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Rejecting the Spectacle That Cleanses Empire

Rejecting the Spectacle That Cleanses Empire

Rejecting the Spectacle That Cleanses Empire

The full, bloody arc of 250 years of U.S. history’s contradictions is foundational, not accidental. Domestically, the United States was built by brutalizing and extracting from colonized and enslaved communities. From the Middle Passage to the plantation. From the massacre of Indigenous nations to the convict leasing system. From Jim Crow to mass incarceration. From redlining to Flint’s poisoned water. The U.S. has never known a peace not purchased by Black, Brown, and Indigenous flesh. Internationally, the same logic applies. The country that dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki; that carpet-bombed Southeast Asia; that trained death squads throughout the Caribbean and Latin America; that bombed and sanctioned Iraq into ruin; that armed apartheid Israel while leveling Gaza; that drones Somalia and Yemen – this is not a nation that holds a moral license to host a "world" celebration.

To host the World Cup in the U.S is to ask the world to look away. To attend is to accept the fiction that sport exists outside politics. But the politics of the World Cup are the politics of displacement, where stadiums are built on stolen land or razed neighborhoods, migrants and the unhoused swept from city centers, and local budgets gutted for security apparatus that will later be turned against protesters. The 2026 World Cup will be no exception. The July 19th final match in New Jersey will take place less than 10 miles from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facility Delaney Hall, where a hunger strike, popular resistance from the outside, and violent state repression are currently colliding.

We therefore have called for a boycott of the 2026 World Cup. This is a political refusal, not to be confused with a symbolic gesture. Boycott is the weapon of the colonized, the sanctioned, the dispossessed. It says, “we will not applaud your stadiums while you bomb our homes. We will not sing your anthems while you starve our children. We will not provide the spectacle that cleanses your empire.”

As we honored Haitian Flag Day, we remember that a small island of revolutionaries brought the entire slaveholding world to its knees. As we honored African Liberation Day, we remember that the continent once vowed to rid itself of colonialism entirely, and that vow remains unfulfilled. As we honor the self-determination of Black/African peoples in the U.S., we remember that this legacy is one of constant resistance to empire domestically and globally. A consistent, coherent critique, therefore, demands that the spirit of defiant self-determination cannot become conspicuously absent when we uncritically cheer for a World Cup built on migrant labor exploitation, greenwashing, and sportswashing. To reject the contradictions of 250 years of U.S. imperialism is to understand that the same hands that hold flags at a World Cup could instead hold signs, blockades, and mutual aid in the struggle for human dignity and collective liberation.

We refuse to be spectators to our own subjugation. We will continue to build our resistance.

Boycott the World Cup,
Boycott the U.S.

 
 
 

On May 16, 2026, the BAP South Miami Cluster organized a Haitian Flag Day celebration in Miami Shores alongside community partners, bringing together residents for food, music, cultural activities, and political education. The event was co-sponsored with Black Men Build Miami and commemorated Haiti’s revolutionary history and the significance of the Haitian flag as a symbol of anti-colonial struggle, self-determination, and Black liberation. BAP members engaged attendees around ongoing local and international campaigns, including solidarity with Haiti and concerns regarding the impacts of World Cup-related development in Miami.

 

On May 3rd, BAP Mid-Atlantic members tabled at a regional soccer tournament held in Gaithersburg, Maryland, hosted by MD2Palestine and University of Maryland Students for Justice in Palestine. Over 200 people gathered to play, compete, and raise funds for Palestine as members talked to players, families, and vendors about the Campaign to Move the Games, Boycott the World Cup, and Boycott the U.S.

 

On Friday, May 29th, BAP-DC endorsed an in-person book talk for "Laundering Black Rage" hosted by Sankofa Books with one of the authors, BAP Midwest Co-coordinator, Too Black, featuring a discussion and Q&A led by Evan, BAP DC Co-coordinator. The event connected central themes from the book and related BAP and member organization campaigns, emphasizing aspects of No Compromise, No Retreat, Zone of Peace, Shutdown AFRICOM, Community Control DC, and the Boycott World Cup Campaign to the current material conditions of DC residents. The talk was livestreamed on Sankofa's YouTube page.

