“Cooked” by Chef Jeff Henderson a story of and dedication, determination, and redemption

cooked1.jpg

Anyone who reads enough books will come across a few that will profoundly affect your life.  Miseducation of the Negro, Wake of the Wind, and Seven Habits of Highly Effective People have moved me in that way.  Cooked:From the Streets to the Stove, from Cocaine to Foie Gras is now added to the list.

Cooked chronicles the life of Chef Jeff Henderson , who went from one of the biggest drug dealer in San Diego to a 19 1/2 year prison sentence, to the executive chef at Cafe Bellagio in Las Vegas.  Chef Jeff details every step of his journey in this compelling piece of literature.

What initially struck me about Cooked was the language that was used in the opening passages.  Whenever you see Chef Jeff, he is cleanly shaved, wearing his trademark glasses, as well as a pressed apron or chef's coat.  But as the book begins, the language is coarse, filled with cursing and obscenities. 

As Jeff Henderson grows and matures so does his speech and his voice as the author.  I do not recall this particular approach in any of the previous books I've read.  It's actually a pretty clever device. 

The take away for me was Chef Jeff's unbelievable work ethic.  He made his way to the top of the San Diego drug game by his desire to be the best and to do whatever it took to get there.  That same spirit lead him to gain favor in prison kitchens and eventually in two of Las Vegas' finest hotels (Cesar's Palace and the Bellagio).

sw-and-chef-jeff.jpgI was fortunate enough to meet Chef Jeff at Real Men Cook in Dallas this past Father's Day.  I had heard of his story, but definitely not in the detail I would come to read in Cooked.  The book has given me a new appreciation for the approval and thumbs up Chef Jeff gave the Not Yo' Mama's Banana Pudding I prepared that day.

I've been inspired to purchase the book for one of my family members who is currently incarcerated.  Maybe he will be moved as I have, and strive to embody Chef Jeff like dedication upon his release. 

I'd encourage anyone who is looking for a good book to pick up Cooked.  Though the book is good, the added bonus is a recipe for Friendly's Buttermilk Fried Chicken that is included. I cooked this tasty treat a few weeks ago and the recipe is worth the price of the book by itself.

Dallas South Rewind: September 23 – September 29

Here's my look back at last week and some of the stories the I wasn't able to bring to Dallas South.

1.  The Chicago Tribune's Howard Witt continued his excellent Jena coverage with a story on the release of Mychal Bell

2.  The demolition of the American Inn in South Dallas is posted at Dallas Progress.  Mike Davis and Dwaine Caraway were instrumental in shutting down the hot sheet motel.

3.  CNN contributor Roland Martin weighs in on Bill O'Reilly's comments about his lunch at Harlem's Sylvia's restaurant.

4.  Electronic Village reports on a Palmdale CA teen beaten by a security guard over refusing to pick up cake crumbs.

5.  Francis Holland writes at the Huffington Post on why the word 'race' word is wrong


United Methodist Opponents of George W. Bush Library and Institute Vow to Continue Fight

Today opponents of the  Bush Library and Institute vowed to continue their fight within the 11 million member United  Methodist Church to deny approval to Southern  Methodist University (SMU) to host the Bush complex.

The South Central  Jurisdictional Conference of the United  Methodist Church will meet in Dallas from July 15-19, 2008, when it will be asked by SMU to  approve the use of university land for the Bush complex, which will include a  partisan political institute operated totally by the Bush Foundation. 

United Methodist opponents of the Bush  complex will ask the 290 elected delegates to the Conference to vote  against this request.  The delegates  in the South Central Jurisdictional Conference represent the 1.83 million United  Methodists living in Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico,  Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska,  Arkansas, and Louisiana.

Bishop Joe A. Wilson  explains:  "Even though the 21 member Mission Council approved by a vote of  10-4 the use of the SMU property for the Library and
partisan Policy Institute,  this decision must be ratified by the larger Jurisdictional Conference which  meets in July of 2008.” 

The rules of the Jurisdiction state that, “all  actions taken by the Council shall be valid and in full effect…..until the  next regular session of The Conference."  He adds, "to place a partisan policy Think Tank, with no oversight by the church and university, on the  grounds of a United Methodist Institution, is an issue the Jurisdictional  Conference must not take lightly." “The  placement of the George W. Bush Library and the establishment of an
Institute to  promote the policies of this president at Southern Methodist University would be  a tragedy,” said  Bishop William Boyd Grove.   

