Uniting labor and community

Uniting labor and community

24th annual Black Workers For Justice banquet

Published Apr 15, 2007 10:10 PM

The Black Workers For Justice held its 24th annual Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Support for Labor banquet April 7 at the North Carolina Association of Educators Hall in Raleigh.

Raleigh city workers receive self-determination<br>award from Nathanette Mayo April 7.

Raleigh city workers receive self-determination
award from Nathanette Mayo April 7.
WW photo: Monica Moorehead

Several hundred people, young and old, representing community organizations and political groups, attended the event in solidarity with the crucial work that BWFJ, along with its ally, UE Local 150, carries out to organize the Black, Latin@ and women workers in the public sector who face low wages and intolerable working conditions.

North Carolina adheres to right-to-work laws and ranks at the bottom as the least unionized state in the country. Right-to-work prohibits state and local governments from entering into collective bargaining agreements with workers. This is known as General Statute 95-98, which was signed into law during the 1950s during the height of racist segregation in the South. Virginia is the only other state with the same anti-worker, anti-union statute.

The banquet affords the opportunity for BWFJ to reinforce its goals and also to recognize the work that labor and community activists have carried out over the past 12 months to meet those goals. This year’s event was no exception. Rukiya Dillahunt was the Directress of Ceremony during the banquet program.

BWJF leader Ashanki Binta spoke on the International Justice Workers’ Campaign to defeat General Statute 95-98. Keynote speaker Rev. Dr. William Barber, president of the North Carolina State NAACP, gave a fiery talk about the need for unity and solidarity in the struggle against war, injustice and racism.

Nathanette Mayo from BWFJ presented the Abner Berry Self-Determination Awards. The purpose of these awards is to “recognize and honor people whose dedication and sacrifice to the struggle for workers’ rights and to the self-determination of the African-American people has been significant.”

Berry, who died in 1987, was a Black active member of the Communist Party USA from the mid-1930s until the late 1950s. He was the editor of the Harlem edition of the CPUSA’s publication, The Daily Worker. He was also a founding member of the BWFJ in 1981.

Two of this year’s Berry awards went to the United Food and Commercial Workers union for its efforts to organize 5,500 mainly immigrant workers at the Smithfield Packing Plant located in Tar Heel, N.C. These exploited workers walked off the job last fall in protest of anti-union tactics by the bosses.

Smithfield is the world’s largest hog processing plant, where 32,000 hogs are slaughtered daily. This amounts to 2,000 an hour, 33 per minute or one hog every two seconds. These workers suffer high rates of injuries including cuts, maiming and repetitive-motion pain, and are denied workers’ compensation. These workers, the majority of them Latin@ and Black, face systematic racism from white bosses.

Another Berry award went to the Raleigh City Workers of the N.C. Public Service Workers Union, UE 150.

Last September, 50 workers from the Raleigh sanitation department carried out a wildcat strike in protest of long working hours, low pay and other grievances against the city. Due to this action, over half of the city workers have joined the union and garnered much community support. Another important victory is that these workers have forced the mayor of Raleigh to “meet and confer” with them—a big step forward to breaking down the restrictive barriers to union organizing, particularly the General Statute 95-98 law.

Other speakers included Shafeah M’Bali, co-editor of Justice Speaks, the BWFJ publication; National Vice-Chair of BWFJ Angaza Laughinghouse; and Ajamu Dillahunt, a BWFJ steering committee member. The Fruit of Labor Ensemble provided cultural entertainment.

Fayetteville Peace March & Rally

Featured Artist: Fruit of Labor

A highlight of the power-packed program of the March 17 Fayetteville peace march and rally, The Fruit of Labor Singing Ensemble is the cultural arm of Black Workers for Justice.

For more than 20 years, Fruit of Labor has been organizing, writing songs and creating music from many ethnic groups of people and co-workers’ struggles!

Their songs are a chronology of popular people’s movements for social change . . . like "The Story of Shiloh", which talks about fighting corporate toxic terrorism in an African American community while surrounded by the popular Research Triangle Park, and "Organize, Organize, Organize" which reflects their support for bringing more international union resources to organize the South. Also, "Never Again", is an important song documenting the national tragedy of an industrial fire that killed 25 workers in a poultry plant in rural Hamlet, North Carolina in 1991. "Election Blues" is a bluesy tune that highlights the hypocrisy of the United States 2000-04 elections.

Through various musical forms including gospel, reggae, rhythm and blues, jazz, protest, folk, work songs, chants and many others, Fruit of Labor Singing Ensemble has carried on our peoples struggle and working class tradition, history culture and legacy.

Fruit of Labor’s latest recording (CD) of music, chants, and songs is "Weapons of Mass Construction." (More about Fruit of Labor at: http://www.fruitoflabor.org/ )

Fruit of Labor will be part of an "all-star" lineup at this year’s Fayetteville rally. It will also include comedian Dave Lippman, bluesman Dan Speller, Holly Near, and more.

All Together. All for Peace. All for Free.

Reprinted from http://fayetteville-peace-rally.org

Voices are lifted against social injustice

Raleigh’s Fruit of Labor Singing Ensemble has practiced vocal advocacy for more than 20 years

RALEIGH - The mother of the fallen soldier, the worker in the hog-processing plant, the homeowner who lost everything in Hurricane Katrina’s Gulf Coast flood, all have a voice when Nathanette Mayo steps up to a microphone. It’s an alto voice, strong and clear, and it can find the melody in any social cause.

"I look for work, but around town

They’re cuttin’ back and shuttin’ down,

I’m sick and doctors have a cure

But not for me — I’m uninsured," Mayo sang during a rehearsal last week with the Fruit of Labor Singing Ensemble, based in Raleigh.

