Calendar

9896
Sep
8
Tue
Release the Tapes! @ Anywhere
Sep 8 @ 12:00 pm – Sep 10 @ 5:00 pm

BART Police Chief: Kenton Rainey:

We demand that BART publicly release the body camera footage from the West Oakland BART shooting immediately.

Phone: 510.464.7022,
E-mail: krainey@bart.gov
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bartsf?fref=ts
Twitter: @SFBART

Last week, a man was shot and critically injured at the West Oakland BART Station after a struggle with two BART police officers. BART police allege that the man shot himself in the stomach with his own gun after resisting arrest on the platform.

However, one witness who took a video of the incident says that he heard a “pop” from across the platform. He then saw a black man on the ground and a policeman on top of him and the man on the ground was yelling, “They shot me! They shot me!”

The two officers involved in the incident were wearing body cameras, and an official statement from BART claims that the footage is being reviewed. BART’s statement also declared their intention to charge the man with attempted murder.

But past incidents involving BART police, like the murder of Oscar Grant in 2009, demonstrate that we cannot trust BART police’s account of the events, or to review the footage without oversight from the public.

For the next #72hours, we are urging the public to call, e-mail, Facebook and Tweet BART, and demand that they #releasethetapes. If their version of events is accurate and true, they should have no problem sharing the body camera and BART station surveillance footage with the public.

While body cameras cannot provide a comprehensive recounting of the incident, they can shed some light and increase transparency. BART needs to know that we are watching, and that we are seeking accountability. We demand that BART publically release the body camera footage from the West Oakland BART shooting immediately.

BART Police Chief: Kenton Rainey

Phone: 510.464.7022,
E-mail: krainey@bart.gov
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bartsf?fref=ts
Twitter: @SFBART

Please use the hashtags #72hours and #releasethetapes.

Supporters:
Anti-Police Terror Project
Black Power Network
Coalition for Police Accountability
Ella Baker Center for Human Rights
National Lawyers Guild

59492
Alameda Fracking Ban Hearing @ Alameda County Building, Room 160
Sep 8 @ 6:00 pm – 10:00 pm

fracking-well.jpgA comprehensive proposal—not simply to prohibit fracking, but all additional oil and gas extraction—is up for approval by the Alameda County Planning Commission.  Under the current East County Area Plan and the Alameda County Zoning Ordinance, conditional use permits can be granted for oil and gas operations.  Under the proposed changes to the zoning regulations, such conditional use permits would no longer be available, effectively preventing the expansion of oil extraction in Alameda County.

Opposition includes E & B Natural Resources, operator of wells in East Alameda County, which objects to any limitation on its current operations, and Californians for Energy Independence, a petroleum industry front group, which argues that the County should defer to the State of California in these matters, despite—or because of—the many failures of state agencies to adequately regulate oil producers.

Because we expect opposition to come out in force, we need to pack the auditorium with our own folks, pumped up (you should pardon the expression) and ready to testify, or to hold signs during the hearing.

Will Alameda join Santa Cruz, Mendocino, San Benito and Butte counties in saying no pasaran to the oil industry?  Passage of this proposal by the Planning Commission is the last hurdle before the Board of Supervisors makes the final decision.  Come join this historic effort!

Need a ride?  Contact bstebbins14@gmail.com.

58846
Sep
9
Wed
LibraryGate in Berkeley, Continued @ Downtown Berkeley Library
Sep 9 @ 5:30 pm – 8:00 pm

Thanks to you and other great supporters, we’ve had a terrific first step in the dismantling of LIBRARYGATE.
Last Monday, the library director resigned, opening the way for the possibility of productive re-building at Berkeley Public Library.

And, we’re not done yet!

Now, the pressure mounts to persuade the Board of Library Trustees to dialog openly with the community. WE NEED YOUR PRESENCE this coming WEDNESDAY. BOLT will meet and it’s pretty certain that the plans for how to search for the new director will be the focus.  Just like we’ve been doing, members of the library public and current and retired staff will sign up for a three-minute public comment speaking slot.  We’re looking for YOU!

And your friends.