 

Throughout May, the BAP Wilmington Cluster co-hosted and attended several events focused on Malcolm X and African Liberation. On May 18, members participated in CMB-DE’s Monthly session and uplifted Haitian Flag Day activities. Also, on 5/23, members co-facilitated a popular education session and panel featuring representatives from MXGM, CMB-Newark, BAP NYC/NJ, and BAP Mid-Atlantic Solidarity Network. Members emphasized BAP’s objectives in re-centering people(s)-centered movements, raised contradictions of a World Cup on U.S. soil, and making connections between revolutionary history and culture to the masses’ efforts and critical work today. Additional photos here.

 
 

No Compromise No Retreat: Defeat the War Against Africans / Black People in the U.S. and Abroad

 

BAP-Baltimore co-organized a May Day mobilization and organization fair at Druid Hill Park. Members conducted outreach, marched through the streets, and read BAP’s May Day statement, which received immense crowd support. They continued to push the Demilitarize Baltimore petition and distribute literature developed by the citywide alliance.

 

For International Workers Day, the BAP Wilmington Cluster participated in the First Friday free food program, organized by Humbly Assisting Humanity. This program operates regularly outside of member organization CMB-Delaware’s local hub headquarters. Members distributed and discussed BAP’s statement: “Not One Drop of Blood from the Working Classes for Capitalist Interests,” using the opportunity to canvas and demonstrate with neighbors on the connection between exploited Black communities as domestic colonies and the fight for Community Control and a Zone of Peace.

 

Zone of Peace in Our Americas:
Haitian Flag Day & Cuba Solidarity against U.S. War

On Sunday, May 24th, BAP-DC hosted a film screening and discussion on “The Forgotten Occupation: Jim Crow Goes to Haiti” to draw connections between historical and present instances of U.S. intervention and invasion in Haiti, across the Caribbean, and the world at large.

 

On May 30, 2026, BAP Philadelphia organized a live musical performance, a DJ set, a poetry reading, and a speakout in solidarity with Cuba against the accelerating U.S. War on the country. Speakers from Philly4Cuba, Anakbayan Philadelphia, and el Colectivo Unido de Resistencia y Autodefensa (CURA) provided messages as well.

 

On May 22, 2026, BAP Philadelphia co-hosted a Haitian Film Night in observance of Haitian Flag Day and Haitian Heritage Month. At the film night, BAP’s Haiti/Americas Team read their Haitian Flag Day statement, and participants discussed Haiti’s struggle for popular governance against imperialism, created their own Drapo (Haitian Flag), and watched films connecting Haitian culture across the island and diaspora. The event was co-hosted with Kolektivo Sin Nombre. Photos here.

 

U.S. Out of Africa: African Liberation Day

 

BAP-Baltimore and the All-African People's Revolutionary Party conducted the second annual African Liberation Day Symposium held at Payne Memorial AME church. Organizations such as the Palestinian Youth Movement (PYM), Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP), Party for Socialism and Liberation (PSL), and People’s Power  Assembly (PPA) were also participants in the event. They discussed this year’s theme, “Revolutionary Pan Africanism Fights In Solidarity With All Oppressed People Our Struggle is One,”  in a set of panels featuring youth organizers and women. They conducted community outreach and handed out BAP literature and materials.

 

The BAP-Atlanta gathered in Washington Park to honor African Liberation Day with the theme “Revolutionary Pan-Africanism Fights in Solidarity with Oppressed Peoples Everywhere; Our Struggle is One!” They gathered together for political education and a keynote address by Baba Mukasa Dada, and celebrated culture with a poet open mic.

