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To: justiceseeker93; Responsibility2nd
The Queen Mother is 83. Not sure about the King Daddy.


Former gang leaders and community leaders give Queen Mother Falaka Fattah (in wheel chair, husband David to right), founder of House of Umoja, a standing ovation at the 40th anniversary event for the Imani pledge. (credit: Cherri Gregg-January 1, 2014)

Chaka Fattah was born Arthur Davenport, the fourth of six sons of a U.S. Army sergeant named Russell Davenport and a journalist and activist named Frances "Frankee" Brown. His mother worked for the Philadelphia Tribune and as an occasional publicist for musicians such as Sam Cooke and Otis Redding. The Davenport marriage failed while Arthur was still young, and his mother became deeply involved in the civil rights movement. At a 1968 national conference on black power, she met a fellow activist named David and married him two months later. Together they founded the magazine Umoja, a Swahili word for unity. They also decided to take new names that would emphasize their African roots. Frankee Brown became Falaka Fattah; Arthur became Chaka Fattah, named after the Zulu warrior Chaka.

Source

35 posted on 07/29/2015 2:08:37 PM PDT by smoothsailing
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To: smoothsailing
Thanks for the additional info. So it was the adoptive father who became “Fattah”. Don't see any references to the Black Muslim movement. But “Fattah” is Arabic, not Swahili; it's the name of an arm of the PLO, Yasser Arafat's bunch.
40 posted on 07/29/2015 3:22:17 PM PDT by justiceseeker93
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