Mayo, her husband, baritone Angaza Laughinghouse, and fellow activist Rick Scott, a tenor, make up the core of the ensemble, which sometimes includes a dozen volunteer voices.

In advance of a performance at Saturday’s peace rally in Fayetteville, they worked through a handful of songs from a two-inch-thick binder accumulated over more than 20 years of social advocacy. While they borrow some music from others in the civil rights or labor and anti-war movements, much of the music Fruit of Labor performs they write themselves.

"It’s a collaborative effort," says Scott, who is also the rhythm man for the group.

None of the core three can read music, but together they create it. The ensemble incorporates elements of nearly every genre of American music: gospel, folk, R&B, hip hop, rock.

Their repertoire reads like a news archive from the past two decades, with landmark events commemorated in verse and rhyme. One song is a tribute to the 25 people who died in the chicken-processing plant fire in Hamlet. Another recalls the national elections of 2000 and 2004.

They offer copies of several CDs they’ve made over the years for sale at the Fruit of Labor World Cultural Center, a remade biker bar off Capital Boulevard near New Hope Church Road that also hosts seminars on labor rights and sessions on how to fight racism. The center sits in a neighborhood that includes Asian, African and Latino residents, all of whom feel welcome in the 2,000-square-foot space that is part library, part civic center, part church fellowship hall.

As they practiced, a drumbeat filled the room.

It sounded like a beating heart.

Staff writer Martha Quillin can be reached at 829-8989 or marthaq@newsobserver.com.

World Cultural Center

Fruit of Labor
World Cultural Center
4200 Lake Ridge Dr.
Raleigh, NC

 

The Fruit of Labor World Cultural Center is available to rent for you or your organization’s special event or meeting.

Call Nathanette Mayo at 919-876-7187 or 919-231-2660 for a very affordable rate quote today!

 

Click on the thumbnail image(s) to tour the Cultural Center

Listen To Our Music

 

Fruit of Labor Singing Ensemble

 

"Worker’s Stimulation Package"
©Fruit of Labor Singing Ensemble

Click Below to Listen to Asikatali

Click Below to Listen to Here We Come

Click Below to Listen to Peace Funk

Click Below to Listen to Justice Flowing Down Like Water

Click Below to Listen to Genocide (Thou Shall Not Kill)


"Your Silence Won’t Save You"
©Fruit of Labor Singing Ensemble

Click Below to Listen to Never Again

Click Below to Listen to We Want Justice

Click Below to Listen to Gulf Coast Ghosts

Click Below to Listen to W.A.R. We Ain’t Ready

Click Below to Listen to Election Blues

Contact Us

Fruit of Labor Singing Ensemble
Post Office Box 5574
Raleigh, North Carolina 27650

(919) 876-7187 - Day

World Cultural Center
(919) 231-2660 - Anytime


Nathanette Mayo
Cultural Coordinator

Angaza Laughinghouse
Manager

(required)
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About Us

Fruit of Labor Singing Ensemble

Celebrating 25 Years of Honoring the Past, Celebrating the Present and Generating Inspiration and Hope for the Future

The Fruit of Labor Singing Ensemble, their songs and music was born out of the struggle of organizing African American workers in the “Black Belt” region of North Carolina and the South.  More than twenty two workers, at various times, have participated in this dynamic cultural workers organization.  Recruited from workplace and community struggles, they have captured in music oppressed peoples’ and the working class’ history of community and workplace struggles. 

In song, they document the tragic Hamlet Imperial Food Company fire which killed twenty five workers in 1991, the Black community of Shiloh’s fight against toxic terrorism during the late 1980’s until 2007 along with the Workers Want Fairness/Organize the South tours from 1989 to 1991 which sought to get international unions to use resources to organize southern workers.  “Organize the South” was the call for justice.  The United Electrical Radio and Machine Workers, the Union of Needlepoint Industrial Textile Employees (UNITE), the United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) and others responded.

From anti-apartheid in South Africa and Azanian liberation to workers solidarity, women’s oppression and liberation, the anti-war movement, black- brown/African American-Latino unity, globalization, run away corporations, justice and jails, youth and hip-hop; the Fruit of Labor’s music and songs speak to the bitter and sweet struggles of the oppressed.  Their music beautifully celebrates the fruitful victories of oppressed people and workers’ glorious history, sorrow and joy!

They have created more than 60 songs, some catalogued in their four CD’s:  “Workers Want Fairness”, “Weapons of Mass Construction”, “Your Silence Won’t Save You” and their 25th anniversary CD “Workers Stimulus Package”. The Fruit of Labor’s music has been performed before countless rallies, picket lines and marches. It has also been heard in concert halls, schools, colleges, workplaces, churches, communities, Junteenth and Kwanzaa celebrations and on radio stations nationally and internationally. They have performed before audiences throughout North Carolina, in Maine, Conneticut, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, New York, Michigan, Wisconsin, Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Virginia, Illinois, Louisiana, Tennessee and Washington, DC.

Many folks have experienced the powerful political messaging of their lyrics bound up in soul stirring, gut wrenching blues, bouncing to a hip-hop or reggae beat or sliding in and out of a jazz melody with a little scat included.  Their lyrics have also been known to get caught up in a 70’s funk beat and break it down rhythm & blues sound. They are even infused, at times, with a bit of pop flavor and, at others, a take them down to the river and lift ‘em up gospel flavor! The Fruit of Labor’s songs and music touches all because it is rooted in our people’s ageless traditions of chants, call and response, spirituals, reggae, jazz, blues, R&B, soul, folk, hip-hop and spoken word.  It’s an exciting mixed bag of dancing, energy, down in your bones spiritual and “fightback” coming at you!

Angaza Sababu Laughinghouse
Founding Member
Fruit of Labor Singing Ensemble