This meeting will be a turning point.  We’re negotiating for an immediate investigation into what’s gone wrong with the library collection and treatment of staff.  We need the Board and the library administration to learn from past mistakes.  We want to insure that the search for a new library director is a national search for candidates of diverse backgrounds, who have a commitment to the Berkeley community and to the printed word in all its forms.  We need an independent interim library director who’s not beholden to the policies and practices of newly-retired Jeff Scott, and who can trustfully restore staff morale.  We need to restore a collegial collection development policy and practice, not limited to book selection and weeding by two managers.  We need to return all librarians to their work of selecting and weeding the collection.  And we want to restore the rampantly weeded collection by reinstating the last copies of titles that were massively tossed.

59480
Berkeley Police Review Commission: BLM, UASI, Urban Shield @ South Berkeley Senior Center
Sep 9 @ 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm

At 7pm the commission resumes work on the investigation of the December 2014 police response to Black Lives Matter protests. See below for more information.

Prior to the full meeting, the Mutual Aid Subcommittee will meet from 6 to 7 to discuss BPD agreements with agencies like the intelligence fusion center (NCRIC), UASI (Homeland Security anti-terrorism funding program, which pays for Urban Shield), and UCPD. I will send more information on this subcommittee meeting separately.

Public comment is welcome at the beginning of each meeting.

Here is the agenda packet for the full 7pm commission meeting: http://www.cityofberkeley.info/uploadedFiles/Police_Review_Commission/Commissions/PRC%20Pkt.%209-9-15.pdf http://www.cityofberkeley.info/uploadedFiles/Police_Review_Commission/Commissions/PRC%20Pkt.%209-9-15.pdf

You may wish to review the packet before coming to the meeting, as it includes:

1. A memo to the city council announcing a delay in reporting back on the investigation (council meeting of December 1)
2. Recommendations already passed by PRC as part of the investigation
3. Proposed outline of overall report to council
— And unrelated to the investigation:
4. Right to Watch: new police General Order, and a protest by CopWatch
5. Proposed commission work plan for the rest of the year
6. Letter sent by PRC to council on proposed changes to BPD General Order N-17 governing Suspicious Activity Reporting to the NCRIC fusion center.

59487
WHOLE FOOD ACTION COMMUNITY GROUP MEETING @ Show Map First Congregational Church of Oakland (United Church of Christ)
Sep 9 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

We need to come together and talk, work out where to go from here with these issues around the brutalization of the young black man at Whole Foods. Please join us and please bring your ideas so we can keep moving forward.
(We will be meeting in the Atrium Area) Look for signs

59494
Why You Should be A Socialist @ Dwinelle Hall, Room 211
Sep 9 @ 7:30 pm – 9:30 pm

The racism of police violence, climate change, sexism and homophobia, war, economic inequality.  The injustices of American society stang exposed for everyone to see.  Yet the many apologists for capitalism claim that whatever its defects there is no alternative to a system that puts corporate greed ahead of human need.  We disagree!  Join the International Socialist Organization and discuss what socialism is and how you can get involved today in the struggle to change the world.

Organized by the International Socialist Organization

59493
Sep
10
Thu
Dante’s Sentencing @ Superior Court of California County of Alameda, Dept 11
Sep 10 @ 8:15 am – 12:45 pm

After many months of appearances, Dante is accepting a felony plea deal. Let’s show up to send him onward to probation and moving forward with his life! The sentencing appointment was specific to the minute, so be on time! That is not, of course, a guarantee that the courts will be prompt.

Check the anti-rep website and Facebook for any change or postponement before going!

59414
Justice For Mario Martinez: Rally At Corizon
Sep 10 @ 10:30 am – 12:00 pm

A few weeks ago you may have signed a petition demanding an investigation be conducted in the death of an inmate, Mario Martinez, at Santa Rita County Jail. We invite you to come out and support our rally at the Corizon office. Corizon is the healthcare provider at Santa Rita County Jail who is partially responsible for Mario’s death on July 15, 2015.

We will meet at 10:30AM at 1130 Ballena Blvd in the city of Alameda. We will march from this location to 1150 Ballena Blvd. where Corizon’s office is located. The event will begin at 11:30 AM promptly.