 

International Solidarity & Delegations

From May 11-13, a delegation of four BAP Africa Team members attended the Pan-Africanism Summit Against Imperialism, the people's counter-summit to the France–Africa Summit in Nairobi, Kenya. The delegation strengthened ties with revolutionary Kenyan activists and organizers on the ground, as well as with international student, labor, and political party organizations that had delegates in attendance.

 

On May 31, 2026, the BAP South Miami Cluster participated in the Protest Against U.S. Escalation Toward Cuba and the Fuel Blockade at Miami International Airport, calling for an end to U.S. threats against Cuba and the intensified sanctions regime targeting the island’s fuel sector. The action was organized by the Miami Coalition to End the U.S. Blockade of Cuba and brought together local anti-imperialist, labor, solidarity, and community organizations. Demonstrators denounced measures restricting Cuba’s access to fuel and other essential resources, highlighting the humanitarian impact of U.S. sanctions on the Cuban people. The protest called for an end to economic warfare against Cuba and affirmed international solidarity with Cuban sovereignty and self-determination.

 

On May 31, 2026, the BAP South Miami Cluster participated in the Protest Against U.S. Escalation Toward Cuba and the Fuel Blockade at Miami International Airport, calling for an end to U.S. threats against Cuba and the intensified sanctions regime targeting the island’s fuel sector. The action was organized by the Miami Coalition to End the U.S. Blockade of Cuba and brought together local anti-imperialist, labor, solidarity, and community organizations. Demonstrators denounced measures restricting Cuba’s access to fuel and other essential resources, highlighting the humanitarian impact of U.S. sanctions on the Cuban people. The protest called for an end to economic warfare against Cuba and affirmed international solidarity with Cuban sovereignty and self-determination.

 
 

Member Organization Activity

 

PACA’s People's Pan-African Wellness Front (PPWF) continues to confront health disparities impacting African/Black working-class communities in Southeast D.C. PACA was invited to table and conduct blood pressure screenings at the Nanny Hellen Burroughs March on May 9, and the Black Mother’s March on May 10. On May 24th, at the PPWF pop-up, PACA held community high blood pressure and glucose testing, where they handed out hygiene kits and educational materials on revolutionary health alternatives and preventative health. There was a special 30-minute PACA supporter-led yoga session.

 

April 11th, PACA held a “Hands Off DC’s Black Youth Rally and Speak Out”. They countered the messaging of teen takeovers being chaos, as they are simply what rebellion looks like when basic needs go unmet. When the system abandons them, they create their own spaces to be seen, heard, and together. Four PACA members gave speeches, and local organizations were in attendance.

 

Individual Member Activities

Erica Caines, BAP National Co-coordinator, was the recipient of the Mawina Kouyate Daughters of Africa award presented by the All African Peoples Revolutionary Party and All African Women’s Revolutionary Union on African Liberation Day. Other recipients include Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitweh (President of Namibia/ SWAPO leadership) and Ana Maria Gomes Soares (formerly served as Political Commissioner of the People's Revolutionary Armed Forces and currently serves on PAIGC Veterans Council and is a member of Democratic Union of Guinean Women - UDEMU)

 

Political Education and Resources

BAP’s Research & Archive Team releases “No Compromise No Retreat: Black Alliance for Peace’s Annotated Edition of the U.S. National 'Security' Strategy (Nov 2025)”. This is a tool for clarity and collective political education to further illuminate the tactics deployed by our enemy, U.S. imperialism and the interests of the capitalist class; and to sharpen our strategies in connection to BAP’s core campaign: No Compromise, No Retreat

BAP’s Haiti/Americas Team developed an updated toolkit for Haitian Flag Day 2026, including a one-pager on the history and significance of Haitian Flag Day. This year, BAP aimed to re-center the people(s)-centered movements and struggles of the Haitian masses for popular sovereignty, connect that struggle to the Black/African working class in the U.S., and heighten the contradictions of Haiti’s historic qualification for the World Cup hosted within the borders of the U.S. empire. Resources here: BAP Haitian Flag Day Toolkit - 2026 and Haitian Flag Day 1-pager.

