Sunday, September 21, 2014

I will be in D.C. all this week promoting "Triumphant Warrior" and will definitely be available to sign and discuss my memoir on this momentous occasion.
OFFICIAL PRESS RELEASE -

The much acclaimed feature-length film, Pardons of Innocen...ce: The Wilmington Ten, will have its national debut during the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation’s Annual Legislative Conference this Friday, Sept. 26 at the Renaissance Hotel on Ninth Street NW in downtown Washington, D.C.
Produced by the National Newspaper Publishers Association (NNPA) and CashWorks HD Productions, the 119-minute documentary recounts the turbulent history surrounding the troubled desegregation of New Hanover County Public School System in North Carolina during the late 1960s through 1971, and the violent incidents, reminiscent of what we saw in Ferguson, Mo. this summer, that led up to the false prosecution of eight black male students, a white female community organizer, and fiery civil rights activist, Rev. Benjamin Chavis, for protesting racial injustice.
The case of the Wilmington Ten made national and international headlines, resulting in the federal government, and specifically the Congressional Black Caucus, speaking out for justice.
Produced, written and directed by Wilmington Journal staff writer Cash Michaels, the film also traces how the Black Press, led initially by Wilmington Journal publisher Thomas C. Jervay, Sr., and subsequently over 40 years later by his daughter, publisher-editor Mary Alice Jervay Thatch, through the NNPA, ultimately pushed for, and achieved the official and dramatic exoneration of the Wilmington Ten in 2012 by North Carolina Gov. Beverly Perdue.
Featured exclusive interviews in the film include Governor Beverly Perdue, who tells how powerful people across the state of North Carolina tried to stop her from granting pardons of innocence to the Wilmington Ten; Joseph McNeil, Wilmington, NC native and member of the legendary Greensboro Four, who tells why black students had to stand up for freedom and against racism during the 1960’s and 70’s; Dr. Benjamin Chavis, NNPA interim president and leader of the Wilmington Ten, who relives the events that led up to that racially violent week in Wilmington in February 1971; Rev. Jeremiah Wright, pastor emeritus of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago, recalling how he and other clergy from the United Church of Christ came to Raleigh in 1977 and met with then Gov. James Hunt to implore him to pardon the Wilmington Ten, only to be rejected.
The film, to be screened as part of the NNPA’s 2014 Leadership Conference in Washington this week, will be shown Friday, Sept. 26th, 4 pm. at the Renaissance Hotel, 999 Ninth Street NW, across from the Washington Convention Center.
The film will be followed immediately by a panel discussion on issues impacting the African-American community, tentatively featuring members of the Congressional Black Caucus. Admission is free and open to the public.

So if you’re in Washington, D.C. on Friday, please drop by the Renaissance Hotel on Ninth Street, right across from the Washington Convention Center around 4 p.m.. we’d love to have you. And if you want to see the trailer for the film, then please go to - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XhfAQy5kx-
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Sunday, July 27, 2014

Letter from South Africa

Brother Wayne
Greetings from South Africa, the cradle of human kind.
I have just finished reading Triumphant Warrior and I would like to commend you for exposing the ugliness of humanity that we sometimes tend to forget. I was filled with rage as I read every page but was also filled with admiration for the courage that you and your nine fellow warriors exemplify.
The lowest point for me was i...n the epilogue when Gwen passed away. I cried. I feel so protective of you that I felt your loss was my loss. But soon my spirits were lifted by how you were given a second chance in life in the form of a successful career and beautiful children who have become upright citizens.



I am passing my book to a close friend and my message to him is that every black person like us who was once oppressed and is now free must read this book just to be soberly reminded of the sacrifices our forebears had to go through in order for us to gain our freedom.
Thank you for the memoir. I have already told my wife and two sons (11 and 15) to read your book (see the family on the attached picture). We would be most honoured to be counted among your friends.

