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Go See Lee Daniel's
The Butler
By John Raye
Unless you have been living under a
rock, you've heard about Lee Daniel's
The Butler, right? Well, here is my short
response; go see it!
In the 34 years he labored there, from
the days of strict legal segregation to
post-integration days, Allen saw and
heard plenty, but true to his word, kept
his lips sealed with a lock that had no
key.
Though fact is tangled up with fiction,
as is the case with most movies, this
movie packs a punch as the real McCoy.
The reality of Black life in pre and post-
segregated America shines through as
bright as a full moon on a cool summer
night.
It is a wonder, an absolute wonder, that
all Back people in America are not cer
tified hopelessly insane. America just
didn't abuse and mistreat our physical
bodies, but it did something even more
evil and sinister. It took away our dignity.
It tampered with our minds and nearly
destroyed our spirit. When you con
sider the hellacious mental whipping
we endured, all of us ought to be crazy.
August 2013
And how Allen, the real White House
butler, for example, maintained his
sense of balance and good judgment
while working in the harsh climate of
racial segregation, surpasses all human
understanding. He had to be a special
man, created, much like a Jackie Robin
son or Martin Luther King, for a special
occasion, and a special season.
Based loosely on a true story. The
Butler will touch your head as well at
your heart as it chronicles the life of
Black people in America as told through
the eyes of one Eugene Allen ( named
Cecil Gaines in the movie) who stayed
on the job for 34 years serving under
eight presidents.
As he was instructed on his first day on
the job, "you see nothing, you hear
nothing, you just serve". In other words,
keep your mouth shut and you keep
your job!
The Butler is a movie with plenty of
star power, headed, of course, by queen
Oprah Winfrey and the redoubtable.
Forest Whitaker, whose tormented
portrayed of Allen, will make your flesh
crawl. An Oscar nod for such a riveting
performance would not be worthy of
the message he brings to this nation,
and really to the world. Instead of an
Oscar, Forest Whitaker ought to be
awarded a Nobel Prize for human suf
fering and deprivation. The Queen
ought to knight him; the Pope ought
to saint him, and Black folk ought to
thank him for telling a story, and a true
story, mind you, that has never fully
been told.
Unlike the recent scandal in Rome
where the Pope's trusted butler stole
and leaked some of his most confiden
tial and private papers, this black White
House butler took whatever he heard
and saw to the graveyard.
Unlike the Pope's trusted butler who
went public with what he knew, Allen,
despite being offered millions to write
a tell-all, walked the walk, but would
not talk the talk. He could have made
a boatload of money because he saw
and heard stuff that most people will
never read or hear, not even in the his
tory books.
Here and there, some scenes will put
tears in your eyes and a frog or two
in your throat, while others will make
you laugh through the pain. No matter
what the critic's say, when you walk out
of that movie, you will know, beyond
question that most Black people have
been to hell and back, more than one
time.
But this humble butler, forced to turn
his cheeks time and time again, never
wavered from the advice given to him
to," see nothing... you hear nothing.".
Two years ago, at age 90, he surren
dered his life on this earth and took his
White House secrets to his grave.
Thus, the psychic damage is unknown
and incalculable. Even today, Willie
Lynch is still messing with us.
Still, we have survived, and survived
with huge, magnificent accomplish
ments, and a measure of human dig
nity, all still intact.
And yes, the freedom struggle has
been long and difficult. But like a tree
planted by the water, we cannot be
removed. We cannot be stopped. We
cannot be, and will not be denied. Like
the proverbial willow tree blowing in
the wind, we were beaten and bent-
butdid not break.
Lee Daniel's The Butlers, shows you
how we did it.
-John Raye, a life-wellness-health-busi-
ness coach, is a 7 year cancer survivor.
He lives in Kernersville, NC. (336) 782-
8383; rayeandrosie@aol.com
What America did and continues to do
to its Black citizens, amounts to nothing
less than high crimes against humanity.
If truthfully, accurately, and fully told,
the Black man's sojourn in America
would make the birds stop singing,
the oceans dry up and even the rocks
would cry out.
The move is rich in symbolic texture,
in that, most Black people are able to
relate to every scene because real
ity always touches a nerve. Whitaker's
face carries an invisable pain that we
will instantly recognize, but more
importantly, can still feel because, lord
knows, it still hurts.
By by Dr. Janey Thorntori, Food,
■ Coi
Nutrition and Consumer Services
Deputy Under Secretary
As we continue to combat childhood
obesity in America, I am proud to say
that this Back to School season our
school cafeterias are at the heart of
offering great nutrition for our kids. Stu
dents and schools are embracing the
healthier lunches offered through the
National School Lunch Program that,
together with the healthier breakfasts
offered through the School Breakfast
Program beginning this school year and
the recently announced "Smart Snacks
in School" nutrition standards that kick
in next year, continue our children on
the path towards future health and hap
piness.
So how are school cafeterias faring with
ail the meal updates across the nation?
Like I said, they are putting their hearts
into it.
Nowhere is this more evident than in
Florida, Montana, Oklahoma, North
Carolina, South Carolina and Colorado,
where all or nearly all school cafeterias
are now serving meals that meet the
new standards. Kudos to them!
In fact, at the end of this past school year,
79 percent of all participating school
districts across the country had notified
their states that they were meeting the
new standards! This represents a sig
nificant achievement for the first year
of implementation. We are confident
that the remaining schools will make
the changes needed to qualify for the
The AC Phoenix
performance based reimbursement in
the coming year.
Back to Healthy School
Meals: USDA Con
gratulates Six States
for Nearly 100% of
Schools Meeting New
Meal Standards
In Colorado, for example, Jane Brand,
Director of the Office of Nutrition at
the Colorado Department of Education,
tried several innovative approaches to
become the first state to complete cer
tification and validation of all schools.
Initially, the Colorado staff mailed jump
drives with all the paperwork and
instructions to each school district.
Some schools were better than others
at mastering the system and utilized
the jump drives. For the rest. Brand and
her staff hit the road and met face to
face with dozens of districts small and
large across Colorado. The hands-on
approach worked to relieve the stress
many districts felt in getting through
the process. Brand also cross-trained
her staff and encouraged school dis
tricts to share ideas and information on
how to master the process.
The best news is that changes in schools
are expected to have a positive impact.
Research shows that school-based pro
grams that encourage healthy eating,
physical activity and positive body
image attitudes are among a range
of actions that can help reduce levels
of childhood obesity. We are already
seeing a promising reversal in child
hood obesity rates, and this fall, with
a return to healthy eating in schools,
I expect nothing less than more prog
ress.
- See more at: http://blogs.usda.
gov/2013/08/16/back-to-healthy-
school-meals-usda-congratulates-
six-states-for-nearly-100-of-schools-
meeting-new-meal-standards/#sthash.
QwWxQ3sc.dpuf
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MICHAEL LOIMG
ATOC Lawns and
Tree Service
(336) 404-4640
(704) 606-6057