citypaper: archives

Black Power
The New Black Panther Party looks at whites and sees red.

Cover Story

For Sharon Roach, the crusade began with a rally on Thursday, Sept. 28, at the Prince Hall Masonic Temple on U Street NW. She walked into the large auditorium crammed with more than 1,000 people, threaded her way to one of the back rows, and took an open seat. It was about 6:30 p.m., and the place was crowded, hot, and thrilling, like some urban tent revival. People fanned themselves with folded pieces of paper titled "Exposing and Countering the Conspiracy to Destroy Black Washington, D.C." The event, sponsored and heavily promoted by the nascent D.C. branch of the New Black Panther Party for Self Defense, had been billed in fliers and posters around the city as an "Emergency Black Unity Town Hall Meeting" on "the State of Black D.C."

Things got off to an inauspicious start, according to journalists who were there. The meeting started late, and the first few speakers rambled almost incoherently. One man recited a meandering poem; another prayed for the audience for what seemed like 15 minutes. The long evening would eventually stretch to more than three hours, and by the time the New Black Panthers passed a hat for contributions, more than half their audience had evaporated.

Roach, though, stayed for the whole thing. An office worker from nearby Shaw, she sat in the rear of the room, listening quietly, absorbing everything. And she found herself thoroughly mesmerized by the evening's main attraction: Malik Zulu Shabazz, the charismatic 34-year-old leader of the New Black Panthers, D.C. Division. ... Continued

Issue of Jan. 19 - 25, 2001

News and Features

  • Black Power
    The New Black Panther Party looks at whites and sees red.
    Cover Story
  • Out of Gas
    An Exxon station raises prices—and sometimes even turns on its pumps.
    The City
  • Promised Land
    Can General Colin Powell's philanthropic crusade deliver more than good PR?
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  • WIN-Win Situation
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  • Panic Attack
    The Mail
  • Tank Half Full?
    The Mail
  • Sports Authority
    The Mail
  • Worthy Opponent
    The Mail
  • Wake-Up Call
    The Mail

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