lune 13. 2007 Page A3 il!‘ IJo rtlau h © bseruer Local Grads Honored Bridge Builders Celebrate The community is invited to join the Bridge Builders as the mentoring group celebrates its African ances­ tors and local high school gradu­ ates. The Bridge Builders MaafaCom- memoration and Announcement takes place Saturday, June 16 at 8 p.m. at the University of Portland - Buckley Center Auditorium, 5(XM) N. Willamette Blvd. Maafa is a Swahili word mean­ ing, "great catastrophe." So this special event marks the great catas­ trophe of centuries ago when 50 million Africans died as they were transported during the middle pas­ sage from Africa to slave-trading countries including America. The Bridge Builders will first rec­ ognize its senior graduates who are participating in the organization's African-centered rights of passage program through the Prospective Gents and Imminent Ladiesof Vir­ tue clubs at the Announcement program. More than 15 passage candi­ dates from schools, including Benson, Central Catholic, Grant, Aloha, David Douglas, Roosevelt, and Jesuit, will take part in the cer­ emony and give aw e-inspiring speeches that they have spent months preparing. After the Announcement the students, their families and guests will gather at the knoll on the cam ­ pus, where the Ben York statue honoring the black member of the Lewis and Clark Exposition is lo­ cated. White helium-filled balloons will be released to commemorate the millions of lives in the Maafa. Negro spirituals will also be sung. Because this is a special cer­ emony all attendees are asked to where white in accordance, and bring several of their own white helium balloons. For more inform ation, visit www.thebridbuilders.org. in terim Superintendent Selected Ed Schmitt, retiring superinten­ dent of the Multnomah Education Service District, will take the helm of Portland Public Schools as in­ terim superintendent after Vicki Phillips leaves June 30. Phillip is leaving PPS to join the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The school board has launched a recruitmentandhiringeffort. Mon­ day it hired Schmitt to lead the district on a temporary basis. A fo rm er E ng lish te a c h e r, Schmitt worked for Portland Public Schools from 1980 to 1996, and served as PPS Director of Person­ nel before he became Superinten­ dent of the Multnomah ESD. n 1 3 , ■ II w r| Ij 1? I , j IWfN 1 \S S r f will LÌ4 b ^> photos in P a i e N ei eeedi /T iii P orti w ii O bni km k Twin Protests on Martin Luther King O pponents to a Planned P arenthood clinic rally on o n e sid e o f N ortheast Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard where it c r o s s e s B eech S tre e t (left) while p roponents e x p re ss their support on the op p o site sid e (above). The duo p ro te sts were held Thursday a t the p ro p o sed site o f the family planning center, which is controversial b e c a u se o f abortion services. The Portland D evelopm ent C om m ission approved the plans earlier this year after hearing from both s id e s in the issu e . Finding a Voice with Poetry and Songs Inspirations from a local author by N icole R onal H ooper T he P ortland O bserver W hen D arlene S olom on- Rodgers read a poem by the fa­ mous African American author Nikki Giovanni she found hercall- ing. As a little girl, she hadn't heard G iovanni's story about Santa Claus being a black man, espe­ cially since she was bused to a school where the majority of the students were white. Some two decades later. Solomon-Rodgers, also known as Blacque Butterfly, is now a poet, singer and motiva­ tional speaker. She’s a Jill of all creative trades in addition to her job as Health Access Coordina­ tor at the Portland teen homeless shelter Outside In. Butterfly took her name from a Soundsof Blackness song, “Black Butterfly.” She believes it was divine intervention brought about aftertwo friends in the same three- way phone conversation talked of butterflies in their car and on top of a flag pole. “From that point on, I was Blacque Butterfly," she said. In 2005, she became an author with the self-published "BlackGirl Blacque Butterfly Can I Comb Your Hair,"acol lection of 30 pages of poetry. She made 250 copies and managed to sell them. "I was opening for (local singer) Liv Warfield and wanted a product to sell and there’s nothing more satisfying than publishing it your­ self,” she said. Butterfly's entrepreneur spirit didn't stop there. In 2006, she came out with Col- lide-A-Scope, a spoken word CD set to music and with other local artists, including her best friend, activist Rochell “Ro Deezy” Hart. Butterfly can understand as a fellow artist and Oregonian, the disappointment Ro felt when she was rejected for a reading at Powell’s Books earlier this year. Because o f the book seller's fallout with her home girl she said she will never shop there again. She says she com m itted to shop­ ping only at black-ow ned busi­ nesses to help rejuvenate the community. Another thing Butterfly will never do is watch certain television shows, like "Flavor of Love” or the spin-off "Charm School.” “ I think its te le v isio n or hellivision that is doing a disser­ vice and showing us what we we're supposed to be doing by watching TV,” she says. "If we spent more time with our kids then things would be better." Butterfly watches Vh I Soul, but true to form, the once neo-soul channel is piggy backing on the same tried and true rap videos chock full of booties, booze and bling. "I was so mad at Nelly for his song "Tip Drill," said Butterfly. The video is more famous than the song, in which rapper Nelly is shown slid­ ing a credit card in between a woman’s buttocks. “The rap game is run by media moguls,” said Butterfly. "Thatgoes back to people thinking there is no integrity in our art.” Technology, she feels, is partly to blame, with people more con­ nected to iPods than each other. She recalls days when blacks in Portland were segregated and how M H N M M M M I MHCC President Takes Job in California the "clan" used to march on North Williams Avenue. "We learned to lean on each other because we didn’t have a choice. It was more community and social based," said Butterfly. She grows frustrated when the black community acts negatively towards each other, especially chil­ dren. Butterfly, who is the mother of one adult son. made an effort to instill him with respect towards el­ ders. “When you see someone on the street who looks like you and you don't speak to them, that is just as bad as gentrification," she said. In the winter. Butterfly plans to move to Atlanta, a city she says is more conducive to her creativity. "It's been hard but it's time for me to go. If it would have been up to me I would have left five years ago," said Butterfly. "But. it w asn't the right lime." You can catch Blacque Butter­ fly on June 15 at 9 p.m. at New Born Tribe, 3525 N.E. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. For more in fo rm atio n about upcom ing sh o w s v isit m y s p a c e .c o m / blacquebutterflypdx.com . July 18, 2007 THE ALAN BROADBENT L.A. TRIO @THE OLD ALAN BRO AD BEN T sp^doXTen a,7pm W " 1 catering by A Simple Elegance KMHD 89.1 FM presents in association w/Fendel-Allen Productions The Alan Broadbent L.A. Trio Tickets available during the KMHD Spring pledge drive June 14—June 17, 2007 or by calling 503.491.7271 or at www.kmhd.fm Beautiful Father's Day Portraits. Following six years of serv ice sonable driving distance to both of to Mt. Hood Community College. his sons and grandchildren. 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