Featured
12 Year Old East Bay Child Seeks Bone Marrow Match to Save His Life
By Sally Douglass Arce
Justin is a 12-year-old African American boy living in the East Bay, who is in a fight for his life.
Last year in February, he was diagnosed with lymphoma. Justin obtained remission, but relapsed in January 2017.
He is now diagnosed with leukemia. In some cases, lymphoma is known to transform into leukemia.
Justin and thousands of people diagnosed with a blood cancer like leukemia and lymphoma, sickle cell, and other life-threatening diseases need a bone marrow transplant in order to live. First, a marrow match must be found. Then, the transplant takes place.
A matching donor will be someone of the same ethnic heritage. None of Justin’s family members are a match. So, an unrelated donor will be his only hope of a cure. He depends on someone like you. You have the power to help, the power to give hope!
“It’s so important for African Americans to join the registry because patients like Justin are waiting for an African American donor to save their life,” says Lakeshia Phillips-Marshall, Justin’s mother.
Commit to being a donor for Justin or other patients like him. Currently there are 14,000 people in need of a donor.
Registering is simple –complete a questionnaire and swab the inside of your cheek. African Americans ages 18-44 are urged to join the Be the Match® registry. To register online, click here.
Fifty percent of the registered donors, who are called to donate to a specific patient, say no. In the African American community, the percentage is worse.
“This means patients are dying unnecessarily,” says Carol Gillespie, executive director of the Asian American Donor Program. “It’s a numbers game. With more African Americans on the registry, there is a better chance to find a match. This is the only way to save lives.”
Justin is the middle child of three brothers. He is a Golden State Warriors fan and loves sports. Justin’s favorite musical artist is Speaker Knockerz. He likes dancing. At school, his favorite subjects are science and history. As for his dreams for his future, he’d like to play in the NBA or be a dancer.
“Justin is the peacemaker,” says Phillips-Marshall. “He’s very kind hearted and is loved by everybody. He doesn’t have a mean bone in his body. That’s what makes this so hard. The Justin that we know is fun loving, the popular kid. Everyone wants Justin at their party. They want Justin as their friend. With him in the hospital, it’s really hard.”
Because the markers used in matching are inherited, patients are more likely to match someone from their own race or ethnicity. Adding more bone marrow donors from diverse racial and ethnic backgrounds to the Be The Match Registry® increases the likelihood that patients will find the match they need. Your heritage can make all the difference.
Only about 8 percent of the nation’s 12.5 million registered bone-marrow donors are African American, which makes Justin’s odds of finding a bone marrow match quite slim.
If you would like to register in Justin’s name, go online here.
To find a registration drive in the Bay Area, call 1-800-593-6667 or go to www.aadp.org/drive/
Activism
In 1974, Then-Gov. Jimmy Carter Visited the Home of Oakland Black Black Political Activist Virtual Murrell While Running for President
civil rights icon Georgia State Representative Julian Bond said that Carter, along with governors Reuben Askew of Florida, Dale Bumpers of Arkansas, and Terry Sanford of North Carolina, were all a part of what was being dubbed the “New South” and so supported civil rights and voting rights for African Americans.
By Virtual T. Murrell
Special to The Post
On his way to seeking the presidency, then-Gov. Jimmy Carter visited the Bay Area in his capacity as campaign chairman of the Democratic National Committee in March of 1974.
A friend of mine, Bill Lynch, a Democrat from San Francisco, had been asked to host Carter, who was then relatively unknown. Seeking my advice on the matter, I immediately called my friend, civil rights icon Georgia State Representative Julian Bond, for his opinion.
Bond said that Carter, along with governors Reuben Askew of Florida, Dale Bumpers of Arkansas, and Terry Sanford of North Carolina, were all a part of what was being dubbed the “New South” and so supported civil rights and voting rights for African Americans.
Based on Julian’s comments, I agreed to host the governor. We picked him up at the San Francisco Airport. With his toothy smile, I could tell almost right away that he was like no other politician I had ever met. On his arrival, there was a message telling him to go to the VIP room, where he met then-Secretary of State Jerry Brown.