Please RSVP and let me know if we can count on you to join the rally. Thank you for signing the petition, your support and your time, Have a great day.

59498
SF: OUR CITY IS NOT FOR SALE : THE CITY TAKES CITY HALL @ San Francisco City Hall
Sep 10 @ 11:00 am – 1:00 pm

The event formerly known as the Mission Takes the Planning Commission, has expanded! We make history on 9/10 at 11am!

11 AM :: RALLY/ACTION
:::: Activities/Actions throughout the DAY ::::

((( THUR. 9/17 is ROUND 3 )))
Save the Date :: Details TBA soon!

Build Affordable Housing • Stop the Evictions • Preserve SF Arts and Culture • Just Cause Evictions 2.0 • YES on I • YES on F • Don’t Supersize SOMA • No Beast on Bryant • Save Yerba Buena Island Community

Organized by ACCE • Bayan NorCal • Calle 24 Latino Cultural District • Causa Justa :: Just Cause • The Cultural Action Network • Gabriela SF • Our Mission No Eviction • Plaza 16 Coalition • San Francisco Antidisplacement Coalition • SoMa Action Committee • and many more!

__________________________________________
SIGN THE PETITION http://tinyurl.com/BeastOnBryant
SIGN UP FOR MORE INFO http://goo.gl/forms/3AjSq0lMtK

FOR UPDATES throughout the day on 9/10: follow on Twitter: @CulturalActNet @PlazaSixteen or follow our Facebook pages

– Please RSVP and stay tuned on the event page.

Please turn out for this and bring 10 friends!

#NoBeastOnBryant

59496
PICKET WHOLE FOODS! STOP ANTI-BLACK VIOLENCE!! @ Whole Foods Oakland
Sep 10 @ 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm

On Thursday Sept. 4th a Black man who was attempting to make a purchase with his EBT, was beaten and bloodied by armed security guards at the Lake Merritt Whole Foods. This man was left unconscious in a large pool of his own blood out front of the store, while employees called for more back-up rather than sending for paramedics.

This inhumane beating adds to the national narrative around a crisis of anti-Black violence. Currently, every 28hrs a black person is murdered by police, vigilantes, or security guards.*

This latest brutality is also in context of many ongoing discriminatory practices and anti-Black policies engaged by Whole Foods:

**Whole Foods materially supported the state violence in Baltimore**
During the Baltimore protests, Whole Foods distributed free water bottles to the National Guard and created a photo opportunity, rather than providing any food/water donations to the Baltimore children left hungry by the forced school closures.

**Whole Foods depends on Prison Labor**
WF uses exploitative prison labor in Colorado to supply products to their stores nationally.

*Whole Foods has a poor labor record**
WF is known for their union-busting and anti-worker labor practices.

*Whole Foods was a significant gentrifying force in Oakland*
WF only opens locations in areas that meet their median income standards. The Lake Merritt location was an exception to this policy; in 2007 this store was opened based on a projected rise in income. Meaning WF both fostered and depended on the gentrification of this area in particular.

On Thursday Spet 10th, we are calling for a picket at Whole Foods with the following demands:

1. Disarm all security guards at the store
2. Compensate for the pain, suffering, and humiliation of the attack victim
3.Issue a public apology
4. Suspend all managers on duty that night, as well as the employees who called for more backup rather than calling the paramedics.
5. Provide discounts and giveaways for EBT customers, in solidarity with the working families being displaced from the area.
6. Require on-going staff training on how anti-Black racism functions within customer service

Please turn out with SIGNS and BANNERS for a two-hour picket line out front of the Whole Foods. This violence against our community has to stop!! And we will not support a business that promotes these acts of brutality!!

~This event is being hosted by members of black.seed and the Anti-Police Terror Project~

*This statistic comes from Malcolm X Grassroots Project annual report, Operation Ghetto Storm.