BAP’s Climate, Environment & Militarism Working Group published a one-pager fact sheet, “Take Action Against Data Centers,” to support local, regional, and national struggles against the proliferation of data centers

Margaret Kimberley, Executive Editor of Black Agenda Report and BAP Africa Team Co-coordinator, interviewed Ajamu Baraka, Director of the North-South Project for People(s)-Centered Human Rights for Black Agenda Radio on YouTube to discuss the campaign, Move the Games: Take the FIFA World Cup Out of the U.S. and Boycott the Host Country Itself. Margaret also interviewed Abraham Paulos of Black Alliance for Just Immigration to discuss settler colonialism, immigration, and mass incarceration.

KPFA's Hard Knock Radio interviewed Netfa Freeman, BAP Africa Team Co-coordinator, on May 7, Breaking Down U.S. Pressure on Zambia. On May 21, Netfa was also interviewed on Rising With Sonali to discuss the U.S. escalation against Cuba. 

BAP member organization PACA garnered local corporate media coverage in such outlets as CBS WUSA9, Fox News, Daily Mail, and NBC4, from their challenges to the DC curfew laws that are criminalizing Black youth in response to so-called “teen takeovers”. They were also featured on Washington Informer TV for the 2nd Malcolm X Day. Check out all PACA media hits here.

While attending the Pan-Africanism Summit Against Imperialism in Nairobi, Kenya, the BAP Africa Team delegation gave this cutting-edge interview to Sovereign Media, a socialist and anti-imperialist news outlet based there.  

On Revolutionary African Perspectives, BAP- Atlanta members  Dan, Steven, and engineer Leyla expose how surveillance, state repression, and corporate power collide in Atlanta—from a police chief accused of stalking with Flock cameras, to new indictments against Stop Cop City activists, to AI surveillance targeting Black neighborhoods as “Cop City” nears completion. Then, Rafiki Morris, of the All- African People’s Revolutionary Party, and BAP Climate, Environment and Militarism Working Group co- lead, Anthony Karefa Rogers-Wright, discuss boycotting the FIFA World Cup, linking mega-events to repression in Gaza and beyond, and how to fight for sports justice.

Austin Cole, BAP National Co-Coordinator, appeared on Venezuela Analysis’ podcast episode 45: “International Solidarity in the Belly of the Beast” alongside Michela Martinazzi of Brooklyn Against War to discuss the role and importance of international solidarity in the context of the U.S. War on Venezuela and Cuba, in particular, as well as the difficulties social movements face in building meaningful solidarity and broad coalitions.

On May 22, Anti-Imperialist Scholars Collective members Layla Brown, Charisse Burden-Stelly, and Navid Farnia discussed Pan-Africanism, its history, and its contemporary significance amid annual African Liberation Day celebrations with BAP National Co-Coordinator, Erica Caines, reemphasizing connecting struggles against the primary contradiction of U.S.- led imperialism. 

Erica Caines, BAP National Co-Coordinator, appeared on the opening interview of WPFW’s Voices with Vision to discuss BAP’s call to “Boycott the World Cup, Boycott the U.S.”, and the significance of an African formation making that call within the belly of the beast.

As part of the “Boycott the Games” campaign, Director of the North-South Project for People(s)-Centered Human Rights, Ajamu Baraka, spoke with a wide range of journalists and media outlets to explain the significance of the campaign and why the US is unsuitable to host the World Cup. In May, Ajamu joined Darker Than Blue on Black Liberation Media, Jamarl Thomas, and  Black Agenda Radio to discuss the political conditions in the US and how it is a dangerous nation for players and attendees. In April, he discussed the reason why sports should be a site of Anti-Fascist resistance on Edge of Sports.

BAP National Co-coordinator, Austin Cole, and Climate, Environment & Militarism Working Group Co-Lead, Anthony Karefa Rogers-Wright, joined The Remix Morning Show to talk about the impact of data center proliferation and US militarization on our environment.