Take care.
Emmanuel Tlou

Friday, July 11, 2014

Testimonials For Triumphant Warrior


Testimonials:
“I finally got around to reading it and I read it from cover to cover in about two days. It is brilliant! I love the way you wrote it as memoir. It made me laugh and cry. I am going to recommend it to all my friends and my book club.”
Beverly Tetterton, noted historian, archivist, and special collections librarian at the New Hanover County Public Library.
 “ A wonderful and rich story of injustice and vindication, of suffering and redemption.”
Dr. Phillip L. Clay—Dr. Clay grew up in Wilmington and teaches at the Massachusetts  Institute of Technology
Triumphant Warrior “is well written an easy to read. I couldn’t put it down”
Linda Pearce “ Former member of the University of North Carolina –Wilmington Board of Trustees
“Wayne Moore’s vivid, firsthand account of the long yet triumphant struggle of the Wilmington Ten is inspirational for all who cry out for freedom.
Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis-- President and CEO of the National News Paper Association --author of Psalms from Prison.
"...The following is an excerpt from the book TRIUMPHANT WARRIOR; "Jail is one of the few places in America where Blacks are guaranteed to be in the majority”….   “I knew that but it sure hit me to see it on print!!! Excellent Book!!!
Vincent Butler MBA A&T State University, Ashland University
Triumphant Warrior is a very vivid account of a long awaited justice and vindication! It is totally what I expected! Couldn't put it down!
Karen Beatty MSW East Carolina University- retired licensed social worker.
 Everyone in America should read this book!The Wilmington Ten story has long needed to be told and Wayne Moore does a beautiful job telling it. His account of how he rose with character, grace and dignity above the evil and injustices that were perpetrated against him is remarkable and inspiring. This book wonderfully elucidates the tremendous damage racism causes, not just to individuals, but to our society as a whole. This book is a must read!
“Triumphant Indeed!!! The fact that an individual could suffer so many injustices over such an extended period of time in 20th, 21st century America is incredulous. To continue, however, not only to persevere to ensure that an injustice is made right but take the time to document the events preceding and subsequent to events that span more than a thirty-year time frame is a triumph in itself. As my friend's Mother often said, if its not written down it never happened. Well this happened, Mr. Moore made it through and yes, after all those years he was triumphant. Thank you Wayne for making the world aware of the strength of your late Mother and yourself”.
C.E. Mayo
This book tells the story of The Wilmington Ten, the city of Wilmington, N.C., and a group of young people caught in Southern justice. The author is an excellent writer who tells his story well. I highly recommend it.
Georgia Champion
 
 

Other publications : Atlanta Daily World http://atlantadailyworld.com/2013/02/12/wilmington-10-member-summoning-strength-through-struggle/

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Political Pimps


        Last night on a radio program I was asked to share my thoughts about today’s black leaders. I responded that in the past we had authentic black leaders who were freedom fighters; people who would lay down their lives for the cause. Today we have a lot of political pimps posing as freedom fighters, whose deepest desire has little to with the liberation of the masses , and more to with economic and  celebrity status. This may be fine for personal upward mobility, but it does nothing to liberate the masses.

I remember many years ago, wearing overalls and marching behind a mule,  alongside SCLC leaders like Golden Frinks and Hosea Williams.  Many of today’s leaders wear designer suits while only  pretending  to lead the masses from limousines and expensive hotel ballrooms. Most of these people were tried and tested in the early day s of the struggle, but seem to have become blinded by the bright lights of their own personal success.

Thursday, May 29, 2014

Triumphant Warrior Book Tour Continues

Triumphant Warrior, the memoir written by Wilmington Ten survivor Wayne Moore, is in Week 3 of its Official Release to the world. This evening, Mr. Wayne Moore will be at the lovely Pomegranate Books in Wilmington, North Carolina for a book discussion and signing. Come prepared with your questions and feedback. For the latest news on the Triumphant Warrior Book Tour, Click on the Book Tour Tab.



Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Where Have All The Leaders Gone

  
I believe that the greatest hope for a brighter future for inner city youth and ending gang violence is for our leaders to first acknowledge, and then take steps to remove, the psychological chains of slavery. It’s time to call a spade a spade. It is self-hatred that has given rise to self-destruction and dysfunctional behavior in the inner cities of America. That self-hatred has its roots in the psychological trauma of slavery. As evidenced by significant population of successful African Americans, the psychological chains of slavery have been broken for most. For others, not so much.

For many, the pain and humiliation of indentured servitude, along with the separation of families during slavery, has left a lasting and ongoing legacy that has for far too long, been overlooked. In most cases, a defining legacy that has seldom been openly addressed. Therefore, without realizing it we have passed down from generation after generation, a legacy of inferiority and self-hatred.

Young people who hate themselves don’t have a problem hating others , or killing someone. They hate themselves because subconsciously, they believe in their minds, that in the eyes of society they aren’t good enough, that they aren’t equal. They don’t feel empowered to determine their own destiny. Therefore to them life has very little meaning. It’s kill or be killed.

We need to find ways to empower our youth. We need leadership that will subscribe to that fact. We need an army of courageous leaders to not only identify viable solutions to this problem, but also to lead a mentally enslaved peopled to the Promised Land, where self-hatred, hopelessness and fear are non-existent.