59489
Screening of : Cowspiracy-The Sustainability Secret @ Berkeley Fellowship of Unitarian Universalists' Hall
Sep 10 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

“Cowspiracy-The Sustainability Secret” is a ground breaking feature length environmental documentary on the most destructive industry on our planet today. The intrepid filmmakers investigated the cattle industry and its impact on climate change and global warming. Don’t miss this exciting, shocking yet humorous film. It is as eye-opening as it is inspiring. Find out why the nation’s leading environmental organizations are afraid to talk about this seemingly obvious issue.

Doors open 6pm. Refreshments served.
Wheelchair accessible.

59482
Sep
11
Fri
Stop Urban Shield! @ Alameda County Sheriff's Office
Sep 11 @ 4:00 pm – 5:30 pm

Protest Alameda County Sheriff Ahern’s

militarized police exhibit and exercises

 

Stop Urban ShieldUrban Shield is the largest SWAT training & war-weapons expo in the world. We will gather on September 11th, across communities, to end it & resist police militarization around the world!

Join the Stop Urban Shield Coalition to say NO to policing, militarization and state violence!

While Urban Shield is just one front in the fight against the state’s attempt to militarize every aspect of our lives – from its war-making here and abroad, to the increasing presence of police in our schools, to the systemic murder of Black and Brown people at the hands of police – stopping Urban Shield would be a major victory against this growing trend of militarization in cities everywhere, from Oakland to Ferguson to Baltimore.

Join us in resisting violence against our communities and in fighting for genuine visions of justice, safety, and self-determination.

 

Organized by American Friends Service Committee, Arab Resource & Organizing Center, Bay Area Latin America Solidarity Coalition, Civilize the Cops, Code Pink, Critical Resistance, International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network, Iraq Veterans Against the War, Justice for James Rivera, Million Hoodies, Oakland Privacy Working Group, Oscar Grant Committee, Palestinian Youth Movement, Restore the 4th, San Leandro-SAFE, School of the Americas Watch-Oakland & San Francisco, UAW Local 2865, War Resisters League, Xicana Moratorium Coalition

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

59427
CANCELLED: Urban Shield Protest in Pleasanton. @ Doubletree Hotel
Sep 11 @ 6:00 pm – 7:30 pm
The Anastasio Project; a performance on race relations, state brutality and border violence. @ Eastside Arts Alliance
Sep 11 @ 8:00 pm – 11:00 pm

THE ANASTASIO PROJECT RETURNS TO OAKLAND
The widely acclaimed multidisciplinary arts project brings to life  local stories of state violence

WHEN: September 11 – 13 and 18-20, @ 8:00 pm

Across the country, the #blacklivesmatter movement has forced to the surface a conversation that has been happening under the mainstream radar in communities of color for centuries. Today, America can no longer ignore the epidemic of state violence that she is enacting on Black, Brown and poor communities by her various law enforcement agencies.

For two weekends – September 11-13 & 18-20 – in partnership with Eastside Arts Alliance, José Navarrete and Debby Kajiyama of NAKA Dance Company surface these conversations once more by returning to the stage their acclaimed production of the The Anastasio Project; a multidisciplinary performance investigating race relations, state brutality and border violence.

Combining interactive video, original music, a large-format mural, spoken word and dance, The Anastasio Project draws on personal experiences of violence endured by people of color living in Oakland to create a profound and moving community event.

Prior to the performance, audience members are encouraged to explore the art galleries where pieces by various local artists will kick start conversations on the impacts of state violence in communities of color. For the complete list of artists, visithttp://nkdancetheater.com/anastasio/.

The Anastasio Project was inspired by the tragic story of Hernandez-Rojas, a Mexican national who was beaten to death by a dozen customs and border patrol agents at the U.S.-Mexico border in 2010.

“When we saw the cell phone footage of the beating of Hernandez-Rojas, we were devastated as we watched the Border Patrol inflict so much pain on another human being,” said Kajiyama in an interview with The Triangle Lab. “People were screaming at the Border Patrol to stop; Anastasio was asking for clemency; but nothing stopped the officers, and they continued to beat him.”

