested donation at the door, as well as drinks and appetizers for a small price.  All proceeds will go directly to the Wooden Shoe’s “Moving Fund” campaign.

The Wooden Shoe is an all-volunteer collectively-run Infoshop located in Philadelphia, PA that seeks to embody the principles of anarchism and other movements for social justice. We strive to provide our local community with radical and non-traditional sources of written, digital, and spoken information. We wish to be an empowering resource for activism, organizing, art, self-education, dialogue, community-building, and the anti-capitalist struggle.

Please visit www.newphiladelphiapoets.com and www.woodenshoebooks.com for more information.

Leave a comment »

Behold, Sweet Uploaded Videos!

Cruise over to the PAPP Youtube page and you’ll see a ton of newly-uploaded, albeit dated, videos from live events around town. I just found out I can indeed upload large files despite my mooching off another connection somewhere nearby. Here’s one particularly fond memory of a collaboration with Dan Schall, performed and recorded at the beginning of June.

In other news, people are yelling down in the street beneath my house. And in other, other news, tomorrow I’m going to be meeting up with some poets and handing out broadsides of my work (I’m going to refrain from posting my broadside until I’ve got videos and pictures from the event as it goes down tomorrow).

Leave a comment »

Upcoming if You’re all about New York

The Ascendency of Obama

Leave a comment »

Iran and the Demand-Centered

From A World to Win, this news sequence, which was sent via email as the events in Iran unfolded over the past few days, has definitely been as emotionally palpable as the videos and pictures on websites like the Huffington Post, but the literary efforts and the analytical approach, which is a mixture of objective and revolutionary prose, has trumped the others I’ve encountered.

Live from the streets of Tehran

15 June 2009. A World to Win News Service. Following are reports sent to Bazr, which describes itself as a Marxist Iranian student organisation. These reports have been selected, excerpted and edited slightly for clarity, but they are basically “raw footage from students and others active in the political turmoil preceding and especially following the 12 June elections. They are in reverse chronology.

Saturday 13 June

Fatima Square was tense starting this morning. People who were there then say that many were viciously arrested. The special police were controlling all the streets leading to the Interior Ministry. They were everywhere. Passers-by were not allowed to stop. Anyone who made the slightest objection was arrested or hit with electric batons. But not many people had gathered yet. Chants of “Death to the dictator” rang out from every street corner. Motorists responded by honking; the police responded to any gathering with batons, kicking and beatings. Shops had pulled their shutters halfway down, and the owners were allowing people to take shelter there. A police loudspeaker ordered all the merchants to close down completely, warning that everything was being filmed and that anyone who failed to comply with orders would be in trouble.

After office hours more people rushed to Fatima Square and Vali Asr Street. First on the sidewalks and then in the street people were chanting “Death to the dictator”. [There was some ambiguity as to whether the “dictator” was Ahmadinejad or both him and Khamenei – the plural of dictator doesn’t rhyme in Farsi.] When the police attacked, people ran, then stopped and went back to shouting slogans, but there still was no coordination among them and they were scattered. The support local residents gave demonstrators was amazing. The people in the area sheltered escaping protestors in their homes.

Amidst all this we heard that a contingent of a thousand demonstrators was walking from Vanak (northern Tehran) towards Fatima Square. This news encouraged the protesters around the Interior Ministry and many of those watching from the sidewalks joined them. People blocked Vali Asr Street waiting for the marchers to arrive. They sat on the street and didn’t let cars go north. After 20 minutes the marchers arrived and more people joined the protest. Then the police charged into the crowd, but the crowd counter-attacked. Several police were beaten and four police motorcycles and three police cars were burned. From this moment the crowd moved with more courage and determination. Teargas grenades were streaming toward the crowd but people kept chanting slogans and shouting. They broke bank windows, burned city garbage cans and pulled down fences along the street while marching towards theInterior Ministry. Two city buses were also set on fire. Gunshots were heard everywhere [although at that point the police were apparently firing into the air].

Later we heard many stories of arrests and vicious police attacks, including against young kids and elderly people in the crowd. The fighting continued until 8 pm when the fully-armed special forces were brought in. It was announced that they would have the right to shoot. At first they tried to scatter people and lure them into the side streets. They never attacked alone. Instead, groups of them, armed to the teeth, would all attack one person at a time. Soon they had scattered the crowd and were not afraid any more. They took back control of Vali Asr Street.

Many youth didn’t expect such brutality from the police. Some even refused to believe that they were really Iranian. Despite the many witnesses and cameras the police broke the neck of one young woman, beat up an elderly woman with an electric baton and committed many more crimes. But people helped each other. They didn’t let the police ambulances grab the injured and took them to local clinics and hospitals themselves. There were rumours that some soldiers were overheard speaking Arabic and turned out to be Lebanese [a total fantasy]. Some of the soldiers, in response to people protesting their viciousness, would say: “Your time is up, now it’s our turn.”