“The policies of the Bush administration are in direct conflict with the Social  Principles of the United Methodist Church on issues of war and peace, civil  liberties and human rights, care for the environment, and health care.  SMU  is a university of the church and is home to one of our outstanding theological  seminaries.  Its United Methodist identity and its moral authority would be  seriously compromised were it to be identified with the policies of George W.  Bush in this way.”

“To place a partisan institute on the campus of a United Methodist University is unacceptable,” said  the Reverend Andrew Weaver, “especially when it will espouse the policies and  values of an administration that has advocated torture, violated international  law, and left the constitution in shambles.  We want SMU to be a great university,  not a propaganda machine for the Bush administration.”

Organizers of the effort  question the educational value of the Bush complex, pointing to Executive Order  13233, which provides former Presidents with virtually unlimited powers to deny  or grant access to documents generated under their administrations.  Bishop  C. Joseph Sprague observed, “last spring  the Faculty Senate and the history faculty at SMU issued statements criticizing  the Executive Order as incompatible with the goals of providing public and 
scholarly access to federal documents.  It is a great concern when a large number of the faculty at a United  Methodist university question the educational value of a project.”   

Bishop Kenneth W. Hicks noted, “in February of 2007, bishops, clergy and laity of  the United Methodist Church began a petition calling for the  SMU trustees and the UMC to reject the Bush project.  That petition (www. protectSMU.org) now  has the signatures of 15 UMC bishops and more than 10,800 Christians (mostly  United Methodists) and persons of conscience.  We are very much encouraged by the  national and international response that we have  garnered.”

Bishop  Susan M. Morrison observed, “while I respect the office of the presidency, presidential libraries are created, partly, to celebrate the  legacies of particular presidents.  Since George W. Bush's leadership has  been so problematic and contrary to much of our Social Principles, it does not  seem appropriate to place this library in the midst of one of our celebrated  educational institutions.”

CONTACTS:

Bishop Joe A. Wilson   
Georgetown, Texas
512-868-2553
jwbish@verizon.net

Bishop Kenneth W.  Hicks
Little  Rock, Arkansas
501-663-2977
kenhicks23@sbcglobal.net

Bishop Susan Murch Morrison
Rehoboth  Beach,  Delaware   
302-227-4097
ogn509@aol.com

Bishop William Boyd  Grove           
Charleston, West  Virginia                           
304-344-1384
(cell)  304-552-6496
wboydgrove@aol.com

Bishop C. Joseph Sprague   
London, Ohio
740-845-0518
cjosephsprague@sbcglobal.net   

Reverend Andrew J.  Weaver
Brooklyn, New  York
212-920-9296
Aweaver747@aol.com

Mychal Bell is Free, La Salle Parish D.A. says Jesus Christ intervened last Thursday

Less than 30 minutes ago,Mychal Bell was set free at the LaSalle Parish Courthouse.  Bell was flanked by his family, Martin Luther King III, and Rev. Al Sharpton.  (see CNN report here).

Earlier, La Salle Parish D.A. Reed Walters made some very odd comments.  Hearing the words come out of his mouth leaves one stunned, again wondering what century this is.

"I firmly believe and am confident of the fact that had it not been for the direct intervention of the Lord Jesus Christ last Thursday, a disaster would have happened," Walters said.  "The Lord Jesus Christ put his influence on those people and they responded accordingly," he said, without explaining exactly what he meant.

Is Walters talking about some type of riot of blacks in the streets of Jena?  Is he talking about a massacre of protesters by gun toting whites?  Did he mean some sort of race war?  Did Jesus talk to him?

Anyway, God bless Mychal Bell, the other five young men involved, their family, and even the "victim" involved.  I pray that Bell will find justice in juvenile court.  This is not over, and it shouldn't be. 

Body of Missing Pharmaceutical Sales Rep Found

artfranklinap.jpgIn a story that hits very close to home, the body of missing sales representative Nailah Franklin has been found in suburban Chicago.  The news was confirmed by the uncle of Nailah (pronounced nah-EE'-lah) Franklin.

CNN reports that Franklin was found dead Thursday near a forest preserve, not far from where her car was abandoned.

Read more about Nailah Franklin and this sad story at Black and Missing But Not Forgotten and CNN

3 for 3 on CNN coverage

I've been a little out of touch for the last few days, but I've turned on CNN 3 times and 3 times the stories have dealt with African-Americans.

One story was about a father's anger at the police's response to a fatal car crash involving his son.  CNN quotes the father, Arthur Smith as saying "police did not respond adequately to pleas for help from two teens who survived the crash."

