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To: Fred Nerks
recent related speeches, lectures, and interviews by Cora Weiss related to subject Barack Obama, Sr.that may yield additional research material.

When I originally posted research, I had recalled that Weiss was not altogether satisfied with Shachtman's book and had considered writing one of her own.
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Airlift to America

The story of the airlifts is a continuing one. On this page, we hope to share with you news we receive that touches on the airlifts, their participants, and the accomplishments. On a separate page we ask our readers to share memories and thoughts they have on these subjects.

ARTHUR BORDEN, COUNSEL FOR THE AFRICAN AMERICAN STUDENTS FOUNDATION passed away on July 23. His obituary is available in the July 26, 2010 edition of The New York Times.

The former principals of the nonprofit shared the following comments upon his death:

We are saddened to learn of the death on July 23, 2010 of Arthur Borden who incorporated the African American Students Foundation in 1958 and was a dedicated supporter of this unique initiative which brought so many students to the US from East Africa. The vast majority of the Airlift students returned to become the nation builders of their soon to be independent countries. The stories from that successful adventure can be found on the pages of this web site and in the book, Airlift to America: How Barack Obama, Sr., John F Kennedy, Tom Mboya and 800 East African Students changed their world and ours, by Tom Shachtman. St Martin's Press. Our thoughts go out to the family and friends of Arthur.

Cora Weiss, former Executive Director, AASF
Ted Kheel, former Chair of the Board of AASF

THE NEW YORK TIMES, IN ITS BLOG “PAPERCUTS”, INVITED COMMENT FROM TOM SHACHTMAN, author of “Airlift to America” on the events leading up the founding of the African American Students Foundation. The comments were published online on May 7, 2010.

IN A LETTER IN THE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW, CORA WEISS TALKS ABOUT THE ROLE OF AIRLIFT IN BARACK OBAMA SR.’S ACADEMIC CAREER. In the April 29, 2010 issue of the New York Times Book Review, Cora Weiss, executive director of the African American Students Foundation, added to the account of the airlift of African students mentioned by Barack Obama in his speech at Selma in 2007 and described in Garry Wills’s review of David Remnick’s biography of President Obama, “The Bridge”. She wrote “Barack Obama Sr., who greatly admired Mboya, did not come on the first flight, but he was a member of the airlift generation, arriving here in 1959 with the support of two American women teachers. While he was a student at the University of Hawaii, the A.A.S.F. gave him three grants.”LIBRARY OF CONGRESS HOSTS TALK ON AIRLIFT: Tom Shachtman, author of Airlift to America, and Cora Weiss, former Executive Director of the African American Students Foundation, spoke on March 12, 2010 about the Airlift at a Library of Congress Event, on the occasion of the Africa Section's 50th anniversary celebrations. Click here for the press release and details. To see a video of the event, click here.

PAPER ON AIRLIFT PRESENTED AT AFRICA STUDIES ASSOCIATION ANNUAL MEETING: On November 19, Cora Weiss presented a paper on “Hidden Documents, the story of the African American Students Foundation and the Airlift,” at the annual meeting of the Africa Studies Association in New Orleans, sponsored by the African Librarians Council. Click here to see Cora Weiss' full presentation.


INSTITUTE FOR POLICY STUDIES, AFRICA ACTION, AND PHELPS STOKES CO-SPONSOR AIRLIFT BOOK EVENT IN WASHINGTON D.C.: On October 6, 2009, the author of Airlift to America spoke in Washington D.C. at an event hosted by the Institute for Policy Studies, Africa Action and the Phelps Stokes Fund. Cora Weiss, Former Executive Director of African American Students Foundation, the sponsor of the Airlift, introduced the author. The speakers also included Badi Foster, President and CEO of the Phelps Stokes Fund and Gerald LeMelle, Director of Africa Action, both of whom come from families that were active with the Airlift. Laverne Page of the Africa Section of the Library of Congress told of her husband's brother in law, Festus Molenje, an Airlift student who graduated from Adelphi University. Bob Levey, who has been a popular Washington Post columnist and whose family hosted a number of airlift students, told wonderful stories and spoke some Swahili that he remembered. The packed room of 65 people included others with ties to the Airlift as well, such as Steve Nkurlu, Director of recreation and respite services at the Easter Seals Camp in Maryland, who is nephew of Yona Nkurlu, an Airlift student who attended Gustavus College in Maine.