BAP Coordinating Committee Chair, Jacqueline Luqman, BAP National Co- Coordinator, Erica Caines, and member of the Anti-Fascist Football Coalition, Clau O’Brien Moscoso, appeared alongside Kim Brown for a Women’s Wednesday ‘Boycott The World Cup, Boycott the U.S” Takeover of The Remix Morning Show on Black Liberation Media.

Organization Is the Weapon: From Crisis to Collective Power

Organization Is the Weapon: From Crisis to Collective Power

The opening weeks of 2026 have stripped away any remaining illusions about the moment we are living in. Across the globe, and inside the United States, we are witnessing a coordinated escalation of imperialist violence, repression, and social control. The empire is not managing decline quietly. It is lashing out openly, militarizing every contradiction it can no longer contain.

ICE raids, National Guard deployments, Cop Cities, mass surveillance, political prosecutions, and profit-driven detention are not isolated abuses or policy excesses. They are interlocking components of a domestic counterinsurgency strategy emerging from imperialist crisis. What we are confronting is the consolidation of a repressive national security state, one that fuses policing, intelligence, militarization, immigration enforcement, and ideological discipline into a single architecture of control. As U.S. global dominance erodes and consent can no longer be manufactured, the ruling class turns openly to coercion.

The Black Alliance for Peace has named this trajectory for what it is and has organized accordingly. Through our North-South Project for People(s)-Centered Human Rights, BAP is advancing a framework that rejects the hollow promises of liberal, state-centered “human rights” and instead grounds struggle in self-determination, collective defense, and internationalist solidarity. The Project exists to do more than analyze repression—it exists to help build the transnational political capacity necessary to defeat it, linking struggles in the imperial core to resistance across the Global South.

Repression is the strategy of a system in decline. Organization is the answer of a people determined to survive and win. The question before us is whether we are prepared to meet this moment with the seriousness it demands. Organization is the weapon.

The pages that follow document how BAP members, formations, and partners are doing exactly that: building infrastructure, sharpening political education, mobilizing communities, and organizing power toward a future beyond empire.

Support this work: If this analysis strengthens your clarity and commitment, we ask you to contribute today. Your donation directly supports BAP’s organizing, political education, and coordination efforts at a moment when principled, independent resistance is essential.

No Compromise. No Retreat.


 
 

On February 6, Micah from BAP Midwest, in collaboration with Derek Ford and Dani Abdullah from PSL Indianapolis, hosted a screening of Shaka Shakur's new film, "Across Enemy Lines," at the Muncie Liberation Studio in Muncie, IN. This event was created in order to heighten awareness of Shaka Shakur in the Muncie local area and raise funds for his freedom campaign.

On Jan 31st, BAP NYC/NJ organized and participated in a mass march in solidarity with Venezuela with other NYC organizations. Some of the organizations were Diaspora Palante Collective NYNJ, Bronx Anti-War Coalition, Workers World, All African People's Revolutionary Party, CODEPINK, and Venezuela Solidarity Network. The march started in Times Sq, briefly stopped in front of the former Exxon Mobil Building on Avenue of the Americas, and concluded at Central Park, in front of the Simon Bolivar statue.

BAP Atlanta participated in an ICE OUT rally during the Week of Action to Defend Venezuela's Sovereignty. BAP Atlanta members came out as a part of the Venezuela Solidarity Coalition, comprising organizations in Atlanta. They challenged the ongoing militaristic aggression by ICE, spoke with members at the rally about how this domestic aggression and imperialist aggression are connected, and discussed the necessity to Make Our Americas a Zone of Peace!

On January 19, Wilmington-based BAP members supported a popular education session for MLK Day. Invited by BAP member org, Community Movement Builders Delaware, the monthly session featured readings of Prophet of Discontent and emphasized anti-war and labor organizing efforts through the life of Martin Luther King Jr. They discussed the relevance of anti-imperialist formations amid the kidnapping of Venezuelan President Maduro and First Lady Flores, and the fight for People(s)-Centered Human Rights.