These are the kinds of stories flooding the daily airwaves and social media platforms of America and why the return of The Anastasio Project is so timely and critical. “The youth that we’ve worked with at Eastside Arts Alliance are not afraid to tell the truth and have themselves become the vehicles for social change,” said Navarrete. “We are concerned about their future, and the legacy that we leave for them. Most people from East Oakland are people of color, and youth are likely targets for racial profiling and police brutality. We want to learn from them; we want to share their perspectives.”

The Anastasio Project asks how we can avoid repeating the tragedies of Hernandez-Rojas, Sandra Bland, Mike Brown, Natasha McKenna, Tamir Rice and thousands like them in cities across the country.

Three of the performances will include pre-show conversations with community activists and organizers including Bertha Gutierrez & Families of San Diego (9/12), Cat Brooks of the Anti Police-Terror Project (9/13) and Mujeres Unidas y Activas with Matt Gonzalez from the SF Public Defenders Office (9/19). These dialogues will explore the complexities of state sponsored terror: ICE, the police, FBI, the military and their supporters. All conversations begin at 4:00 pm and will be followed by a light reception prior to the performance.

Development of The Anastasio Project is supported by: The MAP Fund, the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation; William & Flora Hewlett Foundation; City of Oakland Cultural Funding; The Kenneth Rainin Foundation; The East Bay Community Foundation’s East Bay Fund for Artists; The Open Circle Foundation; the Center for Cultural Innovation Investing in Artists Grant; EastSide Arts Alliance; Theatre Bay Area’s CA$H Grant; the Zellerbach Family Foundation; the Akonadi Foundation; the Della Davidson Prize; the California Arts Council Creating Places of Vitality Grant, California Shakespeare Theater’s Triangle Lab, Oakland Fund for Children and Youth, and many generous individual donors.

NAKA Dance Theater and Eastside Arts Alliance present the return of The Anastasio Project

TICKETS: To purchase tickets online visit brownpapertickets.com.

For more information visit nkdancetheater.com or eastsideartsalliance.org.

59444
Sep
12
Sat
Forty-two years after the Chile coup: Where do we stand? @ La Pena
Sep 12 @ 10:00 am – 12:00 pm

FREE Lecture: Chile at La Peña

La Peña will host short presentations and a participatory dialogue: Forty-two years after the coup: Where do we stand? Topics will include the effects of neoliberalism, current governments and militarism.

Helene Lorenz
Hector Salgado
Ellen Moore

During the month of September, La Peña remembers the barbarism of the 1973 military coup in Chile, mourns the deaths, disappearances, and torture of friends and compañeros, reflects on the invasive role of the United States foreign policy in Latin America, and celebrates the militants, solidarity activists, and cultural workers who responded to injustice with their passions and sometimes their lives. On Friday evening, September 11, the Peña community will gather at 6:30 for a shared potluck dinner, ceremonies, music, and compañerismo.

At this event topics will include the effects of neoliberalism, current governments and militarism, the cooptation of left politicians, the role of cultural resistance, indigenous cosmovisions and sumac kawsay, ecosocialism, and other radical imaginations of the way forward in old and new forms of community organizing.

Other events:

On Saturday, September 19th, we will screen the documentary “Special Circumstances” on U.S. foreign policy in the 1970’s, the effects of the coup, and the current legacies of Pinochet. Director Hector Salgado will lead a conversation afterward. On Thursday, 17th, La Peña will screen the documentary “Archeology of Memory” on exile and the role of public memory and memorial. Director Marilyn Mulford will lead a conversation afterward. Donations requested if affordable to help La Peña carry on.

59519
If Black Lives Don’t Matter, Whose Do? @ Niebyl Proctor Library
Sep 12 @ 10:00 am – 12:00 pm

The Political Affairs Discussion Group sponsored by the Communist Party (Oakland/Berkeley) invites you to a discussion of:

If Black Lives Don’t Matter, Whose Do?
Class Struggle and the Fight Against White Supremacy

Background readings:
Jarvis Tyner, ‘Black Lives Matter! The Struggle Against Police Murders, Brutality and Abuse
http://www.politicalaffairs.net/black-lives-matter-the-struggle-against-police-murders-brutality-and-abuse/
Jake Halpern, ‘The Cop’ New Yorker Profile of Darren Wilson
http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/08/10/the-cop

59445
Justice 4 Pedie Perez BBQ
Sep 12 @ 11:30 am – 2:00 pm

Come support the Perez family in their continuing quest for Justice for their son, Pedie, shot and killed, unarmed, by a Richmond Police Officer one year ago. Learn about new developments in the ongoing lawsuit.

