The end of the Gantt Report Road

Lucius Gantt
Lucius Gantt
Lucius Gantt

The Gantt Report

The end of the Gantt Report Road

By Lucius Gantt

      It has been a good ride but I’m feeling I’m at the end of The Gantt Report road.

I’ve been writing editorial columns for more than 40 years. I began in the late ‘60s when I wrote for The Signal at Georgia State University in Atlanta.

During those 40 years, every year I would get two or three contacts from racists, supremacists, klansmen, skin-heads and other such types that would threaten my life or my family’s lives because I expressed an opinion that they didn’t agree with.

But they couldn’t scare me or stop me from writing!

Also, during those 40 years, I never got paid one dime for writing columns that I know were being read. Many people would buy newspapers and visit websites just to read The Gantt Report.

But I never sought payment and the publishers that wouldn’t or couldn’t pay me continue to this day to get The Gantt Report if they or their readers wanted it.

Ultimately, I risked my life, I jeopardized my career and I faced hatred from enemies of African Americans merely because I tried to inform my people about issues that other journalists were afraid to talk about or write about.

The mis-education of people of African descent makes it easy for others to divide us, to trick us, to fool us and to make Black people hate their brothers and sisters and to hate themselves!

Many of us would rather believe in Satan than to believe in each other, support Lucifer than to support each other and to lock arms and hold hands with the devilish beast than to hold hands with their family members, friends and neighbors!

I began to think my time as a regular opinion writer is at the end of the road when people didn’t just disagree with me; some people despised me.

I expected my exploiters to feel that way, I suspected my oppressors felt that way and I knew my journalistic competitors often wished that I was off the media map.

However, when I began to be hated by African American youth I realized someone else needed to write the influential and encouraging words that appear more and more difficult for me to write.

When you write about Black historical facts and college educated Black people say, “I don’t care about Black history. All I care about is what happens in my lifetime” you can imagine how it made me feel.

I felt when you hate my writing you are hating all of the great Black writers of the past. Why? Because nothing written by Lucius Gantt is new.

My columns and my words were words of Frederick Douglass, words of Denmark Vesey, words of Harriett Tubman, words of Adam Clayton Po-well, words of Martin Luther King, words of Huey Newton, words of Kwame Nkruma, words of Steve Biko, words of Patrice Lumumba, words of Amilcar Cabral, words of Jomo Kenyatta, words of Nelson and Winnie Mandela, words of Fannie Lou Hammer, words of Marcus Garvey, words of Malcolm X and the words of many other Black heroes and freedom fighters!

I’ve tried to quit in the past but Black media pioneers like Charles Cherry, Ike Williams, Garth Reeves, Levi Henry and others pretty much begged me to continue.

Nowadays, almost every publisher feels a need to “edit” The Gantt Report’s unique editorial style so it can read like white folk’s opinion columns and I think that is ridiculous! If Black editors and publishers want Blacks that write like whites, they should just go ahead and hire the kinds of columnists they admire.

So, I want to thank the readers, the friends and the supporters of The Gantt Report for this is the end of the column as you know it.

I will continue to write because God gave me the gift and I have to use it. I want to write a screen play or perhaps more books.

I will even write an opinion column when the media and the people feel they want to read my perspective on current or historical events.

I have a few protégées that can carry the media cross like Andrea Giggetts and there are other senior writers that can write if given the chance like Jim Haskins or James Scruggs.

Brothers and sisters, I’m tired. Contact your local paper or internet site if you agree or disagree with my decision. And, keep in mind Black people in America and in the world will always need a Black voice to plead the Black cause.

     Thank you again for your love and support! (Contact Lucius at www.allworldconsultants.net)

 

About Carma Henry 24363 Articles
Carma Lynn Henry Westside Gazette Newspaper 545 N.W. 7th Terrace, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33311 Office: (954) 525-1489 Fax: (954) 525-1861

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*