Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Black Air Foundation promotional video

The mission of the Black Air Foundation is to introduce inner-city youth ages 13-15 to aviation, filmmaking, and radio and television production.



Visit our webste: www.blackairfoundation.org

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Black Air Foundation- Ex-rep helps youths reach for the sky

Black Air Foundaion- Ex-rep helps youths reach for the sky E-mail
Tuesday, 25 November 2008

BY VINAYA SAKSENA

PROVIDENCE — A local non-profit organization started by a former state representative from East Providence has graduated a dozen more young cadets from a program intended to encourage minority youth to aim high — literally and figuratively.

On Saturday, November 8, the Black Air Foundation held a graduation ceremony in Providence for twelve youths who recently completed the Lambert-Lima Flying Squadron’s cadet program. An after-school program co-founded by former State Representative and World War II-era military pilot George S. Lima, the squadron is intended to introduce minority youth to aviation and the related communication technologies, with participants taking part in a plane flight before the program’s end.
When the latest group of cadets graduated, Lima was on hand to congratulate them, as was his son, Robert M. Lima. In addressing the audience, the elder Lima expressed pride in having been able to start a program that appeared to be helping disadvantaged youths stay on the right track, noting that the prospect of entering the field of aviation or a related profession seemed capable of motivating students toward higher academic achievement.
“A lot of times, we’re losing kids to the streets,” Lima said. “And programs like this help to (steer) them toward something worthwhile.”
Several of the program’s new graduates agreed. The participants, high school and middle school students from Providence, said the program encouraged them to think about life and career possibilities they might not have been exposed to otherwise.
“I think we get a good learning experience out of it,” said Marlon Ford. “It shows how many (things) you can do.”
“It keeps us off of the street,” added Eric Oladapo. “It helps us stay out of trouble, you know?”
“It was fun when we went up in the plane,” said Joann McDowell. “We saw all different places. It was a good experience. It taught me a lot about black aviators.”
Past graduates of the cadet program were also in attendance, including Tom Gaines of Warwick, who participated in the program last year.
Now finishing high school and looking forward to college, Gaines looked back fondly on the experience he shared with others his age, also noting that it looked good on his resume. And while he had not opted to study in an aviation-related field, he said he had benefited from the program, and a career choice was beginning to crystallize in his mind.
“I’m thinking about exercise science,” Gaines said. “I just like working out with the football team and seeing how your muscles work.”
George S. Lima has said in the past that during his military days, with racial segregation still in full force, there was extensive resistance to black men flying fighter planes. And despite not even being afforded the courtesy of being served a beer in some establishments after serving in the war, Lima said he continued to serve his community in various ways in the ensuing years, eventually choosing flying as the focal point for his endeavors with the Black Air Foundation.
Conditions for minorities in the United States have improved considerably since Lima’s days in Tuskegee, as evidenced by the recent election of the country’s first African-American President in Barack Obama. The significance of this event was not lost on the graduation audience, who cheered when Black Air Foundation Board member Ernest K. Faison mentioned the election results.
“Don’t ever, ever, ever not believe in your dreams,” Faison advised the graduates. “Because if you believe it, you can achieve it.”

http://www.pawtuckettimes.com/content/view/58188/27/


Sunday, November 9, 2008

Black Air Foundation-Helping dreams to take flight
















Helping dreams to take flight
01:00 AM EST on Sunday, November 9, 2008
By Tatiana Pina - Journal Staff Writer

PROVIDENCE — Brigham Middle School student Leon-i Taylor has a high squeaky voice that gets higher as she describes the first time she flew on an airplane two weeks ago.

“The cars were so little they looked like people from up there,” she said. “I saw all kinds of colors.”

Taylor and 11 classmates took part in the Lambert-Lima Flying Squadron Cadets, a program designed to introduce minority students to careers in aviation, filmmaking, television and radio. Yesterday, the students graduated from the program in a ceremony at the John Hope Settlement House.

The aviation squadron was started two years ago by George S. Lima, 89, a member of the Tuskegee Airmen, the first group of black fighter and bomber pilots in the history of the U.S. Air Corps. Their performance during World War II dispelled reservations in Washington about the ability of black airmen to fly military planes.

Lima, who attended the graduation, said he started the program because it’s important for young people to know that aviation can be a career for them. He spoke to the class about his experiences as an airman during a time when blacks were segregated from whites. The program is run by the Black Air Foundation with a grant from the Annie E. Casey Foundation and other donations.

Students also visited a radio station and a television station. They visited the Quonset Air Museum. Pilot Frank Moreau took the students for a flight in his four-passenger plane. Moreau told the students they had to study hard because they need good grades to be accepted to a pilot school. For some students it was their first time flying.