A young student: Everybody is flabbergasted. The text messaging system has been shut down since two days before the election and half an hour ago (about 18 GMT 13 June) the whole mobile phone system was cut off. The [state-run] TV is not saying anything about the protests, but the Leader [Ayatollah Ali Khamenei] said in a broadcast, “Our enemies want to rob the people of the sweetness of their victory. Be vigilant.” Nobody else is being shown on the telly. We are getting information through Facebook (filtered during the elections but clear for the last two days) and Web sites (most of which are filtered too). Where I live, many people are depressed, but in Vanak and Zartosht and Vali Asr (downtown Teheran) as well as in front of the Interior Ministry, things are moving…

Latest news: the police have attacked the hospitals in order to arrest the injured. And there have been altercations between the police and the nurses and doctors who resisted this.

The Hope of the Hopeless– A leaflet some worker activists distributed 13 June

The deceiving presidential elections ended with predetermined results: Ahmadinejad’s victory. The people who in the last few weeks marched in the streets with many hopes and small dreams and who thought “This time is different” are flabbergasted and disillusioned. The organized security and law and order forces and a part of Shiite clergy who have put their outrageous and lying peons in power as planned are in a state of readiness. Anyone looking with open eyes at what was going on behind the scenes in the campaign, anyone not resting content with the expressions of naïve enthusiasm of young women and men, could predict the enormous fraud. The Islamic Republic’s intelligence services were assured that Ahmadinejad would be the victor. Intelligence agency rumour-mongers and those organising the government’s opinion poles over the last two weeks were saying, “the Leader is with Ahmadinejad, so he’ll be the winner for sure.” The threats against unauthorized demonstrations issued by the commanders of the repressive forces – even before the election – were a powerful clue that a fraud was being organised.

Isn’t what is going on in front of people’s eyes yet more proof of the regime’s illegitimacy? Do the conciliatory forces and reactionaries turned “democrats” – who bombarded the people’s minds in the last two weeks and drew many people to the ballot box by giving them hope of change – have anything to say today? The reality is that, as usual, the ruling system was the winner of elections. The vast participation of the masses was taken as legitimising the system. And this was the main goal of the election game.

Convincing or pushing the discontented masses to vote in this reactionary game was the common point agreed upon by not only various factions of the IRI but also the imperialist powers. They tried to convince the masses who had not trusted the regime for a long time that they should chose between the lesser of two evils, and be happy that one of those evils would win. It’s enough to pay attention to the propaganda broadcasts of the Voice of America and the BBC Persian service to see how they helped heat up the oven of the elections and convinced undecided and distrustful people that by taking their hopes to the temples of Mousavi and Karoubi [the two reform candidates] things could change for the better. Now, after the results have been announced, we see the same imperialist media trying as hard as they can to persuade angry youth from expressing their dissatisfaction and revolt. Has the influence of reformist thinking and illusion-creating policies been so strong that it saps the strength of the system’s opponents and dampens the fire of struggle against these outrageous oppressors?

All these events should at least have the positive side of dealing a blow to illusions and pipe-dreaming among the people. The youth who were chanting slogans, singing and dancing night and day with the hope of breaking the wall of oppression and suppression – will they accept such injustice? Amidst all this, the question we struggling workers and activists related to the workers’ movement want to pose is this: Can one be the vanguard of change by staying aloof from events? The positions and scattered leaflets here and there of worker activists against the election farce are far from enough. There is danger in this. The situation must be understood and correct slogans and politics developed rapidly and taken to workplaces, neighbourhoods and streets. Once again this fundamental truth must loudly resound throughout society so that bewilderment and disillusionment does not lead to demoralization: Revolution is the hope of the hopeless!

Reports from the days leading up to elections

Ever since the campaign started, the debate was on among the people. Many youth wore [Islamic] green headbands or armbands to show allegiance to Mousavi. The colour of Karoubi was off-white and Ahmadinejad supporters wore black (but later started carrying the tricolour Iranian flag). Everywhere we go, in taxis, bus, the tube, even street corners, there is talk about the election. Almost everybody expresses an opinion. Even people wearing green ribbons are saying, “We know it’s a matter of choosing between two evils, that Mousavi is not our man, but we’ll vote to keep Ahmadinejad from being re-elected.”

I was on a bus. At one stop a young man came on and started distributing green ribbons. When he reached me, I didn’t take it. He said, “What’s wrong with you? You’re young, aren’t you?” I said, “I’m young but my brain does work. I don’t want to vote.” After he left debate raged. A middle-aged woman said, “Who the fuck is Mousavi? We haven’t forgotten that when he was prime minister the Sarollah [Islamic morality police] patrols cut young women’s faces and lips because they were wearing makeup, and cut women’s hands or legs for wearing short sleeves. Now he pretends to be our saviour?” A young woman said, “Mousavi is not my candidate but I’ll vote for him anyway since I don’t want Ahmadinejad.. The country should be fixed through reforms. See what happened when you made revolution once?!” It was a great bus trip.