BOOK RECEPTION IN NEW YORK
(September 17, 2009): Airlift organizers Cora Weiss, Theodore Kheel and Mathilde Krim hosted a moving reception for several hundred, including many with ties to the airlifts, on September 17, 2009, near the United Nations. Ambassador Zachary Muburi-Muita of Kenya, Ambassador Ruhakana Rugunda of Uganda, and Ambassador Augustine Mahiga, of Tanzania co-hosted the event and spoke at it, along with Diana Ofwona, the daughter of an airlift student, now with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) in Niger; Olara Otunnu, friend of Barack Obama, Sr., former foreign minister of Uganda, former Under Secretary General and Special Representative for Children in Armed Conflict at the United Nations; and Haron Andima, airlift student, now a professor at Bronx Community College. To see a video of the event, click here.

MARTHA’S VINEYARD BOOK READING ATTENDED BY HARRY BELAFONTE
(August 27, 2009): The book “Airlift to America” was launched with a reading and a signing at Midnight Farm on Martha’s Vineyard, attended by Harry Belafonte, who served on the Board of Directors of the African American Students Foundation, supported the Airlift in its fundraising efforts, and wrote the foreword to the book. In a story about the event, entitled “Unlikely Events Recall Story of This President,” the Martha’s Vineyard Gazette interviewed airlift organizer Cora Weiss about some of the history. The Boston Globe also reported on the pre-publication celebration, in “Scene Around the Vineyard”. Visit our photographs page to see some pictures taken at the event.

Support for this website was provided by the TASK Foundation, named for its founders, Ted and Ann S. Kheel, who helped organize the airlift and hosted airlift students at their house.

















Airlift to America.org

771 posted on 01/04/2011 10:10:36 PM PST by thouworm
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To: thouworm
Scene around the Vineyard Harry Belafonte at a Martha's Vineyard gathering. (Peter Simon)

Harry Belafonte, pupil of W.E.B. DuBois, friend of Mao and Stalin, mentor to Frank Marshall Davis...

772 posted on 01/04/2011 10:27:34 PM PST by Fred Nerks (fair dinkum)
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To: thouworm
In addition to the Mboya correspondence, the William X. Scheinman papers contain records of the African American Students Foundation, documenting fund-raising efforts, led by such personalities as Harry Belafonte, Sidney Poitier, and Jackie Robinson, and records of the foundation’s various activities from 1959 to 1963. Also included are extensive correspondence files that record Scheinman’s long-standing interest in Africa, as seen in letters to and from African political and cultural leaders such as Kenyan president Daniel Arap Moi, Zimbabwean independence leader Joshua Nkomo, longtime Zambia president Kenneth Kaunda, and Malawian independence leaders Henry Chipembere and M.W. Kanyama Chiume, as well as South African singer and human rights activist Miriam Makeba.

SOURCE

MIRIAM MAKEBA WITH HER HUSBAND STOKELY CARMICHAEL IN 1968

Stokely Carmichael's speeches at the University of Washington and Garfield High School on April 19, 1967 helped galvanize interest in the concept of Black Power

The Black Panther Party in Seattle, 1968-1970


773 posted on 01/04/2011 11:09:35 PM PST by Fred Nerks (fair dinkum)
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To: thouworm
Interesting connection, from your Airlift to America Org link,

The advisers to the Kennedy Foundation arrive in Nairobi to review the airlift operations. Back row, left to right: Albert Sims, Institute of International Education; Gordon Hagberg, African-American Institute; Theodore Kheel, secretary-treasurer of AASF. Front row, left to right : an unidentified man, Dr. Aaron Brown of the Phelps Stokes Fund, Tom Mboya, and Father Gordon Fournier of the Foundation for All Africa (1960).

Image Source

Cold warrior for racial equality

Airlift students withTom Mboya (fourth right), Gloria and Gordon Hagberg (second and third right respectively).

...Their cook was Hussein Onyango Obama, none other than the paternal grandfather of President Obama. Gloria recalls the times Hussein’s son, the youthful student Barack Obama Sr, would visit their house, announcing: “I’ve come to see the old man!”

Although the young Obama Sr. left for the University of Hawaii before the first formal student airlift, he did maintain his friendship with the Hagbergs when he returned to Kenya.

AFRICAN-AMERICAN INSTITUTE. GORDON HAGBERG. The very same Institute referrenced by David Horowitz in the book THE ROCKEFELLERS. In which David notes that the AFRICAN-AMERICAN INSTITUTE was instrumental in bringing several thousands of foreign students, many from Africa, to the US -IN THE EARLY FIFTIES.

So if anyone would know WHEN the son of THEIR COOK, Hussein Onyango Obama left Kenya, one might ask GORDON AND GLORIA HAGBERG.

774 posted on 01/06/2011 5:06:22 PM PST by Fred Nerks (fair dinkum)
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