Cayes DelPeche, 15, a student at Times2 Academy, had never been on an airplane before but the thought of sharing a flight far above the earth with a friend appealed to him.

“I was interested in flying, becoming a pilot,” he said. “I could see taking my family or kids someday. We went 5,000 feet up in the air. I saw Rhode Island and Massachusetts. We passed by Gillette Stadium.”

DelPeche said he had not been aware that black pilots had struggled so much. “I knew people had struggled to vote and with busing but I never knew they had to struggle to fly an airplane,” he said.

Chad Walton, a student at Providence County Day School, said the class gave him a peek at a possible career. He said flying in a plane and his visit to the Quonset museum inspired him. He was considering volunteering to help paint some of the planes at the museum.

Ernest K. Faison, a member of the Black Air Foundation board, told the students that the events of the past few days should serve as an inspiration for them to follow their dreams.

“I’m sure George Lima did not believe that he would see in his life what happened Tuesday when Barack Obama was elected president. What I’m saying to you is don’t ever not believe in your dreams. If you believe it, you can achieve it.”

tpina@projo.com

http://www.projo.com/news/content/FLYING_SQUADRON_11-09-08_U0C7BOR_v33.32257d3.html


Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Black Air Foundation-Cadets take to the air


On Tuesday, November 04, 2008, cadets (l-r) Marlon Ford, Eric Oladapo, and Cayes Delpeche ready to take to the air for their first flight at North Central State Airport, Lincoln, RI

(Pictured below is pilot Frank Moreau)

On this day, election day '08, another person also reached for the sky to become President elect Barack Obama.

Saturday, November 1, 2008

Black Air Foundation-Visiting the RI Quonset Air Museum















Saturday, November 01, 2008
Cadets visiting the Rhode Island Quonset Air Museum
Rhode Island Quonset Air Museum

The museum has a large and valuable collection of aircraft, aircraft parts, and other historical artifacts. The 28 aircraft currently on display or under restoration include civilian, military and prototype aircraft dating from 1944 (Hellcat under restoration) to 1983 (F-14 Tomcat).
And the last aircraft to fly from Quonset NAS, a C-1A COD BU#136792 a one of a kind TWIN TAIL Navy transport.

Address:
488 Eccleston Ave.
, North Kingstown, RI 02852
Phone: 401-294-9540
Email: info@theqam.org
Website: http://www.theqam.org

Hours:
* Winter Hours: Saturday, Sunday From: October through March
* Gladly except groups or special visits by appointment, contact QAM for information.
* Summer Hours: Open Everday from 10:00 AM to 3:00 PM April through September
* Closed on Easter, Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Years Day

Admission
* General: $7.00
* Military (Current uniform members serving with ID): Free
* Children under 12: $3.00
* Seniors 65+: $6.00
* Group Rates Available

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Black Air Foundation invites the public to attend The Lambert-Lima Flying Squadron cadet graduation in Providence


Black Air Foundation invites the public to attend The Lambert-Lima Flying Squadron cadet graduation in Providence

01:00 AM EDT on Thursday, October 23, 2008


The Lambert-Lima Flying Squadron introduces boys and girls, ages 13 to 15, to radio, TV, filmmaking and aviation as a career choice, which includes an actual airplane flight. The graduation ceremony celebration will be held on Saturday, Nov. 8, from 1 to 2:30 p.m. at the John Hope Settlement House, 7 Thomas P. Whitten Way.

The event will feature a film about cadets in flight and an all original cadet poster exhibit. Complimentary refreshments will be served.

The Black Air Foundation is dedicated to empowering minority youths through education and training. For information, call Marlene Britto at (401) 451-8626 or visit www.blackairfoundation.org.

http://www.projo.com/ri/providence/content/me_10-23-08_TIC1478_v44.126037c.html



Saturday, September 27, 2008

Black Air Foundaion- Brown University Alumni Association awards George S. Lima

Brown University Alumni Association awards George S. Lima
The John Hope Award for Public Service

The John Hope Award, co-sponsored by the Brown Alumni Association and the Swearer Center for Public Service, is named for the 1894 African-American alumnus who dedicated his life to education and community service. With this award, the BAA honors a graduate whose commitment to public service exemplifies leadership, innovation, and a direct impact on the community. The honoree may be a professional whose career is dedicated to public service or a volunteer devoted to public service or social action.

Special note: From 2003 – 2005, due to the extraordinarily high quality of nominations of very young alumni for this award, the John Hope Award selection committee also recognized a number of these nominees with the Young Alumni Service Award. Their names are included in the list below with the designation "YASA".

(Click on a name for more information on the recipient.)

