2A •o NEWS/(Cit C^rtottt $«t Thursday, January 5, 2006 Afro Center moves ahead with vision Continued from page 1A ter’fl Board of Directors, ccm- tinue to serve - effectively — as interim directs? lie, alctfig with others in the Charlotte community, say abedutely “Well, certainly, it’s not something we want to do Usig-term,” Taylcs' said. “The grxxl news is the (AACC; staff has rf'ally dcsie a great job, so I think the amount of time tliat I liave to spend on staff operations is (limited). I mean, the staff really does it. People like (aanmunity cul- tiu'al programs director) Vickii (Graham, people like Gloria Duncan make a differ ence. These people have real ly done great woik. So it real ly does kind of mediate the hands-on, day-to-day tasks forme. “Right now, I can be more of a visionary rede, in terms of helping execute on key things that the center can continue to grow from.” Tb outsiders, it would appear that an abundance of growth is needed at the Afro Center. Of late, the center’s most pressing issues have been hij^y publicized; • Neariy six months after the board of directOTs voted to replace Beveriy Cureton .as executive director, a replace ment hasn't beai choeen. • There are concerns about whether the center can attract the corporate and community funds necessary to maintain and expand pro gramming. • And it’s still imcertain whether the center has the backing - frnandal and other wise — to land a new $17.9 million building, which would be vital in drawing more annual visifras. Moving forward Because of the support sys tem in place with the center’s staff and his peers on the board, Tajior said things have been going well for the AACC lately even without a perma nent executive director. A recent victory for the cen ter was a Dec. 15 fund raiser hosted at the home of Charlotte attorney Johnny Tajdor, which generated a much-needed $32,000. “We set a goal for $25,000,” Egypt apologizes for Sudan deaths Continued from page 1A encounter repeatedly playing on television news channels around the worid, a spokesman for President Hosni Mubarak expressed the coiuitrys “sorrow and pain for all the victims.’ But Suliemnn Awad also rejected criticism from the U N. High Commissioner for R>iiigee8, saying police had evicted the protest ers at the agency’s request. Tlie migrants had occupied the park since Sept. 29 to demand that officials in the nearby UNHCR offices declare them eligible for reset tlement in a third country Egypt’s Interior Ministry said the agency asked for protection l)ecause it had received threats. On Friday, High Commissioner Antonio Guterres condemned the bloodshed from his Geneva office, saying “there is no justification for such violence and loss of life." Awad said authorities ended the protest “in response to three written requests fiom the UNHCR office in Cairo." ‘'Ihe UNHCR is fully aware of how much lielp Egypt has given in this situation and how much patience it has shown,* he said The UNHCR stopped hearing the cases of Sudanese seeking refugee status after a January peace deal ended a civil war in the soutli of their homeland Criticism moiuited in Egypt and abroad as a small group of protesters gathered at the paik, ciianting “down with Mubarak" and “humanity was killed liere.’ “The police acted with extreme brutality," said New York-based Human Rights Watch “The blood is still on the sidewalks, and already the government is blaming the Sudanese refugees and migrants." The Egyptian Organization for Human Ri^ts condemned “the ui\justified violence.” Estimates on the number of dead varied Security officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk with the media, said the toll rose to 25 when several protesters succumbed to their iiyuries The Interior Ministry, however, stuck to a statement that only 12 Sudanese died and 74 police were iiyured blaming the protesters for provoking the violence. Protest leader Boutrous Deng said 26 Sudanese were killed including two women and seven children. Egyptian Dr. Aida Saifaldawlah, who had treated the Sudanese during the protest, said 30 people died and 60 were wounded. She said 2500 Sudanese were taken to camps run by security forces. Not everyone sympathized with the Sudanese. The Cairo dly government had been under heavy pressure fiom residents in the well-todo neighborhood to dose the camp. ‘Took at this place. It’s like a garbage dump," said Khaled Mohammed, a Cairo policeman who had been assigned to guard the protest camp. “They brou^t diseases and a bad repu tation to this district ” Kenyan inmates skip New Year’s lunch to support drought victims By Rodrique Ngowi int:ASS(x'iAm) pRtxs NAIROBI, Kenya Thousands of prisoners skipped their aimual New Year’s limch Sunday and instead sent the food to hun dreds of thousands of Kenyans affected by food shortages, a senior prison offi- dal said. Most of Kenya’s estimated 50,000 prisoners gave up tlieir ration of beans and stiff jwiridge made fit)m com on the day that President Mwai Kibaki declared the food shortages a naticoial disaster in a bid to speed up relief effcHts “In the next six months, up to 2.5 million of our pecple will be in need of famine relief This represents close to 10 percent of the country’s population," Kibaki said dur ing new year celebiTitions. ‘Tb ejisure that we have adequate interventions on the ground, I am declaring the famine a national disaster.’ Prisoners wanted to help after watching images of starving Kenyans on TV, reading about food shortages in newspapers and discussing the situation with visiting rel atives and among themselves, said Jehn Isaac Odongo, the commandant of Kenya’s prison staff training college. People detained in Kenya’s 93 prisons “move about when they are taken to court and this is how the ideal of skip)- ping a meal was spread,” Odongo told The Associated Press. “As human beings, they also feel like other Kenyans ... They asked themselves can they forgo one meal in a life time for the sake of other Kenyans? The answer was that wiU not even affect their health,* Odongo said. French moving to end forced marriages By Julio Gtxioy INI IJtNAllONAl. PRISS SFJt\ ICE PARIS - Fatia was in love, but mmths earlier she had been fitted into marriage with another man. “A\hen my nK)ther realized I did not want to marry the man she had chosen for me. she warned me, ‘Either you marry him, OF you are not my daughter any more’,’ Fatia, 23, said T went to the town hall to my marriage as if I was going to my own exe- aition. but nobodycared there about my