The next day in the tube I heard a young man screaming, “I don’t want to vote, nobody should vote, they’re all the same. Nothing changes.” Somebody responded, “If you don’t want to vote, don’t, but why create a bad atmosphere?” Another young woman said, “We vote because we want freedom.” A woman asked, “What kind of freedom is Mousavi going to give you?” The other answered, “They say Iran will be like Turkey; the veil will be voluntary.” I was shocked. At one point Mousavi said that he would discontinue the morality police patrols, but he stopped even saying that. The same kind of discussion was repeated in taxis…

A week before the elections: from some worker activists

The night of the televised debate between Ahmadinejad and Mousavi, a lot of people were watching their TV sets.. The candidates’ mutual insults and boasting had filled the newspapers for months. The day after the debate, the discussion among the people was hot. Even people not usually interested in politics took part in these passionate arguments. Ahmadinejad made some sharp exposures of Mousavi, Khatami [the ex-"reform" president], Rafsanjani [Iran's richest man, a pillar of the Islamic regime and a powerful backer of Mousavi, widely hated for his personal corruption], and many others in such a way that made many people change their mind about who they were going to vote for and even incited people who didn’t want to vote to go and vote anyway. The reality was that these exposures did not reveal even a thousandth what is really happening and yet Mousavi had nothing to say in response.

Night. Street. Constant honking and the voices of people shouting slogans. I went out. There were supporters of Mousavi and Ahmadinejad, and some people watching. This was the result of last night’s TV debate. The slogans were ridiculous. People were out until 3 or 4 in the morning. The forces of order were only watching. They were trying to be polite, asking people to go home. I asked myself if they were thinking: “Wait until the election is over, we’ll show you, just wait.”

The streets are filled with women and youth. The colour most visible is green…. The Ahmadinejad-Mousavi TV debate produced contradictory results. Some people really liked the exposures Ahmadinejad did of Rafsanjani and Nateghnouri and they completely forget who was saying these things. It shows you how over the last 30 years these questions of “self-enrichment”, “theft” and “privileges” have created such complex hatred in the society that even Ahmadinejad can manoeuvre in it. Many people liked Mousavi’s poise… Ironically a backward sentiment about a man’s “honour” acted against Ahmadinejad – some people didn’t like his disparaging treatment of Mousavi’s wife….

Now a lot of people who were cursing and promised they wouldn’t be fooled into participating in the elections ever again have changed their mind and are saying that it’s different this time. They’re not just saying that we have this Ahmadinejad problem, they’re saying we can win this time. They’ve started having hope.

The situation is really different from previous elections. The last time the sentiment for boycotting them was strong. And you didn’t see this enthusiasm in the streets. But now a lot of people come out and argue against boycotting the elections. I can firmly say that the schools for these various arguments against the boycott are the satellite TV stations! People are mouthing the same arguments voiced over the BBC or VOA by the various reactionaries and vacillating forces these media invite… What’s interesting is that the forces of repression have been deliberately taken off the streets. The few officers you see here and there just observe.

Comments (1) »

Poetry Double Header!

NPP Poster

Stolen from the website of my cohorts, the New Philadelphia Poets:

Join us Saturday at 5 pm at Fergies Pub (upstairs) for a reading by Brenda Iijima and Yedda Morrison.

Afterwards we’ll walk a few blocks to the Chapterhouse Cafe for the Chapter and Verse reading series featuring Frank Sherlock and Simon Pettet.

Brenda Iijima is the author of Animate, Inanimate Aims (Litmus Press) and Around Sea (O Books). Forthcoming works include revv. you’ll—ution (Displace Press) and If Not Metamorphic (Ahsahta Press). She writes about animal-ability. She lives in Brooklyn and runs Portable Press at Yo-Yo Labs.

Montreal based writer and visual artist Yedda Morrison was born and raised in the San Francisco Bay Area. Her books include Darkness (chapter 1) (Little Red Leaves, 2009) (PDF available here), Girl Scout Nation (Displaced Press, 2008), My Pocket Park (Dusie Press, 2007), Co (Collaborations with Bruce Andrews, Roof Books, 2006) and Crop (Kelsey Street Press, 2003). How Flora Became An Ornament is forthcoming from Make Now Press in Los Angeles. Morrison has exhibited her visual work throughout the US and Canada and is currently represented by Republic Gallery in Vancouver, BC.

Frank Sherlock is a native Philadelphian, author of Over Here and Ready-To-Eat Individual, a collaboration written with Brett Evans about New Orleans in the Year 1 A.K. (After Katrina). You can listen to his work at PennSound.

Simon Pettet is a poet from New York. HEARTH, a book that collects his decades’ worth of poetry, was recently published. You can read an interview with Pettet in last month’s Brooklyn Rail.

Leave a comment »