There may be a short march after the BBQ.

59400
Omni Work Party @ Omni Commons
Sep 12 @ 12:00 pm – 4:00 pm

*Who*: You–at ANY level of skill (newbs encouraged to attend)!
*What*: Work Party (fun, learning, labor, love)! — Also see TASKS list below!!!
*When*: *Sat 9/5 @ 12 noon* (And Every Saturday, FOREVER)!
*How*: With our bare hands, feet, noses, etc — plus tools and stuff!
*Why*: Omni Commons needs some serious elbow grease to get ship-shape, for the safety, accessibility, and delight of all!

*TASKS*
* Doors (re-hanging and installing closers)
* Carpentry in the basement
* Plumbing, tile, and other water-related activities
* Drywall ’til you drop
* Felt the feet of our ballroom furniture
* Protect our building from confused critters like pigeons!
* General cleaning / tidying / arranging / creativity / expression / explosions / excitement / activity!!!!!!!
* much much much more!

Please join your fellow volunteers, especially the zany and rambunctious
Building and Maintenance Working Group (woooohooooooooooooooooooooo)!Omnivore480

 

59463
Strike Debt Bay Area Meeting – Fighting Back Against Unjust Debt @ Oscar Grant Plaza Amphitheater
Sep 12 @ 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm

 photo debtors-assembly-6-6-15-fp_zpsd4iiri17.jpg

Come and help us draw awareness to and fight unjust debt!
Come get connected with SDBA’s many projects!
  • student debt resistance
  • organizing for public banking.
  • advocating for Postal banking.
  • ongoing study group
  • helping out America’s only non-profit check-cashing organization and fighting against usurious for-profit pay-day lenders and their ilk
  • our famous Strike Debt radio program
  • staging Debtors’ Assemblies
  • Restaging our recent presentation on money and debt at the US Social Forum
  • Working on debarring US Banks that have been convicted of felonies from municipal contracts
  • saving the Berkeley Post Office and stopping the Staples non-union takeover of good Post Office jobs
  • and much more!
 Also check out our website, our twitter feed, and our Facebook page.
Strike Debt Bay Area is an offshoot of Occupy Oakland and Strike Debt, itself an offshoot of Occupy Wall Street.

Strike Debt – Principles of Solidarity

Strike Debt is building a debt resistance movement. We believe that most individual debt is illegitimate and unjust. Most of us fall into debt because we are increasingly deprived of the means to acquire the basic necessities of life: health care, education, and housing. Because we are forced to go into debt simply in order to live, we think it is right and moral to resist it.

We also oppose debt because it is an instrument of exploitation and political domination. Debt is used to discipline us, deepen existing inequalities, and reinforce racial, gendered, and other social hierarchies. Every Strike Debt action is designed to weaken the institutions that seek to divide us and benefit from our division. As an alternative to this predatory system, Strike Debt advocates a just and sustainable economy, based on mutual aid, common goods, and public affluence.

Strike Debt is committed to the principles and tactics of political autonomy, direct democracy, direct action, creative openness, a culture of solidarity, and commitment to anti-oppressive language and conduct. We struggle for a world without racism, sexism, homophobia, transphobia, and all forms of oppression.

Strike Debt holds that we are all debtors, whether or not we have personal loan agreements. Through the manipulation of sovereign and municipal debt, the costs of speculator-driven crises are passed on to all of us. Though different kinds of debt can affect the same household, they are all interconnected, and so all household debtors have a common interest in resisting.

Strike Debt engages in public education about the debt-system to counteract the self-serving myth that finance is too complicated for laypersons to understand. In particular, it urges direct action as a way of stopping the damage caused by the creditor class and their enablers among elected government officials. Direct action empowers those who participate in challenging the debt-system.