But where can we find such leadership? It seems that our most introspective and talented leaders have fled to a safe haven in the plush surroundings of  suburbia, leaving behind so many who so desperately need to bear personal witness to  the successful achievements of people who look like them. It is selfish not to acknowledge where you came from, and it is insensitive not to be willing to lead to freedom those you have left behind. Yet I understand all too well your reluctance to look back. You have little or no desire to return from whence you came, especially when your most vivid memories are rooted in desperation and hopelessness. You somehow beat the odds, you played by the rules and made it to suburbia vowing to never return to the bowels of that slave ship from which you so desperately fled.

Sunday, May 18, 2014

Honoring Mothers of the Wilmington Ten



              
The Mothers of Wilmington Ten
  

The Wilmington Journal had had just been bombed. My mother had been sitting at the kitchen table with a young civil rights leader named Ben Chavis. Suddenly the plates on the table rattled from the concussion of a loud blast around the corner from the house. With my mother leading the way, they rushed out of the door toward the sound of the explosion. As they approached ground zero, they found a shocked Tom Jervay Sr., standing in front of the building he owned. The iconic structure which stood in heart of black Wilmington, had just been blown to smithereens. It had been home to the cities’ black newspaper, The Wilmington Journal.


The 1973 bombing had come in the wake of racial hostilities that had begun in 1968 with the closing of the city's only black high school. Mr. Jervay had been the voice of the black community throughout the turmoil. No doubt, the bombing was a not-so-subtle attempt to muffle the resounding sound of Jervay’s constant drumbeat for justice. 


As if this courageous man needed reassurance, my mother looked up at him, as he stared blankly at his blackened building - she said, “We are not going to let them scare us. Bombing our community’s newspaper will not silence us.” 



That was my mother. Like Harriet Tubman and Sojourner Truth, like Rosa Parks and Coretta Scott King. Dolores F. Moore will always be remembered as one of those brave and courageous African American Women, who made a difference in the world around them, who “refused to remain silent in the face of injustice.” 



To me Dolores F, Moore was the greatest civil rights leader of all time. “Triumphant Warrior” is my attempt to honor her legacy. She once said in a documentary on the Wilmington 10. 
“Wayne would never speak up about what was happening to him, She then said “I had no choice but to step forward.” 



She is the pillar on which I lean, and the prism through which I have always viewed the future . When I was lost she helped me find my way back home. When I was weak she lifted me up; when the jaws of injustice and persecution swallowed me up, she boldly and courageously stepped forward to free me. She taught me to never give up, to never forget to hold my head up high, to be bold in the face of injustice, to love even my enemies, that it is always better to give than to receive. I cannot fill her shoes, but I promised her during her transition that I’d try to walk courageously in her footsteps. With “Triumphant Warrior” I have at least stepped forward.

Thursday, May 15, 2014

Addiction To Racism


 

 

               Seldom does anyone, black or white, ever want to be told that they have issues.  Just try getting an alcoholic to admit that they are an alcoholic, or a husband or wife to admit that they are the reason the marriage failed. It gets worse when you try to get a racist to admit to being a racist.

 

 I have for some time now, felt that racism is an addiction not unlike addiction to drugs or alcohol.  Donald Sterling   retreated into denial the second his blatant racism was revealed before the world.  After having his addiction to racism exposed, he denied that there could have been even the slightest possibility of racism underlying his “unfortunate words”.

 

Just as Scarlett O’Hara in “Gone with the Wind”, boasted about how well she treated her slaves, Sterling continues to boast about how well he treats “his” blacks, especially his black players. He talks of buying them “food, and cars, and houses”. He doesn’t have a clue how that sounds to his millionaire players, whose exceptional talents helped him make his billions. He is so blinded by his racist superiority complex, that he actually believes that his players love him. In all actuality, they probably want to open up a can of ass-whipping on him.

 

               Like most addicts, Sterling has failed to seek the help he most urgently needs.  He is learning the hard way, a very important lesson; that in 2014, he lives in a society where the majority of its citizens, at the very least, want to appear to treat its fellow citizens with a degree of fair-mindedness and humanity.  The blatant transgressions of a few brought on by years of unbridled addiction to a tradition of racism will no longer be tolerated.

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Mothers of the Wilmington Ten

There has been much said about Ben Chavis and the Wilmington Ten. No one ever mentions some of the greatest civil rights workers of all time, our mothers. As Mothers’ Day approaches, I am dedicating this entire week to the mothers of the Wilmington Ten.  