feelings. Ijust got mar ried to a man I had hardly met - and whom I did not love.” In tinte she came to love scmieone else. T thou^t I was going mad* she said T was failing in love with this wcTKleriul guy, and at home I had to go to bed with another man, wheon I feared and with whom I did not have anything to do. least of all any intimate life. It was terriUe * TTus conflict continued for several months, until Fatia’s moth er agreed to do her bit now to help end the marriage She s]x>ke to Fatia’s husband and after a Icng dis|kite he accep)ted disseJu- ticHf of the marriage. Tbday, Fatia shares her life with the man she loves. Not a per- fret p>artnership. but at least this is what she wanted Tt is my life. whate\^ mistakes I ccaumit, I have to come to terms with them,” she said Fatia is not alone Initial estimates show that Kenya needs about 11 billion shillings (US $153 million) to pjTOvide emergency food to vic tims of drought. More money is needed to provide water to people and animals, educa tion, health care, seeds to farmers in preparation for the next crop season and restock ing livestock, Kibaki said. Officials are trying to deter mine how much money would be saved in the prisons, Odengo said ([Convicts at the Naivasha Maximum Security Prison said the food shortages also affect their relatives. “Those suffering out there are our brothers and sisters and we need them once we get out of this pjlace,* said One James Kamutu, who was sen tenced to death Drou^t has also tri^ered food shortages in neighboring Ethiopia and Somalia, a coun try that has had no effective government since warlords overthrew dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1994. More than 1 million Ethiopian cattle herders face extreme food shortages after the failure of rains that nor mally replenish water sources and sustain livestock throu^ the dry season. In anarchic Somalia, where about 2 million p)eople need humanitarian aid, drought has affected its southern region, leading to increases in admissions of severely mal nourished children to thera peutic feeding centers there. Associated Press reporter Ahihony Gitonga in Naivasha, Kenya, contributed to this report. David Tajdor said proudly, “and we raised $32,(X)0 —and growing. We’ve stiB got checks coming in. Those peo ple wrote $500 checks 10 days before Christmas, which is unheard of” That, he said, is something that should help quell any notions about the AACCs lack of ability to generate funds fix)m corporate and community entities. T think the community and the individual and corporate have historically been very supjportive of the center, and continue to be supp)ortive,” Tajdor said T think our chal lenge at the center has been that we go out and inform them of our needs and make requests. But I have yet to find that either of those enti ties have demonstrated that they have no interests. Tve seen quite the contrary - that there’s a great passion for the c^ter, a great willingness for the center to succeed And they’ve demonstrated that. “What was really encourag ing (about the December fund raiser) was that it was a whole different set of p)eople (involved). It wasn’t the regu lar people that always come to the center’s rescue, the people you can always count on for a check. This was new money by and laige. Board member DeAlva Glenn took this vision and pulled this together, working with Johnny That’s the kind of leadership that we’re getting fixmi the board that people don’t know about necessarily. And we’ve already got a couple other ones scheduled that we hope will be similariy successful.” Necessary asset John Mnter, who has been M inter involved vsdth the Afit) (Center as a patron over the years, said he isn’t worried about whether it ultimately can thrive. The center, Minter said is too much of a commu nity pillar to fail. Tt’s obviously a pjrocess that would work a lot better if it had (a permanent) executive director to oig^anize and focus a portion of it, but the Cultural Center itself has always had a sp)ecial relationship with the com- m u n i t y, ” Minter said “So even with out an executive director, there’s enough passion in the community to give it the kind of support it needs to be suc cessful, to help get the new building. People will come through and make donaticais because of what the Cultural (Denter means to the black community” Hence, Tajior said, the cen ter’s visions are very ambi tious. And realistic. For starters, 'Tajior and the center have set a fund-raising goal of $250,000 by the end of the fiscal year. As a matter of fact, he said, the center is “hit ting and exceeding” its bud get, which means the new executive director won’t come in with the AACC in financial straits. Tajior said the Board of Directors has “two to three candidates, quite frankly, that we like, and we’re having sev eral conversations with them.” But he would not give an indication of how soon a successor would be named It doesn’t matter, though, he said, because the center’s overall visictti will not change. “The ultimate vision is that the Afix)-American CXiltural Center become the pM'emiere arts center in the region,” Tkjior said “One, because of the variety of things we do. When you really think about, we not only can have local impact; we really should have regional and state impact as well. “When you even think about the great city of Atlanta — Atlanta won’t have what Charlotte has in the Afix>- American Cultural Center. This place would really tell our story in different £isp)ects. We want to change p)eople’s lives - how they think, how they view Afiican-Americans. And we’re excited about that.” Such vision is what makes Tajior the ideal p)erson to run the AACC at such a critical moment, Minter said ‘T think he is the kind of p)er- son with the respect and integrity in the community who win attract the siQ)p)ort the Cultural d^ter needs,” Minter said ‘Tou need a (p)er- manent) director, but, more impxjrtantly, you need the ri^t direction. “The community has always wanted more fium the center than it could give. But I think Mr. Taylor is the kind of p)er- son who has the integrity to actually fulfill everything the community needs. I know it’s v^y difficult for him to do both jobs right now. It’s not going to be easy But he’s been very successful in business, and I know he can be success ful leading the Cultural Center for however long is necessary” DERRICK BROWN COMPOSER tomorrow 9TH GRADER Prapara for greainest. 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