Sankofa – 21

Fed check not in mail, deadbeat

September 10, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Fed check not in mail, deadbeat

Fed check not in mail, deadbeat

BY DAVE GOLDINER
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

Wednesday, September 10th 2008, 12:29 AM

More than 42,000 New York deadbeat parents never got a chance to spend their tax stimulus checks on TVs or iPods – the cash went to pay outstanding child support.

The deadbeats missed out on more than $22 million in payments, which were withheld and sent to ex-partners for unpaid obligations to their kids.

The Treasury Department says 1.4 million people nationwide had all or part of their stimulus check diverted for child support.

In all, the feds diverted $830 million from deadbeat dads and moms, less than 1% of the total stimulus program.

The stimulus program provided $600 checks for most individuals and $1,200 for couples filing jointly, with a $300-per-child credit added on.

States submit the names and Social Security numbers of deadbeat parents to the IRS, which cross-checks those names against the lists of taxpayers receiving stimulus checks.

The IRS then sends the deadbeat parents’ checks straight to state child support agencies.

The diverted ones are just a fraction of the more than 112 million stimulus checks issued as of the start of July.

So far, the IRS has dispensed checks totaling $92billion.

Besides child support, the IRS withheld stimulus checks from those who owe money to the federal government or have unpaid state tax obligations.

dgoldiner@nydailynews.com

Categories: GENERAL

Man offers $50,000 to Jewish families willing to relocate to Alabama town

September 10, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Man offers $50,000 to Jewish families willing to relocate to Alabama town

Tuesday, September 9th 2008, 8:27 AM

MArtin/AP

Part of the relocation deal is that one becomes an active member of local Temple Emanu-El in Dothan.

DOTHAN, AlabamaLarry Blumberg is looking for a few good Jews to move to his heavily Christian corner of the U.S. South.

Blumberg is chairman of the Blumberg Family Relocation Fund, which is offering Jewish families as much as $50,000 to relocate to Dothan, an overwhelmingly Christian town of 58,000 that calls itself the Peanut Capital of the World. Get involved at Temple Emanu-El and stay at least five years, the group’s leaders say, and the money doesn’t have to be repaid.

More Jews are living in the southeastern U.S. than ever — about 386,000 at last count in 2001, according to Stuart Rockoff, historian at the Goldring/Woldenberg Institute of Southern Jewish Life in Jackson, Mississippi. But young Jews are leaving small places like Dothan in favor of big southern cities like Atlanta and Birmingham, Rockoff said, and dozens of small-town synagogues have closed in the so-called Bible Belt, an area of predominantly Christian southern states.

“A lot of the older people have died, and not many of the younger ones have stayed,” said Thelma Nomberg, a member of the Dothan temple who grew up in nearby Ozark, where she was the only Jewish student in public school in the 1940s. “We are dying.”

Trying to lure Jewish families to a quiet Southern town in a state with a reputation for hard-right politics and racial intolerance might be difficult. About 20 Jewish families have sought information about Dothan, though none has made the move.

Being outside the Christian majority was never a problem, Nomberg said, even six decades ago: She won the Miss Ozark beauty pageant at 14 and sometimes attended church with friends after sleep-overs.

Now a widow, Nomberg has watched two of her four adult children leave for Florida as Temple Emanu-El lost nearly half its membership, down to about 50 families. She can only hope the recruitment plan works for her synagogue.

Launched in June, the Blumberg program has put advertisements in Jewish newspapers in Boston, Miami, Providence, Rhode Island, and Washington, and it plans to expand the campaign.

“I think it’s important that we try to find young people that we could use in our religious school, our Sunday school and help in the way of trying to create more of a family-type atmosphere in our temple,” Blumberg said.

Groups offered financial aid for Jews to return to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina in 2005, and Jewish organizations around the country offer moving assistance for relocating families. A congregation has loans and other benefits for Jewish families moving into an area near Boston.

“Our program is distinctive because it’s Dothan, but it’s also distinctive because of the type of financial assistance,” said Rob Goldsmith, executive director of Blumberg Family Jewish Community Services, which will screen applicants and administer the grant program.

Rockoff credits Blumberg and the rest of the congregation with fighting to remain in Dothan, where the synagogue has a full-time rabbi and the temple, which is aligned with the reform movement.