After leaving the airport, we went to a reception in his honor at the home of Paul “Red” Fay, who had served as the acting secretary of the Navy under President John Kennedy. (Carter, it turned out, had been himself a 1946 graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy and served as a submariner in the 1950s.)
The following afternoon, the Niagara Movement Democratic Club hosted a reception for Carter, which was a major success. Carter indicated that he would be considering running for president and hoped for our support if he did so.
As the event was winding down, I witnessed the most amazing moment: Carter’s wife, Rosalynn, was in the kitchen with my former wife, Irene, wearing an apron and busting suds! You would have to have been there to see it: The first and last time a white woman cleaned up my kitchen.
A few months later, President Richard Nixon resigned amid the Watergate scandal. He was succeeded by his vice president, Gerald Ford.
On the heels of that scandal, Jimmy Carter’s election in 1976 represented integrity and honesty at a point in America’s history when he was just what the nation needed to lead as president of the United States.
Activism
Oakland Post: Week of January 1 – 7, 2025
The printed Weekly Edition of the Oakland Post: Week of January 1 – 7, 2025
To enlarge your view of this issue, use the slider, magnifying glass icon or full page icon in the lower right corner of the browser window.
Activism
Racially Motivated Violence Against Black Teen Prompts $10 Million Claim Against LAUSD
In December, a second altercation, on a video shared with news media, showed 4 to 6 boys attacking a Black student and using racial slurs. The video also shows a person in a safety vest trying to stop the fight and telling them to “handle it after school.” Then, the video ends.
By Solomon O. Smith, California Black Media
A distraught mother and her legal team announced a $10 million lawsuit against the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) on Dec. 16, alleging that her son was the target of bullying because of his race.
“CS DOE is a 14-year-old African American student at Verdugo High School. He is a Ninth Grader,” reads a statement the plaintiff’s attorneys shared with California Black Media (CBM).
“Almost from the first day of class (in August 2024), CS DOE was targeted by Latino students who called him racial slurs, physically attacked him and threatened to stab him.”
The family’s identity has not yet been released to the public due to safety concerns, according to their attorneys Bradley C. Gage and Caree Harper. The student’s mother is identified only as A.O. in the complaint.
The first video, filmed in August, showed several non-Black students punching and kicking a Black student in a bathroom on campus while yelling racial slurs. The mother claims that the students who attacked her son were not punished, and the administration asked her to move her son to another school for his safety.
“They wanted him to leave the school without giving any disciplinary action towards those students,” said the student’s mother. “He’s not going anywhere. He’s going to finish. I wanted him to at least stay until the December winter break, and then I was going to transfer schools for him.”
Before she could enroll her son in a different school the attacks escalated.
In December, a second altercation, on a video shared with news media, showed 4 to 6 boys attacking a Black student and using racial slurs. The video also shows a person in a safety vest trying to stop the fight and telling them to “handle it after school.” Then, the video ends.
CS DOE, a 14-year-old freshman, left the school but was followed by a car, according to Gage. Several individuals exited the vehicle, one with a “large butcher knife.” A fight ensued and two people were stabbed. The Black student was arrested for assault with a deadly weapon but was later released into his mother’s custody.
The high school freshmen is scheduled to appear in juvenile court on Feb. 1, but Harper says she will reach out to the District Attorney and make the case against charging the young man.
“His mama had to go find him because he was hiding and fleeing for his very life,” said Harper.
According to the boy’s mother, the young student is still traumatized and has not been able to return to the area because it remains unsafe. Racial slurs have also been spray painted on their home.
“I’m sad. I’m devastated, you know,” said the mother. “I still feel like they’re after him. I still feel like they can kill him, possibly.”
The LAUSD and principal of Verdugo High School did not respond to CBM’s requests for comment.
If you are – or someone you know is – has experienced a hate crime or hate incident, please visit CAvsHate.org for more information and to find out what you can do about it.
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