These women fought hard and valiantly for our freedom. Dolores F. Moore, Louise Hyman Carolyn Vereen, Margaret Jacobs, Etta Patrick, Sarah Wright, Elisabeth Chavis, Florence Epps, and Lue Vell Tindall. Though Ann Sheppard was also a co-defendant she was also like a mother to some of us. These brave women risked their jobs and reputations to fight for justice and freedom. They marched tirelessly around the country demanding justice for the Wilmington Ten. They car-pooled to prisons around the stare delivering comfort and home-cooked meals to us. 

Most of them never lived to see to us pardoned, but it is never too late to honor them. I honor them now. I will do a special honor to my mother in my blog on Thursday.


Monday, May 5, 2014

Melissa Harris-Perry Mentions Wilmington Ten

In case you missed it, the United Church of Christ and the Wilmington Ten were mentioned on the Melissa Harris-Perry show yesterday in a segment entitled, "Faith-based Action Oriented Toward Justice." In this segment Harris-Perry cites some of the social justice causes the United Church of Christ has championed over the years, including the Wilmington Ten. My memoir,Triumphant Warrior, details the support given by the UCC at the national and local level.

In the 1970's the United Church of Christ spent close to $1,000,000 defending the Wilmington Ten. After posting close to $500,000.00 bond for our release, they provided scholarship money for four of us to go to college. Through one of their many ministries, the Commission for Racial Justice, they paid our legal fees throughout a long and expensive appeal process. It was one of it's member churches, Gregory Congregational, from which we launched our boycott. It is only appropriate that I launch the story surrounding that boycott from a UCC affiliated church:The Church of the Good Shepherd in Ann Arbor, Michigan. 



Thursday, May 1, 2014

The Thing I am Learning to Accept

Since the soft launch of my memoir, Triumphant Warrior, in my hometown of Wilmington, I have been overwhelmed by the positive feedback I have received from local educators and former Williston Senior High classmates like Diane Emerson.

The praise from Diane means the most to me because is deeply rooted in a story that we both share. That story hit home a few years ago when I read her doctoral dissertation. It was only then that I came to realization that we had both accomplished things that are often praised in society. We had achieved a certain level of success beyond the stereotypical expectations of folk from the inner-city.

Diane once lived on the front row of Jervay Projects just across Dawson Street from Dew Drop Inn, a local hang-out for Wilmington’s most “aspiring pimps, players and pushers had obtained their kick-ass diplomas there. It was where dope addicts went to get their fixes and potheads went to cop a nickel bag.”

It has been said that living in the projects is a horrible and demeaning way of life designed to control an entire segment of society. But not everyone can be controlled. Not everyone is willing succumb to the wretched designs of the environment in which they live. Diane was such a person. Like Diane I too am a product of Jervay projects, though I was there by choice. It was the one place my mother always told me to never hangout. She had heard all the horror stories about the drugs and shootings in and around Jervay. “Nothing good can happen by you hanging out there” she said. Yet I had been hanging out in front of the Dew Drop Inn across the street from Jervay when a friend provided me a way out. 
“One evening, in September 1973, my old friend, Kojo Nambtambu, walked up to me and took me aside. He asked with worry and concern playing in his eyes. “What are you doing hanging out on a street corner? You need to be in college.”

It-is-the-greatest-possible-praise-to-be-praised-by-a-man-who-is-himself-deserving-of-praise Kojo Nantambu, no stranger to how the streets can wreck the aimless, asked me if given the chance I would go to college. I said sure, and he said, “Go home and pack your bags. We are going to Raleigh and Shaw University tonight.” I did exactly what Kojo told me to do. I went home, packed a duffel bag full of clothes, and rode off to Raleigh in Kojo’s ‘67 Dodge Rambler. Like Diane, I was able to see beyond the "now' in which I then lived. Life in and around Jervay was environment in which mere survival is worthy of praise. A place where praise is seldom looked upon as being sincere.

I have never expected praise for doing what I believe is a natural instinct. Nor have I ever wanted to be looked upon as a victim. As we approach Mother's Day, I should mention how I have long been inspired by the courage of the mothers who survived the Middle Passage, after giving birth to their young, in the bowels of slave ships. Like those mothers, people like Diane were determined that it would be themselves, and not their environment, that would determine their destiny.

Up until recently I shunned praise. Who can you trust? Praise can be the voice of friendship but it can also be the language of the insincere, the fair-weather friend. Additionally, it didn't quite seem fair to be praised for just surviving when other classmates were being praised for their accomplishments. So, I developed a way to measure when it was okay to accept praise. For me, that development has come only in the past few years - - now that I am being praised for being a man of triumph, an overcomer, a writer, an author, the founder of a social justice organization - instead of a victim. 

What I am noticing is that I am slowly learning to accept praise. It is why when a Ph.D. from the projects reaped praise on my work I jumped for joy. She had been where I had been. Done what I had done, and understood my triumph.