Strike Debt holds that we owe the financial institutions nothing, whereas, to our friends, families and communities, we owe everything. In pursuing a long-term strategy for national organizing around this principle, we pledge international solidarity with the growing global movement against debt and austerity.

59411
The Anastasio Project; a performance on race relations, state brutality and border violence. @ Eastside Arts Alliance
Sep 12 @ 8:00 pm – 11:00 pm

THE ANASTASIO PROJECT RETURNS TO OAKLAND
The widely acclaimed multidisciplinary arts project brings to life  local stories of state violence

WHEN: September 11 – 13 and 18-20, @ 8:00 pm

Across the country, the #blacklivesmatter movement has forced to the surface a conversation that has been happening under the mainstream radar in communities of color for centuries. Today, America can no longer ignore the epidemic of state violence that she is enacting on Black, Brown and poor communities by her various law enforcement agencies.

For two weekends – September 11-13 & 18-20 – in partnership with Eastside Arts Alliance, José Navarrete and Debby Kajiyama of NAKA Dance Company surface these conversations once more by returning to the stage their acclaimed production of the The Anastasio Project; a multidisciplinary performance investigating race relations, state brutality and border violence.

Combining interactive video, original music, a large-format mural, spoken word and dance, The Anastasio Project draws on personal experiences of violence endured by people of color living in Oakland to create a profound and moving community event.

Prior to the performance, audience members are encouraged to explore the art galleries where pieces by various local artists will kick start conversations on the impacts of state violence in communities of color. For the complete list of artists, visithttp://nkdancetheater.com/anastasio/.

The Anastasio Project was inspired by the tragic story of Hernandez-Rojas, a Mexican national who was beaten to death by a dozen customs and border patrol agents at the U.S.-Mexico border in 2010.

“When we saw the cell phone footage of the beating of Hernandez-Rojas, we were devastated as we watched the Border Patrol inflict so much pain on another human being,” said Kajiyama in an interview with The Triangle Lab. “People were screaming at the Border Patrol to stop; Anastasio was asking for clemency; but nothing stopped the officers, and they continued to beat him.”

These are the kinds of stories flooding the daily airwaves and social media platforms of America and why the return of The Anastasio Project is so timely and critical. “The youth that we’ve worked with at Eastside Arts Alliance are not afraid to tell the truth and have themselves become the vehicles for social change,” said Navarrete. “We are concerned about their future, and the legacy that we leave for them. Most people from East Oakland are people of color, and youth are likely targets for racial profiling and police brutality. We want to learn from them; we want to share their perspectives.”

The Anastasio Project asks how we can avoid repeating the tragedies of Hernandez-Rojas, Sandra Bland, Mike Brown, Natasha McKenna, Tamir Rice and thousands like them in cities across the country.

Three of the performances will include pre-show conversations with community activists and organizers including Bertha Gutierrez & Families of San Diego (9/12), Cat Brooks of the Anti Police-Terror Project (9/13) and Mujeres Unidas y Activas with Matt Gonzalez from the SF Public Defenders Office (9/19). These dialogues will explore the complexities of state sponsored terror: ICE, the police, FBI, the military and their supporters. All conversations begin at 4:00 pm and will be followed by a light reception prior to the performance.

Development of The Anastasio Project is supported by: The MAP Fund, the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation; William & Flora Hewlett Foundation; City of Oakland Cultural Funding; The Kenneth Rainin Foundation; The East Bay Community Foundation’s East Bay Fund for Artists; The Open Circle Foundation; the Center for Cultural Innovation Investing in Artists Grant; EastSide Arts Alliance; Theatre Bay Area’s CA$H Grant; the Zellerbach Family Foundation; the Akonadi Foundation; the Della Davidson Prize; the California Arts Council Creating Places of Vitality Grant, California Shakespeare Theater’s Triangle Lab, Oakland Fund for Children and Youth, and many generous individual donors.

NAKA Dance Theater and Eastside Arts Alliance present the return of The Anastasio Project

TICKETS: To purchase tickets online visit brownpapertickets.com.

For more information visit nkdancetheater.com or eastsideartsalliance.org.

59444