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General Manager and Founder
Chokwe Lumumba |
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Johnnie Thomas
Coach and Co-Founder |
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Nelson Mannie
Coach and Co-Founder |
PANTHERS MISSION STATEMENT:
The primary mission of the Jackson Panthers Basketball Program is to promote the continued development of young players as it relates to fundamentals of basketball, sportsmanship and athletic competition achieved through participation in tournaments throughout the country and competing at the highest level possible. Another mission is to coach each player into reaching their maximum potential and contribution in the game of basketball and in transforming those skills from the basketball floor today, to become leaders in our communities TOMORROW.
WHY WE CALL
OURSELVES 'PANTHERS'
In 1996, the Jackson
Panthers Basketball team was born. The name "Panther" which
the team adopted was one which came from a rich heritage of Black
Freedom Struggle. For over 30 years, the "Panther" was used
in the civil rights, Black Power, and Black Independence
movements in America to identify bold and energetic political
organizations which moved to the forefront of the struggle for
freedom. Most often, these organizations were organized by
young people.
In modern times, the
Black Panther was first used as a symbol and logo to identify
Lowndes County Freedom Democratic Party in Alabama which
organized a slate of Black candidates in the Lowndes County
elections in 1966. The formation of the party was an act of
self-determination by SNCC, the student nonviolent coordinating
committee. SNCC worked in opposition to the white racist in
the regular Alabama democratic party. The regular party led
drives to prevent Blacks from holding office and voting and actually
supported lynching and other racist acts for a century before the
Lowndes County Freedom Democratic party was formed. Kwame Ture {formerly
known as Stokely Carmichael} was one of the organizers of the
Lowndes County party. The Party was often called the Black
Panther Party.
One of the most
effective organizations in the history of Black Freedom
struggle was called the Revolutionary Action Movement (RAM).
One of the primary leaders of RAM was Muhammad Ahmad
(formerly known as Max Stanford). Ahmad was a young follower of
Malcolm X. RAM was a low profile group. It quietly sent
its members all over America to join Black organizations in order to
help build the Freedom Movement. Ram had members in SNCC, in
Black Worker Leagues in large urban centers like New York, Detroit,
Cleveland, Ohio, Newark, New Jersey and Philadelphia and in various
Black culture groups on colleges campuses all over America.
RAM worked closely with the Deacons for Defense in protecting many
civil rights and human right workers from harm. In 1966, Ram members
received permission from those affiliated with the Lowndes County
Freedom Democratic Party to use the Black Panther name in forming a
Black Independent Party which would work to organize Black people
from the west coast to the east, and from north to south. Thus, the first Black Panther Party
was formed by Ram.
Later, Bobby Seale and
Huey P. Newton formed the Black Panther Party for Self Defense in
Oakland, California in October of 1966. Within a short while the
spread across the country. Both Black Panther Parties were effective
in training young people to stand up for their rights, and in
encouraging them to study history and world political
movements. The first Black Panther Party set up chapters which were
eventually called the House of Umoja and which operated very
successful community and political development programs across the
country. Eventually, the House of Umoja group from Los Angeles
became part of the New African People Organization.
The Black Panther Party
for Self Defense challenged police brutality and murders, set
up free breakfast programs, shoes and clothing programs, organized
against drugs, and for tenant rights and developed many more
productive projects.
Unfortunately, the Black
Panther Party for Self-Defense was destroyed when the various racist
police departments and the FBI targeted the BPPSD in a program
called the Counter Intelligence Program (COINTELPRO) in the late 1960's and early 1970's. The
program was designed to destroy groups like the Martin Luther King
SCLC and the NAACP as well as the Panthers and other
organization which believed in the right to self-defense.
Like Martin Luther King
Jr. and Malcolm X, some panthers were assassinated and many were put
into prison for crimes that they didn't commit, Geronimo JiJaga
(Pratt) was a Panther who spent 27 years in prison on false charges. Afeni Shakur, Tupac Shakur's mother, spent two years in jail on false
charges.
In fact, she was
pregnant with Tupac in jail. Sundiata Acoli is presently still in
jail. He is a former panther and an expert in mathematics. Before he
became a Panther he worked for the U.S. NASA Space Program and
trained the U.S. Astronaut, Neil Armstrong. Sekou Odinga,
Assata Shakur and Mumia Abu Jamal are all Panthers who were placed
in jail because of the Cointelpro Program. Sister Assata is
free in Cuba today. However, Odinga and Mumia remain in
prison along with over a hundred other political prisoners in
America. Mumia is on death row for a crime he did not commit.
Thousands of people in the U.S. and across the world have protested
Mumia's death sentence and imprisonment of political prisoners in
America.
in the late 1980's, the
New Afrikan Peoples Organization named its youth group the New
Afrikan Panthers. Tupac Shakur was the first president of
that group. Today the New Afrikan Panthers are at their high
schools and in their communities.
As the history
indicates, it is an honor to be a panther. A Panther is more
than a basketball player. A Panther is a proud, courageous and
dignified young person who is loyal and responsible. A Panther
believes in working hard for that which is right, following
instructions and being committed to our common goal. A Panther
is not selfish. A Panther gives generously of himself or
herself and works together with other Panthers to accomplish
their common goals. Panthers are lovers. Panthers love
the people and love justice. That is why Panthers once
developed the slogan "Power to the People."
So every time we say or
hear the slogan "Panther Power", we should be proud of our history and
be prepared to step up and face the challenges of the present and
future.
PANTHER POWER 1999!
"It takes Desire, Dedication and Discipline to be a Panther!"
WE ARE WINNERS
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