Uncategorized

  • Our Unpaid Debt to Haiti

    When we started talking about Haiti, my usually goofy and jocular college homeboy turned gloomy. Every word and every movement a brew of desperation and despair. When he lived in Haiti in the 1980s, everyone seemed to be poor but at least they had food, he told me. But times have changed and folks are…

  • A Masterful Move

    One’s thanks for the work of Jacob Lawrence—an American painter of ingenious vision and remarkable aesthetic grace—must always be twofold. The duality stems from what was, throughout his career, a truly hybrid mission. Lawrence made history with his 1943 “Migration Series,” now on display in its entirety in the airy rooms of the Phillips Collection…

  • The Low-Budget Vegan

    Much has been made about Oprah going vegan for 21 days. But she, of course, does not have to worry about managing her vegan eating plan on a budget like I do. As a vegetarian, do I have to give up the items I have become accustomed to because they are more expensive as a…

  • The Big Payback

    Legislatures in two more states—Missouri and Nebraska—are contemplating apologies for slavery. Slavery was introduced in what would become Missouri at least as early as 1720 when Philippe Francois Renault brought 500 enslaved Africans to excavate the mines in present-day St. Louis and Jefferson counties. Missouri outlawed the practice with the ratification of its state constitution…

  • The Fibroid Sisterhood

    In some of the most respected medical manuals, fibroids are referred to as little more than a pesky annoyance. On a legitimate medical Web site they are described as, “generally symptomless, rarely causing problems and seldom requiring treatment.” But that’s not the story whispered in late-night phone conversations, shared at sister circle support groups, posted…

  • Farewell to My Uterus

    After a four-year battle with uterine fibroids, I am finally surrendering. Last Monday, I checked into N.Y. Presbyterian Hospital and underwent a hysterectomy. I am 34 years old. I fought back with hormones and holistic treatments. I have had second and third opinions in Chicago, Philadelphia and New York. I’ve seen black doctors and white,…

  • In Italy, At Least, Black is Beautiful

    Now that the much buzzed about all-black issue of Vogue Italia has hit stands, readers can finally take in the mezmorizing glamour of black models filling the glossy’s pages—even if they can’t read the text, which will remain in Italian, even in U.S.-circulated copies of the magazine. I sat down with legendary modeling agent and…

  • Return of the Piano Men

    For decades, jazz was a horn player’s game. Since the ’80s, the jazz business has engaged in a furious search for the next trumpeter a la Wynton Marsalis, and since the ’90s, they’ve looked for the next saxophonist like Joshua Redman. The 2000s may be remembered as the decade of the pianists. Not since Humphrey…

  • Shaq’s Bad Rap

  • That Girl Can Dunk!

    Women’s basketball doesn’t need dunks to be relevant and popular, but paradoxically Candace Parker’s dunks may give the WNBA just the boost it needs. Parker, the Los Angeles Sparks’ rookie forward, dunked in the waning moments of L.A.’s win over the Indiana Fever on Sunday. Then on Tuesday, she threw it down again in the…