© 2024 New England Public Media

FCC public inspection files:
WGBYWFCRWNNZWNNUWNNZ-FMWNNI

For assistance accessing our public files, please contact hello@nepm.org or call 413-781-2801.
PBS, NPR and local perspective for western Mass.
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Activist and academic ready to get to work on reparations in Amherst

Amilcar Shabazz
NEPM
Amilcar Shabazz

Prominent University of Massachusetts professor of Africana Studies Amilcar Shabazz began life with a more mundane name. He grew up in Texas as Eric Frank. Then in college, Shabazz read a great deal about Malcom X and other Black activists.“That name of Eric that my mother just saw in a movie. I think with the male character versus Audrey Hepburn, you know, that's all fine and good, but I wanted something culturally meaningful,” Shabazz told And Another Thing.

He changed his last name to Shabazz, which is a name Malcom X and members of his family adopted. He changed his first name to Amilcar in honor of Amílcar Cabral, who led an independence movement for Cape Verde and Guinea-Bissau.

And Another Thing devotes Mondays to in depth conversations with a single guest about important issues and challenges they have faced. The guest today is Amilcar Shabazz.

Shabazz moved with his family from Oklahoma to Amherst in 2007 to join the UMass faculty and became involved in his new community. He is now a member of the African Heritage Reparation Assembly, which will determine how the town goes about making reparations to descendants of slaves. Amherst is the only town in Massachusetts that has committed itself to reparations.

“People are ready now more than ever for a narrative, for a story, for a framework, for policy, for action to make real, transformative change in our society that can address these disparities. That can address these inequities. That cannot address the exclusions. That can address the segregated spaces that can address the tiki torch parades,” said Shabazz.

Related Content