 
 

Dr. Jemima Pierre, member of the BAP Haiti/Americas Team, joined Millennials are Killing Capitalism for a conversation about US-led Imperialism's latest schemes for the people of Haiti. They discuss tactics Western imperialism has used to undermine the sovereignty of the Haitian people, current threats of war against Haiti, and the repeated UN and US-backed military invasions.

Margaret Kimberley, Africa Team Co-coordinator, joined CGTN America's "The Heat" to discuss Trump's immigration policy as a tool of state repression against the entire country. She also appeared on another CGTN program, The Point with Liu Xin, as a panelist discussing the first anniversary of the Trump administration and the precarity that people in the U.S. are subjected to.

Austin Cole, BAP National Co-Coordinator and member of the Climate, Environment & Militarism Working Group, published the piece, Data Center Boom, Corporate Extraction, and the Obfuscation of the Land Question in the U.S. In it, he writes about the data center boom, resolving the "land question", and how People(s)-Centered Human Rights must be the framework that drives organizing against corporate extraction and Big Tech overreach.

BAP National Co-coordinators, Erica Caines, Austin Cole, and Tunde Osazua, appeared on Marc Lamont Hill’s Night School to talk domestic politics and the ongoing genocide in Palestine, protests in Iran, and ICE terror. They also discussed the Week of Resistance to Disrupt the US War Machine that occurred from January 23-31, 2026.

Following the abduction of Venezuelan President, Nicolas Maduro, Ajamu Baraka, Director of the North-South Project for People(s)-Centered Human Rights, joined the WPFW Special Breaking News Report to discuss this blatant violation of the sovereign nation and what the response from the Venezuelan masses may be. Ajamu also appeared on Spotlight on Press TV  to analyze the latest developments in Venezuela, how and why this illegal kidnapping took place, its repercussions, and the potentially perilous precedent it sets for the future.


 
 

February 13: Join the US Peace Council for this urgent discussion featuring Ajamu Baraka (USPC Secretariat) and Nina Farnia (Anti-Imperialist Scholars Collective). This webinar will examine sanctions, hybrid warfare, Zionist expansion, and the role of propaganda and information warfare in manufacturing consent for imperialist intervention.
Register for Zoom Webinar | Time: 1:00 pm ET

February 28: For Black History Month, BAP Atlanta will host a political education event titled "The History of Black Atlanta: Myth vs. Reality." We will explore the true reality of Atlanta and debunk historical myths together. We will gather and engage in community discussions, presentations, and more that explore our shared history, resistance, and strategies for building a liberated future.
Location: Shrine of the Black Madonna - 960 Ralph David Abernathy Blvd., Atlanta, Georgia | Time: 2:00 pm - 4:00 pm

No Peace in Gaza, No Peace in the Congo, No Peace in Our Streets: The War is Here

No Peace in Gaza, No Peace in the Congo, No Peace in Our Streets: The War is Here

No Peace in Gaza, No Peace in the Congo, No Peace in Our Streets: The War is Here

In the midst of a cynical spectacle aimed at rehabilitating Israel’s fascist regime, we must be clear: there will be no peace in Palestine without an end to the zionist occupation. The logic of colonial domination remains unbroken. The U.S., working through its gangster enabler state, is using this moment to re-establish its regional hegemony. It will never support an authentic Palestinian state without being forced by the overwhelming coercive power of the Palestinian masses and their global allies. 

From the genocide in Gaza to the ongoing attacks on Iran and Venezuela to the false peace and extraction-fueled destabilization in Sudan and the Congo, war is empire’s chosen instrument in a desperate attempt to maintain global white supremacist, capitalist imperialism.