Tapes of 911 calls support claims the teens — both of whom police say had been drinking — repeatedly asked for help finding their two other friends.

"They was right there. I found them, and if I was out there at night, I could have found them with a cigarette lighter. They did not look, they did not look America. They did not attempt to look for them boys."

The second story had Bill O'Reilly detailing his experience at Sylvia's a black owned restaurant in Harlem.  CNN quoted O'Reilly as saying that he took civil rights leader Al Sharpton to the Lenox Avenue fixture and "couldn't get over the fact that there was no difference between Sylvia's Restaurant and any other restaurant in New York City."

He went on to say "There wasn't one person in Sylvia's who was screaming, 'M.F.-er, I want more iced tea." Man I wish I had time to go off on this one.  But it's the same mindset and attitudes that caused black students in Jena Louisiana to ask if they could sit under a tree reserved for white students.  It's not always the overt racism that we should worry about, it's the subtleties and undertones that we should pay more attention to.

The third story was of Mychal Bell's expected release today.  We've heard that one before. 

Front Page Chicago Tribune article argues school disicpline tougher on African-American Students

Tuesday's Chicago Tribune will have a front page article that details the stiffer punishments levied on African-American students in  schools across the country.  Here are some stats from the Howard Witt article:

*   In the average New Jersey public school, African-American students are almost 60 times as likely as white students to be expelled for serious disciplinary infractions.

*   In Minnesota, black students are suspended 6 times as often as whites.

In Iowa, blacks make up just 5 percent of the statewide public school enrollment but account for 22 percent of the students who get suspended.

Other information gathered for the article:


In every state but Idaho, a Tribune analysis of the data shows, black students are being suspended in numbers greater than would be expected from their proportion of the student population.

In 21 states—Illinois among them—that disproportionality is so pronounced that the percentage of black suspensions is more than double their percentage of the student body.

…on average across the nation, black students are suspended and expelled at nearly three times the rate of white students.

Click here to read the front page Tribune article in its entirety. 

white supremacist groups begin to mobilize in response to Jena rally

Howard Witt now reports on white supremacist and neo-nazi groups who are forming a response to last Thursday's rally in Jena.  Click here to see Mr. Witt's entire story.  A few excerpts from Tuesday's Tribune:

*  No sooner did tens of thousands of African-American demonstrators depart the racially tense town of Jena, La., last week after protesting perceived injustices than white supremacists flooded in behind them.

*  First a neo-Nazi Web site posted the names, addresses and phone numbers of some of the six black teenagers and their families at the center of the Jena 6 case and urged followers to find them and "drag them out of the house," prompting an investigation by the FBI.

*  David Duke, the former Ku Klux Klan leader, last week announced his support for Jena's white residents, who voted overwhelmingly for him when he ran unsuccessfully for Louisiana governor in 1991.

*  "There is a major white supremacist backlash building," said Mark Potok, a hate-group expert at the Southern Poverty Law Center, a civil rights group in Montgomery, Ala. "I also think it's more widespread than may be obvious to most people. It's not only neo-nazis and Klansmen-you expect this kind of reaction from them."

*  McMillin (mayor of Jena) has insisted that his town is being unfairly portrayed as racist-an assertion the mayor repeated in an interview with Richard Barrett, the leader of the Nationalist Movement, a white supremacist group based in Learned, Miss., who asked McMillan to "set aside some place for those opposing the colored folks." 

PLEASE, PLEASE read Mr. Witt's article in it's entirety.

NPR discussion focuses on why popular media misses stories like Jena

Today I participated in an extensive discussion on NPR's Talk of the Nation regarding why the national media "missed" the Jena 6 story.  Also on the program was Steven Holmes, national editor for The Washington Post and Keith Woods, dean of faculty at the Poytner Institute

Click here to listen to the full discussion and please let me know what you think.

10 Opinions/Observations from September 20th rally in Jena, Louisiana

I have had a chance to collect my thoughts since last Thursday's historic rally in Jena, Louisiana, and I wanted to share with you some of my thoughts about the events of the day.

1. Black is Beautiful

dew.JPGThe suggestions that everyone wear black made the visual impact of last Thursday even more stunning.  As far as the eye could see at any time in any direction folks were dressed in black

crowd.JPGOnce we made it close to the courthouse, the crowd was so think we could hardly move.  But at no point did the situation seem dangerous in any way.

There were many times when my companions and I had to retreat because the people flow was at a stand still.   I don't trust any of the estimates under 30,000, and 50-75K is probably more realistic. 