“It is a small community, but they have some deep pockets to be able to do this,” said Rockoff. “As a historian, it is fascinating to see them trying to buck this trend.”

Dothan lies at the heart of the South’s peanut region, in Alabama’s southeastern corner, just minutes from Florida and Georgia. It’s dotted with big fiberglass peanuts painted to resemble characters and people — there’s even an Elvis peanut.

But the Blumberg foundation is selling prospective Jewish residents on Dothan’s quality of life — its low cost of living, the heritage of its synagogue and its proximity to Florida beaches, about 80 miles away.

Downtown is filled with quaint red-brick buildings and colorful murals, and traffic never gets too bad.

Rabbi Lynne Goldsmith didn’t know quite what to expect when she moved to Dothan a year ago to serve as pastor at Temple Emanu-El, which was founded in 1929. She came with her husband, who directs the Jewish community services group.

A Connecticut native, the rabbi halfway expected the Alabama of old with wide-open racism and dirt roads.

“The Northeast has a really warped perception of what the South is all about, and I found out it was all wrong,” she said. “The South is a wonderful place to be. The people are warm and friendly. There’s very little traffic. And best of all, there’s no snow.”

Categories: GENERAL

City Halts Public School Visits to U.N. Over Safety

September 10, 2008 · Leave a Comment

City Halts Public School Visits to U.N. Over Safety

By BENNY AVNI, Staff Reporter of the Sun | September 10, 2008
http://www.nysun.com/new-york/city-halts-public-school-visits-to-un-over-safety/85538/

UNITED NATIONS — The city of New York is suspending all public school visits to the United Nations due to safety concerns in the landmark First Avenue building, according to a letter to top U.N. officials from the city’s liaison to the world body, Marjorie Tiven.

Expressing “profound disappointment” over the United Nations’ failure to make good on pledges to secure the building, Ms. Tiven, who is Mayor Bloomberg’s sister, writes that the city has “no choice” but to suspend all school trips. The suspension comes as the United Nations is preparing for the U.N. General Assembly session later this month.

RELATED: Marjorie Tiven’s Letter (pdf).

The September 8 letter to the U.N. under-secretary-general for management, Angela Kane, is the latest in an escalating tug-of-war between city and U.N. officials over the safety of the U.N. compound, which has violated city building safety codes throughout its 60-year existence, including at least 866 fire and building safety code violations documented by the fire department in recent months.

Although the United Nations is outside the legal jurisdiction of its host country, Ms. Tiven’s office has demanded that the world body comply with the codes, arguing that city first responders would be called upon to save lives in U.N. building during an emergency. The request has led to legal wrangling between the two sides, but recently the United Nations began to work with the city, erecting fire-separation features in parts of the building. U.N. officials say they have spent at least $3 million to comply with the city’s safety demands, funds they say will be wasted when the organization launches its $1.9 billion Capital Master Plan to overhaul the building by 2013.

U.N. officials have recently limited public tours of the building, one of the city’s most popular tourist destinations, confining day trips to areas that are fire-compartmentalized. But Ms. Tiven writes that the move does not address safety concerns for employees working at the 39-floor building and for nontourists who visit the institution, including dozens of heads of state attending this month’s annual General Assembly session.

“It is not within the United Nations’ discretion (or the City’s) to assign different values to the lives of tourists in the Headquarters’ public areas, versus the lives of United Nations employees and business visitors in the high-rise Secretariat building,” Ms. Tiven writes.

“We are confident that the U.N. facilities are very safe,” the executive director of the Capital Master Plan, Michael Adlerstein, who has negotiated with the city over safety issues, told The New York Sun.

“We look forward” to the arrival of the General Assembly delegates later this month, he said, adding that the building is as safe as it has been over the last 60 years.

Categories: GENERAL

Former Nation of Islam leader W.D. Mohammed dies

September 10, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Former Nation of Islam leader W.D. Mohammed dies

By SOPHIA TAREEN
Associated Press Writer

Obit Mohammed


AP Photo

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In this Aug. 31, 2003 file photo, Imam W. Deen Mohammed responds to those gathered at the annual meeting of the American Society of Muslims in Chicago. Mohammed, the son of Nation of Islam leader Elijah Muhammad who moved thousands of blacks into mainstream Islam to become among the most important Muslim leaders in North America, died Tuesday, Sept. 9, 2008, according to his nephew. He was 74.