Thursday, April 24, 2014

Book Excerpt


My new book, Triumphant Warrior will be released Mother's Day Weekend. Here is a small excerpt:

Once, when I was a teenager, I sat on a huge rock at Fort Fisher, a state park with sugary sand beaches, squawking seagulls and keyhole urchins, all about 30 miles south of Wilmington. During the Civil War, this out-stretched earthen and brick fortress was, as one historical reference put it, “the South’s most powerful bastion.” But on this sunny afternoon, I wasn't thinking much about the Confederacy and the bulging buckets of blood, referring to the union and rebel blood that had soaked this ground. My gaze was fixed on the vast Atlantic Ocean that restlessly rippled and rolled against the shimmering horizon. I was thinking of a mighty carnage, of mass murdering and kidnapping on a global scale.


Before I fully realized it, I was reflecting on what the journey across the Atlantic must have been for my ancestors. I was lost in thought thinking about the Middle Passage. The roar of the waves as they pounded the shore gave due and timely notice of the destructive forces that most certainly confronted any vessel of that time on the high seas. It would have been hard enough for a seaman on some creaking, sea-slickened deck of a slave ship. But what about below, in the bowels of such ships? There, in a dark, dank, stink of a waking nightmare, I contemplated what it must have been like to be captured, chained, innocent of no crime other than being seen as inhuman in the cold eyes of those who captured you. Little did I know that I would, years later, get a glimpse of an answer, experiencing a 20th-century version of the slave ship in which I was captured and locked away – confined -- for no other reason than the color of my skin.
In the darkest days of my incarceration behind the “Wall” of Central Prison in Raleigh, N.C., I reached into the not-so-deep recesses of my mind for ancestral memory. I would revisit where I had actually never been, the way lots of African Americans making their first trip to Africa talk about “going back.” I daydreamed, nightmared really, of the ship and felt a real connection between my now and my people’s then. I experienced a kind of inner vision, seeing myself lying on my back in manacles, as the ship groaned all around me in a horror hold of others just like me, chained.

I could hear the dying, the sick and the able bodies unable to do anything more than rattle their shackles, and beg their gods for freedom now stolen. I’d live these atrocities in my head, even experiencing enslaved Africans giving birth to the first African Americans in those ships, and I would appreciate, that much more, being a black American. Sometimes, during my incarceration, I would open my eyes and convince myself that I didn't have it so bad behind bars compared to their struggle.

Back then behind bars, I’d tell myself an unshakable truth: I come from people who have endured much worse, like slaves, lynch mobs and the likes of the Wilmington Massacre of 1898. With that, my pain would lessen for a while, and I’d feel my shoulders begin to square and my backbone stiffen.

I wish I had known all of that, the great record of black people’s relentless courage, strength and faith, when I was a little black boy growing up in Wilmington, North Carolina.






Thursday, April 17, 2014

Wilmington Looks Into Its Past

With the pending documentary, Wilmington on Fire, a lot of people are coming forth about how their families have been affected many years later. In the memoir, Triumphant Warrior, Wayne Moore draws parallel between the massacre and what he experienced later as part of the Wilmington Ten.

Moore writes in his memoir, "Wilmington never fully recovered from that day. I know because I was swept up some 73 years later in its echo, in a kind of historical aftershock of the Wilmington Race Riot of 1898."


Tuesday, January 7, 2014

What Being Pardoned Means To Me

For the last forty years, I seldom lost sight of my  connection to all those who never once expressed any desire to either forget their past or to bury it……. Harriet Tubman…..Sojourner Truth…..Nat Turner…..Toussaint L’ouverture……Malcom X…..Martin Luther King……  Although I am over joyed to have received a pardon of Innocence after forty years of immense pain My deepest  desire was never so much that I be vindicated from any culpability in the case of The Wilmington 10 but that I courageously draw strength through struggle  from  all those Triumphant Warriors who came before me.


 The trial and  conviction  of the Wilmington Ten disrupted our lives in  ways which are unimaginable. I wish I could say that the cruelty that the state of N.C. allowed to be perpetrated on a group of mostly high school students is unprecedented. It is not. Certainly I need not list  the many instances in which the justice system has betrayed the hopes and dreams of young black men. My deepest desire is that these kinds of injustices continue to be exposed, so that what happened to the Wilmington Ten won't continue to destroy the lives of young black men. This Pardon of Innocence can't give me my life back. It does however officially bestow on me the title of Triumphant Warrior.


triumphantwarrriors.ning.com



Wilmington-Ten-Wayne-Moore-Ben-Chavis-and-codefendants