Categories: U.S. and Canada

Amiri Baraka ¡presente!

Baraka reads “Somebody Blew Up America” poem before 1,100 people at Mumia Abu-Jamal solidarity rally at the Philadelphia Constitution Center in Philadelphia, Pa., on Dec. 9, 2011.
WW photo: Joseph Piette

Amiri Baraka, a longtime Black revolutionary who was very influential in the struggle against racist and class oppression for over five decades, died on Jan. 9 at the age of 79, following a short illness in Newark, N.J.  At a Jan.10 public forum in New York City, Workers World Party First Secretary Larry Holmes pointed out that Baraka used his status as a spoken word poet, writer and playwright to help elevate the Black liberation struggle starting in the 1960s — when he was first known as Leroi Jones — until his death.  It was this powerful combination of politics and artistry that propelled Baraka as a towering, respected and beloved figure within the Black movement and among other progressive sectors.

A wake for Baraka will be held on Friday, Jan. 17, at Metropolitan Baptist Church, 149 Springfield Ave. in Newark from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m.  The funeral will be held on Saturday, Jan. 18, at Newark Symphony Hall, 1030 Broad Street at 10 a.m.

Go to blackleftunity.blogspot.com/?view=magazine for tributes to Baraka.  A full obituary on Amiri Baraka will appear in a future issue of WW.

Monica Moorehead

Monica.Moorehead@workers.org

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