In this context, the Black Alliance for Peace has launched our 5th International Month of Action Against AFRICOM for the month of October. The same system bombing Gaza is propping up comprador regimes in Africa through AFRICOM and militarizing police in our communities. Under the theme “21st Century Neocolonialism: Capitalism, Compradors, and the Ongoing Scramble for Africa,” we challenge this entire interlocked system, by raising the public’s awareness and strengthening the foundations for collective resistance against the militarized infrastructure of the U.S.-led imperialism.

This month of action remains critical because the violence carried out by the U.S. abroad and domestically are linked. To carry out these aggressive plans globally, the empire must first intimidate its opposition internally. This is why the federal state under Trump is moving into cities with Black political leadership and sizable African and Latino populations. The deployment of National Guard troops and ICE raids in Chicago, Los Angeles, and Washington, D.C., is a deliberate strategy of subjugation.

We must remind ourselves that we are at war. The Trump administration, operating from the foundation of repression in tandem with fascistic neoliberal Democratic Party, has stripped away all illusions. Returning the name of the Department of Defense to the Department of War was a message to Chicago and to the world, a stark reminder of the true nature of the U.S. settler project. The clarity of the militarist violence of U.S.-led imperialism will not force us into submission, it must guide us to deeper and more principled unity in our shared struggle. The Black Alliance for Peace has long understood that passivity, avoidance, and comfortable illusions around reform have never been options. It is our responsibility to accelerate the development of independent radical popular movements.

From Gaza to Chicago to the Congo, we must mount a unified defense. To shut down AFRICOM, resist the war at home, and build a world free from imperialist control, we need you.

Your support makes our struggle possible.


 
 

The BAP Miami cluster, in communication with BAP South regional coordinators, planned an outreach for the October 12, 2025 Miami Carnival/J’ouvert 2025 weekend at Miami-Dade County Fairgrounds as a site of political and Caribbean cultural resistance. On the ground, we were able to connect with a few Carnival attendees, especially folks repping Haiti with their flags. We handed out zines and had good conversations around challenges to CARICOM unity.

On August 14th BAP member organization Pan-African Community Action (PACA) led the mobilization of a rally in the heart of downtown Washington DC at Franklin Square Park as a revolutionary response to the federal occupation of D.C. by National Guard and FBI agents. The rally turned out over 200 people and 15 local organizations. The rally was to assert the position that the military mobilization into DC is in fact an escalation of the war on settler-colonized people, versus a war on crime.

On August 15, 2025, members of BAP NYC/NJ attended the Korean National Liberation Day Rally hosted by BAP Solidarity Network member organization Nodutdol. The rally commemorated Korea’s liberation from Japan in 1945, while simultaneously calling for the end of U.S. military occupation of Korea in 2025. BAP NYC/NJ participated in two key ways: First, member Josh delivered a speech, making connections between the US out of Korea Campaign and all three of BAP’s campaigns. Second, marching from Herald Square to Madison Square Park, members carried banners with messaging about shutting down AFRICOM and Africans in the Americas being a part of a global anti-colonial struggle.


On August 31, BAP-DC co-hosted Curbfest for Political Prisoners: DC, alongside co-planners of All-African People’s Revolutionary Party DMV, Books and Bouquets, Coalition to Free the Vaughn 17, Malcolm X Grassroots Movement D.C., PACA and several other community contributors.The commemoration drew over 150 neighbors in the Southeast DC area and over a dozen organizations in providing free offerings of food, books, letter writing, politicized performances, capoeira classes, and acupuncture clinics, including contributions of materials from leftwingbooks. Additional photos here and here [credits: Brandon Forester and Elise Ferrer]








On August 22, 2025, in collaboration with How Our Lives Link All Together (H.O.L.L.A), Harlem Palestine Peace Walk for Justice and Liberation (HPPWJL), and AAPRP-NYC, BAP NYC/NJ participated in a local march through Harlem in observation of Black August. Organizers marched through Harlem chanting for the release of political prisoners, Hands off Haiti, and for a Free Palestine. The march concluded in Marcus Garvey Park where a member of the NYC/NJ gave a speech outlining the War against Africans/ Black people in NYC and the ongoing counterinsurgency tactics the US government conducts domestically and internationally.