2008 Recipient: George Lima ’48
one of World War II’s famous Tuskegee Airmen, a lifelong activist and public servant.

John Hope Award for Public Service: George Lima ’48

In April 1945, as a member of the U.S. Army’s 477th Bombardment Group, George Lima was one of 60 black Air Corps officers arrested for trying to enter a white officer’s club at Freeman Field in Indiana – a courageous and potentially dangerous decision for a military officer. But this incident proved to be decisive in the Army’s move to integrate its clubs and was a turning point on the road toward the full integration of the military just three years later. As it turns out, this was only one in a series of courageous actions George Lima would take in a lifetime of commitment to civil rights.

The son of immigrants from Cape Verde, Lima first attended NC A&T State College, and served with the legendary Tuskegee Airmen in World War II. Enrolling at Brown after the war, he chose to study sociology in part to try to understand the segregation and discrimination he had witnessed and experienced. After graduation, despite his military service and Brown degree, the only work he could find was as a shipping clerk. But with characteristic determination, he went on to serve as a union representative and organizer, then as an administrator with the War on Poverty and VISTA in Washington.

Returning to Providence, he served as president of the local NAACP and as a Rhode Island state representative – using both positions to continue his fight for civil rights. And the passage of time has not diminished his drive for change. Just a few years ago, now in his 80s, he founded the Black Air Foundation to create programs empowering minority youth through education and training.


Thursday, September 11, 2008

Black Air Foundation-Board of Directors

Black Air Foundaion-

The members of the Board of Directors—are involved with programming respective to their expertise and experience in the fields of aviation, radio, television and filmmaking.

Board Members:

Hon. George S. Lima, Thomas P. Whitten, Napoleon X, Marlene Britto, Robert Lima, Hon. George A. Castro, Jim Vincent, Ron Alves, Ernest Faison, Robert Bailey

Monday, April 14, 2008

Black Air Foundation-Reflections on Race and Sport in America w/ Coach Craig_Robinson_@brown_university

Reflections on Race and Sport in America. A panel discussion at Brown University on April 14,'08

Craig Robinson @brown_university

Panelists:
William C. Rhode, New York Times sorts columnist
Craig Robinson, Oregon State Head Men's Basketball Coach
Nicole Burns, Brown Tack and Field
James T. Campbell, Moderator, Professor of American Civilization, Africana Studies and History


photos by: Protown Productions

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Black Air Foundation-Spike Lee meeting George S. Lima and Napoleon X


Spike Lee lectures at Brown University


Spike Lee meeting George S. Lima and Napoleon X. The award-winning film producer and director, Spike Lee, was in town for a lecture for the Brown community on Tuesday, April 8, 2008 (7 p.m. Salomon Center for Teaching 101).

photo by James H. Williams, Brown '10

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Black Air Foundation-Tuskegee airmen helping kids to fly

Tuskegee airmen helping kids to fly E-mail
Tuesday, 01 April 2008

Image
Herman Wells, Lemuel Fuller and George Lima

BY VINAYA SAKSENA

EAST PROVIDENCE — A former state representative who served in a history-making group of military pilots during World War II is now trying to give young people an opportunity to fly- literally and otherwise.

During that historic war, George S. Lima was one of the Tuskegee Airmen, the first-ever group of African American military pilots. Said to have included the only fighter group that never lost a bomber under its watch, the group came to life when the 99th Fighter Squadron was formed at the Tuskegee Institute, a Tuskegee, Alabama-based university founded by Booker T. Washington. The Tuskegee Airmen made history in part because they managed to meet standards for admission allegedly designed to keep black men from serving as military pilots.
“They didn’t believe we were qualified to fly an airplane,” Lima remembered. “(But) I had a pilot’s license before I had a driver’s license.”
Adding insult to injury, Lima found that even after returning home from service, some would still refuse to even serve him a soda in a public establishment. In a way, this experience was symbolic of what Lima and other black pilots of the World War II era had to undergo to advance in society. He allegedly was unable to find better work after graduating from Brown University than he had held beforehand. He ended up rising through union ranks, while participating in various social justice efforts throughout the ensuing decades.
Today, Lima is the president and CEO of the Black Air Foundation, a non-profit group dedicated to helping other organizations — such as the Lambert Lima Flying Squadron Cadet Program — in their efforts to help minority youth.
Specifically, Lima and his associates hope to spark interest in aviation and related vocations among young people by giving them the opportunity to fly.
“Our goal is to get them interested in aviation as a career,” Lima explained. “But we also expose them to radio, television and documentary filmmaking.”
The latter element is handled by a fellow Black Air Foundation Board of Directors member known as Napoleon X, a documentary filmmaker, musician and music producer also based in East Providence. X said he was approached by another board of directors member, Marlene Britto, about the possibility of making a film about Lima.
He said he did not need much convincing of Lima’s worthiness as subject matter.
“What got me was the fact that even after all the things he’s done, you could find people who said, ‘oh, he (helped) me on a personal level,’” X said.
“He actually got involved with people on a one to one basis, which to me is very impressive.”
The result of X’s work on Lima’s history was the documentary film Black Men Can Fly: The Story of George S. Lima. The film was broadcast on PBS television, and has since led to a series. X, who is also working on a documentary on rap group Wu Tang Clan, said the film ended up having slightly different meanings for Lima and himself. Lima, he said, seemed to see the film as a literal documentary, while X said he viewed it as a metaphor- implying the possibility that the future could hold greater things in store for black men and other minorities who dared to dream and worked hard to fulfill their dreams. He pointed out that the name of the foundation stemmed from its roots in the experience of the Tuskegee Airmen, and not any bias for or against any particular race.
“It’s called Black Air, but it’s not just a black thing,” X said. “We’re not limited (by) color or race or any of that stuff.”
Participants in the cadet program are given the experience of flying in a plane with help from Frank Moreau, a Lincoln resident who has lent his time and his plane to the program for this purpose. X said that having flown with Moreau and his pupils, he had seen the positive effect the program was having, and could verify that it was a cause well worth supporting.
“You could see it in their faces,” he said. “Most of these kids have never been on an airplane before. It’s changed their lives. That’s a priceless sight.”