2. We Trashed Jena

The Jena rally was a peaceful protest, but the day's events produced a lot of trash.  For any future gatherings such as this, there would need to be lots more trash cans in place. 

I was on one of the last buses out of Jena, and it was left pretty much like it was found; with the exception of trash all over the streets.  Most of the trash consisted of water bottles discarded by attendees.

3.  Emergency Response/Red Cross were on Point

cross-2.JPGThe American Red Cross was in full effect last Thursday as were local emergency response teams.  It was hot!  There were a few people who passed out due to heat related complications.  The Red Cross handed out free bottles of water throughout the day. 

4. A Deviation in the Program

There was a point in the afternoon right after Jesse Jackson spoke when it seemed like no one knew what was next.  Many folks were looking for Rev. Sharpton and Michael Baisden, but as far as I know they were in were in Alexandria. 

While a march went on in Jena, there were others who left for some type of concurrent event in Alexandria.  I heard Rev. Jackson say "we are going to march to Ward 10 park as was planned." (twice) 

At last I heard, Rev. Sharpton was on his way back to Jena, but I never saw him and I don't know if he ever made it.  I still don't know why there was a separate event going on in Alexandria.

pq.JPG5. College Students represented

There were so many young faces in the crowd last Thursday.  Kids were sporting their college gear, frat letters, and school colors.  They did more walking and shouting than anybody.  

5a Black Colleges Represented

The majority of college buses and vans I saw were from HBCU's.  I saw no (visual) representation from Texas A&M, University of Texas, University of Houston, or others though Texas had a large contingent of protesters.

6. Rev. Jesse Jackson still knows how to hype the crowd

In the hot Louisiana sun, Rev. Jackson inspired the thousands who were gathered in front of the LaSalle Parish Courthouse.  He was rapping and rhyming as usual, but the people still love him.    One of my friend looked at me and began quoting Jackson word for word as he spoke.  We laughed, but his words were still timely and relevant.

res2.JPG7. Jena was about what I expected

As we drove in on Hwy 8 Thursday morning, the town was exactly like I had pictured in my mind.  As we neared Jena, one of the first things we saw was a house flying an American flag and a Confederate flag out front.  Just down the road was a triple-wide church. The courthouse was on Courthouse Road and the high school was on High School Dr. 

ladies1.JPGThere were a few locals outside observing all the happenings from their front yards.  One man read a Bible, another began his daily walk as the rally shut down for the day. 

The ladies pictured at the left seemed to just take it all in stride.  I did see a couple of houses who were allowing marchers to come inside, but I didn't check the extent of what was really going on. 

There were a lot of folks who had tape up around their property to discourage folks from walking in their yards.  You can see this in the above right picture.

band.JPG8. The Jena High School became a pilgrimage site 

For some reason I didn't figure that I would make it to the place where it all started while I was in Jena.  But as the day progressed people began migrating towards Jena High School.

tree.JPGIt was about a mile and a half walk from the courthouse, and this was the first time I realized just how many people had come to town for the rally.  The entire street was packed with black folks wearing black.

I plan to devote a post to my experience at Jena High School, but it was quite impactful.  The courtyard where the tree once stood was so small. 

Not only was the tree gone (left), but there was very little evidence that it had even been there.  It began to sink in that everyone in a school this size would know each other, and all of the acts that are chronicled in this saga were more intimate than I had originally imagined.

kids.jpg9. White folks rallied for the Jena 6 too

I'm not sure how it translated to T.V., but there where a number of white folks in Jena last Thursday.  Some seemed to be children of the 60's who were reliving their radical roots from the past.  Others were hawking anti-Bush books, newspapers, and posters. 

There were also young people who seemed a little uneasy with this unfamiliar territory but glad to be there none the less.  But none of them seemed to get the memo about wearing black.

10.  On 9/20/07, we drove the media agenda

gma.JPGIt is not lost on me that had it not been for the Jena 6 rally, O.J. Simpson would have been the biggest story in the news that day.  It seemed like every television station from the South and Southeast was represented with a news truck.  Cameras and anchors were all over the place.

tony.JPGMartin Savidge of NBC alerted me to the fact that President Bush had made remarks that day regarding the Jena case.  As the day progressed, I'm told that the coverage continued to increase.

ricky.JPG Having the unique prospective as both a blogger and a rally participant, I was asked to conduct a number of interviews throughout the day from Seattle to New York.  Ricky Smiley recorded his radio show live from Jena Thursday morning.