CHICAGO Imam W.D. Mohammed, who succeeded his father as leader of the Nation of Islam but abandoned its teachings of black supremacy and moved thousands of its followers into mainstream Islam, died Tuesday. He was 74.

Mohammed died at his home in Markham, Ill., according to a family statement issued late Tuesday by his nephew, Sultan Muhammad. Details of his death were not immediately released.

“We ask that you pray for our father and leader,” the statement said.

The Cook County Medical Examiner said 74-year-old Wallace Mohammed was pronounced dead Tuesday. Mohammed went by both Warith Deen Mohammed and Wallace Muhammad. An autopsy was planned for Wednesday.

“Obviously, it’s a great loss for the entire Muslim community,” said Dawud Walid, executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations in Michigan, where Mohammed led a convention last month. “He was encouraging his followers to accept the best of their humanity and to extend the moral and ethical values of Islam to the general American public.”

When Mohammed’s father, Elijah Muhammad, died in 1975, his son was named leader of the Chicago-based Nation of Islam, which promoted self-reliance and black supremacy, a belief that mainstream Muslims consider heretical.

Mohammed quickly abandoned that teaching and led the Nation toward orthodox Islam, emphasizing the faith’s message of racial tolerance. He had been a friend of Malcolm X, who abandoned the Nation to embrace mainstream Islam before he was assassinated in 1965.

Minister Louis Farrakhan, who broke with Mohammed over the move to orthodox Islam, separately revived the old Nation of Islam.

Farrakhan and Mohammed reconciled in 2000 through meetings and a joint public appearance at a Friday prayer in Chicago. Still, Mohammed remained critical of many Nation of Islam leaders.

“The time for those leaders who had that hate rhetoric has come and passed – and they know it,” Mohammed said in an interview last year in Little Rock, Ark. “For the last 10 years or more, they’ve just been selling wolf tickets to the white race and having fun while they collect money and have fancy lifestyles.”

The Nation of Islam didn’t immediately return telephone messages seeking comment.

Born in 1933 in the Detroit area, Mohammed was the seventh of eight children. He was interested in Islam from an early age, said Lawrence Mamiya, a religion professor at Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, N.Y.

“He was a great African-American Muslim leader who opened up Islam to the wider American public,” Mamiya said.

In 1990, Mohammed was the first Muslim to open the U.S. Senate with prayer.

“His intrinsic intelligence and high academic acumen made him wise, but his kind heart and charitable character is what made him so beloved,” Rep. Andre Carson, D-Ind., who is Muslim, said in a statement Tuesday. “I extend my sympathies to his family and friends as they mourn his passing.”

No one knows the size of Mohammed’s movement, which was decentralized with many leaders and many entities, including The Mosque Cares. However, the number of his followers is believed to be in the tens of thousands.

The movement included not only mosques nationwide, but many business projects, which reflected the continued emphasis on black economic self-reliance that had been part of the Nation of Islam’s mission.

The movement’s decentralization makes it unclear who will succeed Mohammed.

Jimmy Jones, a Muslim chaplain and religion professor at Manhattanville College in Purchase, N.Y., joined Mohammed’s movement in 1979, during the transition toward orthodox Islam.

“He asked the believers to stop reading and learning what his father had taught and start listening to him,” Jones said after learning of Mohammed’s death from a movement leader.

Mohammed changed his name several times from his birth name, Wallace Muhammad, to Warith Deen Muhammad and W.D. Mohammed. Jones said the renaming partly reflected the imam’s struggle to maintain a triple identity: Muslim, African-American and American.

“He was trying to move a community that called itself an Islamic community closer to Islam without losing its roots and trying to situate itself in the context of American culture,” Jones said.

Mohammed’s businesses included importing clothing, developing skin care products and real estate development. Among the social service work he championed was promoting education, improving access to health care and supporting convicts after they were released from prison.

Associated Press writers Rachel Zoll in New York and Jeff Karoub in Detroit contributed to this report.

Categories: GENERAL · TRANSITIONS