Black Air wishes to thank everyone who came out to support our fundraiser event on March 20, 2008.
Slideshow photos courtesy of: CVN News
Jim VIncent, Geor S. Lima, Keith Stokes
Still photos courtesy of The Times
Chops Turner
photos courtesy of The Times


Friday, February 15, 2008

Black Air Foundation-Bryant University -Former Tuskegee Airman speaks as part of Black History Month

Former Tuskegee Airman speaks as part of Black History Month

Black Experience program features George S. Lima, one of the first black pilots in the U.S. Army Air Corps.

As part of Black History Month, the Intercultural Center at Bryant hosted the Black Experience on February 15 to share the contributions of influential African Americans with members of the Bryant community. The event featured George S. Lima, a former Tuskegee Airman.

Lima, who will turn 89 in April, was born in Fall River, MA, and lived in Harlem, NY, as a child. He graduated from Durfee High School in Massachusetts before enrolling at North Carolina A&T, where he played football and received his pilot’s license.

In 1942, he was called to Tuskegee, AL, to train to become a pilot in the U. S. Army Air Corps. Lima, who eventually became one of the first black pilots, spoke about the adversity he faced because of his race.

“People didn’t believe we could fly the aircraft,” he said.

Renee Gadsden '08 (Fitchburg, MA) and Marjorie Krakue ’08 (Warwick, RI) with George S. Lima.

In a documentary about his life titled “Black Men Can Fly: The Story of George S. Lima,” he told the story of being one of 60 black Air Corps officers who were arrested for trying to enter a white officer’s club when they were stationed in Indiana. When he returned to Rhode Island to study at Brown, he faced similar treatment when he was denied service at a restaurant.

“I fought for my country, came back to go to Brown to get a degree, and I can’t get a beer,” he said. “Those are the kinds of things that happened on a daily basis … so you have to try to fight it.”

Lima has long been a recognized civil rights activist in Rhode Island. He is a past president of the Providence chapter of the NAACP, a former state representative in the Rhode Island General Assembly, and was a labor organizer for the American Federation of State County and Municipal Employees. He also received a Congressional Gold Medal for his work as a photographic officer during World War II.

He recently started the Black Air Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to empowering minority youth through education. The organization provides hands-on training for students interested in aviation, radio, television, and filmmaking.

“It’s been exciting for me to work with the kids,” he said.

George S. Lima

Marjorie Krakue ’08 (Warwick, RI), a member of the Black History Month Committee, helped to organize the event to show students the dedication and commitment of someone in their own community.

“Mr. Lima is a person that was not satisfied with the way things were,” says Krakue, an international business major. “He is a remarkable person that is still making change happen.”

Events like these encourage people to explore history and get involved, says Krakue, who recently accepted a job in the product marketing department at MetLife in Warwick.

Christina Shaw '10 (Woonsocket, RI) shows a poster autographed by George S. Lima.

“I think that all cultural events are very important,” she says. “If we as a university are promoting diversity, we need to make an effort to educate people about the many different cultures around the world.

“By becoming well informed and active in your communities, you too can make a difference,” she says.

To learn more, visit Black Air Foundation.


http://www.bryant.edu/wps/wcm/connect/Bryant/About%20Bryant/News/News%20Releases/2008/February/Black%20Experience