Post by Hanna Levy on Jan 15, 2006 15:52:56 GMT -5
Culled from Hanna Levy Diary- Field Operative Masheda (lap)
THE ALLIANCE PROJECTS
In modern history, the civil rights movement era was an interesting period for many groups vying control of the same space, Negroes claimed was theirs. For the Negroes who later will be called African-Americans, this battle for the control of their destiny ended abruptly when two prominent figures namely, Martin Luther King and Malcom Shabazz X, leaders from diverging positions, were assassinated.
From that moment emerged civic groups which existed all along but were overshadowed by the political imperatives of the time, principally, the United States’ war in Vietnam, and the civil rights movement. In the latter, the focus shifted from African-Americans to other people including Jewish immigrants.
And behind visible initiatives of cooperation between these two groups such as the Niagara Falls agreements, and the creation of the NAACP, lurked other elements of association in strange alliances directed toward Black civic groups (both secular and religious) from the offices of Jewish Rabbis and a multiplicity of obscure personnel, most of whom operated in the dual lives of ordinary citizens and operatives of the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF). This was no secret to many people yet not a concern or a common subject of conversation among African-Americans.
Nonetheless, the reports and studies on Negroes or rather the Negresses social behavior within civic groups such as sororities became important to a particular people such that they formed the basis of the “Alliance Projects”.
Out of these projects, it is revealed that from at least one with hundreds of memos, four million African-American women were sterilized in the past 30 years and 1.5 million of them developed problems of conception resulting in miscarriages, birth anomalies stimulated from expanded laboratories which were not likely to raise the suspicion of these women because these laboratories were hotels (with specialized staffs and hired contractors) where these conventions, seminars and conferences convened.
What was obvious, 4 million children were not born and 1.5 million fetuses never saw daylight. To that, one must add the privately funded programs endorsed by authorities and the public programs such as “Planned Parenthood” or before, “Family Planning” as well as the gamut of male/female options to discourage child bearing.
Thus far, the “Alliance Project” worked smoothly among African-American women because they were integral part of the medical establishment as compare to their men, and “educated” through an alliance in ignorance by the larger number, and the complacency of a few in the hierarchy of these groups. After all, was it not the image of success to sit on the board of directors of such and such firm, or hotel?
All the while, at each of these conventions, conferences or seminars in first class hotels, medicaments or pharmaceutical drugs supplied in various products to unsuspecting vendors were distributed to these women. Many of the products appeared once or twice, disappeared to resurface altered in different formulae, packages or popular brands, thus assuring the continuation of these experiments.
Segregation with Jim Crow may have spared the pioneers of these civic groups who met in each other’s home or in black owned establishments but integration and affirmative action opened the Pandora box to covert racism, and “alliance projects”.
Even currently, black mothers, sisters and mentors lead their protégées to a brush with dead squads with cheers and accolades.
THE ALLIANCE PROJECTS
In modern history, the civil rights movement era was an interesting period for many groups vying control of the same space, Negroes claimed was theirs. For the Negroes who later will be called African-Americans, this battle for the control of their destiny ended abruptly when two prominent figures namely, Martin Luther King and Malcom Shabazz X, leaders from diverging positions, were assassinated.
From that moment emerged civic groups which existed all along but were overshadowed by the political imperatives of the time, principally, the United States’ war in Vietnam, and the civil rights movement. In the latter, the focus shifted from African-Americans to other people including Jewish immigrants.
And behind visible initiatives of cooperation between these two groups such as the Niagara Falls agreements, and the creation of the NAACP, lurked other elements of association in strange alliances directed toward Black civic groups (both secular and religious) from the offices of Jewish Rabbis and a multiplicity of obscure personnel, most of whom operated in the dual lives of ordinary citizens and operatives of the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF). This was no secret to many people yet not a concern or a common subject of conversation among African-Americans.
Nonetheless, the reports and studies on Negroes or rather the Negresses social behavior within civic groups such as sororities became important to a particular people such that they formed the basis of the “Alliance Projects”.
Out of these projects, it is revealed that from at least one with hundreds of memos, four million African-American women were sterilized in the past 30 years and 1.5 million of them developed problems of conception resulting in miscarriages, birth anomalies stimulated from expanded laboratories which were not likely to raise the suspicion of these women because these laboratories were hotels (with specialized staffs and hired contractors) where these conventions, seminars and conferences convened.
What was obvious, 4 million children were not born and 1.5 million fetuses never saw daylight. To that, one must add the privately funded programs endorsed by authorities and the public programs such as “Planned Parenthood” or before, “Family Planning” as well as the gamut of male/female options to discourage child bearing.
Thus far, the “Alliance Project” worked smoothly among African-American women because they were integral part of the medical establishment as compare to their men, and “educated” through an alliance in ignorance by the larger number, and the complacency of a few in the hierarchy of these groups. After all, was it not the image of success to sit on the board of directors of such and such firm, or hotel?
All the while, at each of these conventions, conferences or seminars in first class hotels, medicaments or pharmaceutical drugs supplied in various products to unsuspecting vendors were distributed to these women. Many of the products appeared once or twice, disappeared to resurface altered in different formulae, packages or popular brands, thus assuring the continuation of these experiments.
Segregation with Jim Crow may have spared the pioneers of these civic groups who met in each other’s home or in black owned establishments but integration and affirmative action opened the Pandora box to covert racism, and “alliance projects”.
Even currently, black mothers, sisters and mentors lead their protégées to a brush with dead squads with cheers and accolades.