The Doshon Farad Institute for Journalism

The Doshon Farad Institute for Journalism The Doshon Farad Institute for Journalism course will teach students the history of African-American

02/13/2023

On February 5th, journalist and Your Black World host Doshon Farad interviewed Africana (Black) Studies Scholars Dr. Leonard Jeffries, Prof. James Small, and...

10/13/2022
08/29/2022

A duet released by Elton John, represents Ms. Spearsโ€™s first music in six years, following a conservatorship that controlled her life and finances.

08/24/2022

๐—”๐—Ÿ๐— ๐—˜๐—ก๐—” ๐—Ÿ๐—ข๐— ๐—”๐—ซ (1915-2011)

Pioneering journalist and civil rights activist Almena Lomax was a leader in African American journalism and founded a black weekly newspaper in Los Angeles. She was the first black person to work on the city desk of the San Francisco Chronicle.

Hallie Almena Davis was born on July 23, 1915, in Galveston, Texas. Her father was postal deliveryman and her mother was a full-time seamstress. In 1917 the Davis family relocated to Chicago briefly before permanently settling in California in the early 1920s.

In 1933, Davis graduated from Jordan High School in Los Angeles, California and soon afterwards enrolled in Los Angeles City College where she majored in journalism. Davis graduated in 1938 and was hired by editor Charlotta Bass to work for the African American weekly The California Eagle. Davis also worked at a local Los Angeles radio station, where she ran a news/interview broadcast program two times a week.

In 1941, Davis acquired a loan from her future father-in-law, Lucius W. Lomax Sr., enabling her to start her own newspaper, The Los Angeles Tribune. Soon afterward she wed Lucius W. Lomax Jr., and the couple had six children before the marriage ended in 1960.

Throughout the 1940s and into the 1950s, the Los Angeles Tribune attained great popularity and eventually rivaled the much older California Eagle and the Los Angeles Sentinel, the other black newspapers in the city. Beginning first as a small weekly newsletter, by the end of the decade the Tribuneโ€™s weekly circulation reached around 25,000 subscriptions. Occasionally Lomax wrote for other newspapers as well. In 1946 she wrote a controversial guest editorial challenging the myth of African American male sexual prowess. The piece won her first place in the Wendell L. Willkie Awards for Negro Journalism.

By the 1950s, Lomax became more directly involved in politics and civil rights activism. In 1952 she was a delegate to the Democratic National Convention. In 1956, Lomax traveled to Montgomery, Alabama to write about the ongoing Montgomery Bus Boycott and the emerging Civil Rights Movement. Later in the decade she led protests against an array of Hollywood motion pictures that she and others felt promoted damaging representations of African Americans. Two of those films were Porgy and Bess and Imitation of Life.

The Los Angeles Tribune ended its publication in 1960 when Lomax divorced her husband and moved with her six children to Tuskegee, Alabama. From Tuskegee she continued to write articles for national magazines such as The Nation. In 1969 she returned to California and wrote for the San Francisco Chronicle and later its competitor the San Francisco Examiner. Lomax continued to write on political and social events into the 1990s. Her career ended when she developed poor eyesight.

Her daughter Melanie went on to become the president of the Los Angeles Police Commission and a prominent civil rights attorney before her death in 2006. Another daughter Michele was a film critic at the San Francisco Examiner before her death in 1987. Her son Michael is national president and CEO of the United Negro College Fund and a son Mark is a Los Angeles attorney.

Hallie Almena Davis Lomax passed away on March 25, 2011, in Pasadena, California. She was 95.

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Today we celebrated the Birthday of the Immortal Sister Ida B. Wells. Pouring water to the Earth in Her Honor!!! Ebiye!!...
07/18/2022

Today we celebrated the Birthday of the Immortal Sister Ida B. Wells. Pouring water to the Earth in Her Honor!!! Ebiye!!! Aseโ€™o!!!

07/17/2022

The Last Dragon 30th Anniversary Celebration at the Newark CityPlex Movie Theater. Reported by Doshon Farad for Your Black World. Shot and edited by Cliff Ro...

07/08/2022
06/26/2022

Fay Jackson deserves recognition for her contributions to Black Hollywood. In her twenties, she founded the weekly publication Flash and the newspaper California News. She used the black star interview to focus on Hollywoodโ€™s racial inequities. Jacksonโ€™s newspaper helped create a sense of a more vital black entertainment community, in which everyone was aware of the activities of everyonelse. Actors and actresses worked hard to get a space on her newspaper.

06/02/2022

CashApp $DFarad.

04/27/2022
My interview with Atty. Ben Crump at the National Action Network Convention in New York City. 4/6/22
04/11/2022

My interview with Atty. Ben Crump at the National Action Network Convention in New York City. 4/6/22

This is an all-black news and commentary channel that features a number of African American thinkers, commentators and speakers. The views of each video are...

04/07/2022

N.A.N. Convention: Keepers of the Dream Awards!!!

04/06/2022

This is an all-black news and commentary channel that features a number of African American thinkers, commentators and speakers. The views of each video are...

04/01/2022
03/26/2022

Weโ€™re in need of three Apple Mac Books in excellent condition. If youโ€™re able to donate please inbox me at [email protected] Thank you very much for your support.

03/17/2022

Continued. . .

03/17/2022

Welcome to class!!!

03/12/2022

According to abcnews.com, The Rev. Jesse Jackson was hospitalized Monday in Washington, D.C. after falling and hitting his head while helping Howard Universi...

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The Doshon Farad Institute for Journalism is currently in need of three Apple Mac Books-recent models in good condition. If you would like to donate please inbox me. Thank you very much for your support as always.
Hotep (Peace), Family. Wednesday nightโ€™s launch of The Doshon Farad Institute for Journalism course was very successful. We will be holding class for the next five weeks via Zoom every Wednesday from 7pm-9pm Est. The cost is $500 for the full course, however, you can you pay $100 for any class that you decide to attend. You donโ€™t have to pay the $500 all at once. Please inbox me for further information. Thank you very much for your time.
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