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Radio Baha’i News

Thursday, Feb. 28th, listen to a Black History Month special: a radio play performed by the Village Voices -- children from Plantersville Elementary School in Georgetown County. The play, If Anybody Ask You Who I Am, was written by Roosevelt Wright, Jr. Don’t miss these wonderful children exploring their identity.

The production of this play was directed by Mrs. Gladys Bonds McKoy and Queen D. Funnye. It was produced by DeShantell Singleton (who was featured on Insight a few months ago)

If Anybody Ask You Who I Am will be aired on Thursday, Feb. 28th, at 10:00 AM, 7:00 PM, and midnight, on 90.9 FM, Radio Baha’i.

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Mrs. Wilhelmina P. Johnson, Executive Director - CRC INC.

For 40 years, the Cultural Realism Complex (CRC) in Darlington has served Darlington County with a variety of programs for youth and community development and historic preservation. The force behind CRC is Wilhelmina P. Johnson, a retired educator and Darlington County Councilwoman, who started CRC as Cultural Realism Charm in 1973. Bhakti Larry Hough interviewed Johnson about CRC and African American history in general on the current edition of Insight.

Insight airs Wednesdays and Mondays at 10:00 AM, 7:00 PM, and midnight, at 90.9 FM, Radio Baha’i.

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Joseph McGill early in the morning at Sotterly Plantation. Click on the photo to see the video.

Joseph McGill, Jr., a native of Kingstree now living in the Charleston area, eats, breathes and sleeps African American history - literally. McGill is the founder of the nearly three-year-old Slave Dwelling Project, during which he has slept in 38 former slave cabins in 12 states to draw attention to the existence of the structures and to pay tribute to his enslaved ancestors. In March, McGill will sleep in a former slave dwelling at Hopsewee Plantation in Georgetown County. Bhakti Larry Hough interviews McGill about the Slave Dwelling Project on the current African American History Month special edition of Insight.

The slave dwelling at the Sotterly Planation. Click on the photo to see the video.

Here are some links to more information about the Slave Dwelling Project:

PreservationNation Blog

 

Lowcountry Africana

This edition will air Monday, 2/18, at 10:00 AM, 7:00 PM, and midnight on 90.9 FM, Radio Baha'i.

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Radio Baha'i is celebrating Back History month with a series of programs produced by SI Communications: 4 one hour programs which will be aired on Thursdays at 10:00 AM, 7:00 PM, and midnight; and three mini-program series, with 14 episodes each, that will be aired throughout the day. These programs join our own Trial and Triumph mini-programs that feature South Carolinians. Below is the information provided by SI communications about their programs.

The Civil Rights Movement was won in the face of attack dogs, Klansmen, fire hoses, arrests and even death. The men and women who participated were soldiers on the battlefield of freedom, justice and equality, winning through demonstrations and non-violent disobedience. The most recognizable heroes of The Movement are Martin Luther King, Jr. and Rosa Parks. But there are many more heroes whose names and deeds should be known by our young adults. Those heroes of the movement include A. Phillip Randolph, Bayard Rustin, James Meredith, Wyatt T. Walker, Medgar Evers, Fannie Lou Hamer, Ella Baker, Angela Davis, the Little Rock Nine and many more.

S I Communications is proud to present this epic radio series throughout 2013. The Movement will provide a contemporary and fresh look at the struggle for equality in America from the early fifties through the turbulent sixties and seventies using music and narration. Actor Flex Alexander and singer Shanice will guide the listening audience through each entertaining hour of The Movement.

The Movement - 4 Hours (one hour aired on Thursdays in February at 10:00 AM, 7:00 PM, and midnight)

Black Women in The Movement Vignettes - 14 episodes :60 sec

Black Men in The Movement Vignettes - 14 episodes :60 sec

Events in the Movement (events, court decisions, etc) - 14 episodes :60 sec

 

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If you watched the Super Bowl Sunday and saw the commercial showing a fight over cookies taking place in a library, you probably didn’t recognize the place if you have visited a public library lately. The library in the commercial consists mostly of books, chairs, tables and bookcase with hardly any computers in sight. Today’s libraries, by contrast, have many computers, e-readers and other technology that have transformed them into what they are often called in schools – media centers. On the current edition of Insight, Bhakti Larry Hough interviews Marilynn Lance Robb, manager of the Carvers Bay Branch of the Georgetown County Library, about their offerings and how the Digital Revolution has affected public libraries.

Insight airs Wednesdays and Mondays at 10:00 AM, 7:00 PM, and midnight, at 90.9 FM, Radio Baha'i.

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