On Sunday, September 28th, PACA led The People’s March for Community Safety and Power, through the heart of Washington DC’s Ward 8, a still predominantly Black working class community of Southeast Washington DC. The march was a step in the struggle to get organized, with speeches, educational literature distributed to the people, and preceded by days of rigorous community outreach. Additional photos here [credits: Elise Ferrer]

PACA’s October 8th Assata Shakur Study Group (ASSG) session was devoted to this year’s Month of Action Against AFRICOM and analyzed critical connections between AFRICOM and the federal military occupation of Washington DC, entitled “U.S. Military Aggression From DC's Occupation to AFRICOM in Africa”. The second ASSG of this month on October 22nd, entitled “Global Impacts of U.S. Militarism in Africa & Building Resistance in D.C.”, is in collaboration with BAP-DC and the A-APRP.


 
 

BAP joined the new media collective, Sovereign Media, an anti-imperialist coalition bringing together voices from the Global South and the Global North who refuse to bow to censorship or empire. Members work together with the goal to tell the stories the mainstream buries and to give a platform to the struggles of the oppressed. Sovereign Media is not just a media project. It is a grassroots effort born from progressive movements, fighting for truth, dignity, and sovereignty.

Director of BAP’s North-South Project for People(s)-Centered Human Rights, Ajamu Baraka joined RT News to discuss the Israel-Palestine Peace Deal.

BAP Comrade Too Black interviewed Comrades Erica Caines and Oliver Robinson of PACA on his Black Liberation Media show, Black Myths Podcast and held an incredible discussion around the myth surrounding the federal military mobilizations across the U.S. and the role of the Black misleadership class. 

WPFW’s Voices WIth Vision, co-hosted/produced by Brother Craig and by BAP Coordinating Committee member Netfa Freeman, did a deep dive interview with Ajamu Baraka about the broader and less addressed international dimensions of the “peace” deal around the genocide in Gaza. The Ajamu made crystal clear the material and global interests for the genocide and why an imperialist brokered “deal” could never accomplish more for the Palestinians than this has.


 
 

October 18, 2025 | We are at war. We have been at war. Intentionally framing the continued murder, genocide, and escalating violence against Africans and all oppressed people, locally and globally, as a terrain of war clarifies the context and increases the understanding of how we engage in battle. Join BAP-Baltimore, All-African People’s Revolutionary Party (A-APRP), as we connect the dots of our shared struggle within this war, and unite against a common enemy to fight back as collective resistance. Rooted in the Black Radical Peace Tradition, we will resist until there is peace. Time: 1:00 PM – 3:00 PM | Location: Payne Memorial A.M.E Church 1714 Madison Ave, Baltimore, MD 21217 | Eastern

October 22, 2025 | Pan-African Community Action (PACA)’s next Assata Shakur Study Group session “Global Impacts of U.S. Militarism in Africa & Building Resistance in D.C.” is a collaboration with BAP-DC and the A-APRP, to deepen the understanding of how AFRICOM represents a last stage in the neo-colonization of African people everywhere. Time: 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. ET. | Location: In-person at Black Workers & Wellness Center, 2500 Martin Luther King, Jr., Ave., SE, Washington, D.C. Get more info and register here.

October 25, 2025 | Join Pan-African Campus/Community Organization (PACCO), BAP Midwest, and Friends of the Congo, for Path to Liberation: Healing through Change, a teach-in on the environmental crisis happening in Congo and how it is fueling the global technology industry. The event will be held both in-person and virtually on Zoom. For in-person attendance, we will be at the Hilltop Library in Columbus, Ohio. Time: 3:30-5:30 | Registration Link

Banner photo: Participants in a protest against Israeli land theft in February, 2012 carry flag demanding release of Marwan Barghouti. Courtesy Wikimedia Commons.