(Eady wants to impart knowledge. Are you
ready?)
In too many communities we
continue to see drugs being easily distributed on
our streets by the products of a failed education
system – a lack of real jobs, lack of affordable
housing, no real family structure and much more.
The answer to the situation is economics.
He is no stranger to new ideas and continues to
reach people with his economic knowledge. Kermit
Eady, the founder and president of Black United Fund
of New York (BUFNY), the organization that once was
an engine of growth and pride in the Black
community, has released his first DVD entitled,
“Empowerment Strategies.” The DVD is full of
information, which lays down the ground work for
starting a business – with no money. The DVD can be
ordered through (888) 538-9803 or via
kermit@kermiteady.com.
In the beginning of the summer, Eady held
empowerment sessions on 125th Street where over 250
people were in attendance. He has stepped up to
educate these communities with his empowerment
strategies knowledge through his DVD and classes,
which will begin in Harlem at the State Building on
125th Street and CEMOTAP, (Committee to Eliminate
Media Offensive to African People), located in
Queens, 135-05 Rockaway Blvd.)
In 1979, Eady started BUFNY and kept it running for
almost two decades, until Attorney General Elliot
Spizter forced him out, citing misuse of charity
monies after BUFNY managed to purchase real
property, which put 400 Harlem families in low
income housing. An act that did not seem to be
illegal, however, it appeared to be an affront to
BUFNY’s shareholders, at a time when ‘Black’
communities were going through a gentrification
phase.
After speaking with Eady on several occasions, I
found him to be very spiritual, and very serious
about his works. It shows Spitzer and company really
did not get Eady’s MO, and found out the hard way –
that he was tough as a three day old steak – who
refused to be put out of business easily.
“You see, I started BUFNY to empower the community,”
Eady recalls. “I saw a bigger dream past the 400 low
income units. These units would have brought more
monies to do bigger things. That dream was a vision
someone did not want to let get off the
ground.” Eady went on to say, Spitzer, a Democrat,
“Fired me and brought in four Black Republicans from
Long Island to take over BUFNY. Then fired all the
employees and stopped the payroll deductions that
just about killed BUFNY. A preacher told me, ‘Man if
I was in your shoes, I would have blown someone’s
head off by now.’ I don’t have to think like that
because God will make a way.”
The Attorney General’s Charity Bureau, headed by
William Josephson was given high praises when it
involved taken down Black charities, however, when
Josephson went after Medicaid fraud in white nursing
homes, he was no longer welcome at the AG’s office.
Spitzer was quoted saying in a newspaper that he
didn’t “have confidence” in Josephson’s judgment.
How about the BUFNY investigation, where was
Spitzer’s confidence then? Will we ever find out
what really happened to BUFNY and other Black run
charities closed down by Spitzer?
There is a need to empower oneself and with 50% of
Black males unemployed –Eady’s Empowerment classes
couldn’t come at a better time. “I am going to tell
young people about Kermit’s classes. Our young
people need to learn a skill to empower themselves,”
says Florence Rice, a long time Harlem advocate and
friend of Eady’s.
These classes may fill a gap in these communities
where the education system has surely failed. Maybe
some of those young men who can be seen so visually
standing on the corner selling cigarettes and
whatever illegal substance – will take advantage of
these classes to make an attempt to enter the work
force and become an asset to the community and not
just a thorn in its side.
If you have any comments contact
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