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David Hilliard

Personal Information

Born January 1, 1964 (62 years old)
Rockville, United States
Also known as: David Hilliard, David Hilliard (Editor)
4 books
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19 readers

Description

Photographer based in the eastern U.S.

Books

Newest First

This side of glory

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6

This Side of Glory is both a compelling personal narrative and an eyewitness account of the Black Panthers that reclaims a piece of history long obscured and now almost lost. Just as David Hilliard's candid life story illuminates this revolutionary movement, it sheds light on America's present racial and political troubles. Hilliard's experiences encapsulate an entire generation. Born in the forties, the twelfth child in a poor but intact Alabama family, he began life as. The traditional Southern black culture was ending. When the family migrated to the West Coast, Hilliard and his pals hung out on Oakland's streets, exhilarated by the fifties boom, testing their adolescent selves to the fullest, but also learning the limits of blacks' participation in American life. Witnessing the unfulfilled promises of the civil rights movement and an expanding economy, Hilliard joined the rebelliousness of the sixties and the Black Panther Party. Old. Friendships with and tested loyalties to the Party founders, coupled with his intelligence, catapulted him into the position of Chief of Staff. In retrospect, the naivete of these young revolutionaries astounds. Responding to the brutal police beating of a fifteen-year-old black girl, the first armed patrols were intended to make the police obey the law. When the inevitable shoot-out occurred, a policeman was dead, Huey Newton badly wounded and under arrest for murder. The ensuing Free Huey campaign propelled the first black American armed revolutionary movement into a nationwide organization providing free food and medical and legal services to the poor, and, ultimately, into electoral politics. This Side of Glory breaks twenty years of silence to provide firsthand accounts of Huey Newton's shoot-out, the killing of Fred Hampton, how money was raised and spent, the sexual mores of the Panthers, how illegal activities erupted and were. Controlled. Whatever their accomplishments and failings, the Panthers, "the greatest threat to the internal security of the country," according to FBI director J. Edgar Hoover, began to dissolve as police raids, gun battles, IRS investigations, trials, and prison terms decimated their ranks. Covert tactics including infiltrators - agents provocateurs - and a disinformation campaign turned Panthers against one another. Some, Hilliard included, turned to drugs and alcohol. Whatever the government had not destroyed, the Panthers finished themselves. Hilliard was imprisoned and deserted by the Party. His subsequent disillusionment, addiction, and degradation serve as paradigms for African-American despair in the seventies and eighties. Written with the drive of a novel, Hilliard's riveting story of young militant blacks reaching toward a vision of justice and radical change is in the tradition of The Autobiography of Malcolm X. This Side of. Glory is an important historical document and one of the most profoundly telling memoirs of our time.

The Black Panther

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First meeting....? When young Lady Gwendolyn Sherbroke first meets Sir Philip Chadleigh, the devastatingly handsome Member of Parliament, she knows there is something strangely familiar about him. But she is sure she has never met him before. She had been warned: he was hopelessly possessed by the memory of his lost love, a beautiful girl who had died for him many years before. No other woman, now or ever, could claim his heart. But from their first meeting, Gwendolyn was irresistibly drawn to the brooding Sir Philip. And from the very first words that she uttered to him, he found himself fascinated by her. But instinctively Gwendolyn realized the truth: it was because she reminded him of his lost love that Sir Philip now showered her with attention. Should she turn away before it was too late? But her fate had already been decided.... Is there some mysterious link between Gwendolyn's birth and the death of Sir Philip's only love which occurred within minutes of each other in adjacent buildings? Or is the supposed connection sheer conjecture on the imaginative Gwendolyn's part?

The New Huey P. Newton Reader

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"The first comprehensive collection of writings by the Black Panther Party founder and revolutionary icon of the black liberation era, now in a new edition with a new introduction by former Black Panther Party chairman Elaine Brown. The Huey P. Newton Reader combines now-classic texts from Newton's books (Revolutionary Suicide, To Die for the People, In Search of Common Ground, and War Against the Panthers) ranging in topic from the formation of the Black Panthers, African Americans and armed self-defense, Eldridge Cleaver's controversial expulsion from the Party, FBI infiltration of civil rights groups, the Vietnam War, and the burgeoning feminist movement. Editors Hilliard and Weise also include never-before-published writings from the Black Panther Party archives and Newton's private collection, including articles on President Nixon, prison martyr George Jackson, Pan-Africanism, affirmative action, and the author's only written account of his political exile in Cuba in the mid-1970s. Eldridge Cleaver, Bobby Seale, Angela Davis, Mumia Abu-Jamal, and Geronimo Pratt all came to international prominence through Newton's groundbreaking political activism. Additionally, Newton served as the Party's chief intellectual engine, conversing with world leaders such as Yasser Arafat, Chinese premier Chou Enlai, and Mozambique president Samora Moises Machel among others. Beginning with his founding of the Black Panther Party in 1966, HUEY P. NEWTON (1941-89) set the political stage for events that would quickly place him and the Panthers at the forefront of the African American liberation movement for the next twenty years"--