citypaper: archives

Static Disrupters
Public radio station WPFW-FM may be broke, split by staff conflict, and short on listeners, but it's still fighting for the First Amendment.

Cover Story

A guest on the station's noontime talk show, We, Ourselves, Cheatwood says the bloodiness and bondage began in the sixth century B.C. when the “barbaric Caucasians” overran Egypt, ushering in a thousand years of Greek and Roman cruelties. The Arabs were the next oppressors, he says, starting in the middle of the first millennium A.D. White Europeans brought the trade to its murderous peak, pillaging Africa for chattel from the 15th century to the 19th. The enslavement, he says, continues in North Africa today, where Arabs still hold black Africans in bondage. Cheatwood, who's just written The Butcher's Grand Ball, a book on the subject, asserts that 200 million African people have been killed in the slaving “holocaust.”

From the microphone in WPFW's Chinatown studios, Cheatwood's voice casts a radio penumbra 180 miles wide, reaching to the Eastern Shore and West Virginia, north to Gettysburg, Pa., and south to Culpeper, Va. We, Ourselves host Ambrose Lane urges the audience to phone and comment on “Brother Cheatwood's” views; the listeners are enthralled by the guest, thanking him and asking how they can learn more about this suppressed history of slaving. Halfway through the hour-long broadcast, the sole challenger to Cheatwood's thesis tells him that blaming groups like “the Arabs” or “white Europeans” does nothing but divide.

Cheatwood responds bitingly. “I am not in the business of making people comfortable,” he says. “It is not an issue of trying to blame people or vilify. Villainy is something that comes out of the Caucasian world anyway.”... Continued

Issue of Nov. 19 - 25, 1993

News and Features

Columns

Eats

Movies

Music

Theater

Arts and Events

City Lights

This week's best in Arts and Entertainment.

Inauguration Housing and Inauguratin Rentals
Shop Local
DC SEARCH
calendar
restaurants
movies
classified
personals

Find an Event

Select the type of event, and the particular day this week below.

Submit your event to the City Paper's Event Calendar.

Find a Restaurant

Enter a restaurant name, or select a cuisine and neighborhood below.

Find a Movie

Select a movie theater in the box below to see a list of all movies at that theater.

...Or view a full list of theaters, films, and showtimes.

Search Classified Ads

Post a Classified Ad

Find It

Find a Match

Age range: to
Find It

Who saw you? Check I Saw You
Looking for something kinky? Wild Side

City Paper Newsletter
advertisement
CarTango

Get a Car

Search inventory on the City Paper's CarTango website:

CP Events

Come take a walk

This Week

Current Issue
The Issue of Nov. 27 - Dec. 3, 2008

This Week in
City Paper History

  • Exit Strategy
    Is Anthony Falzarano's effort to help gays go straight sexual healing or a way to deny reality?
    Nov. 26 - Dec. 2, 1999
  • Midget Wrestling
    Wannabe politicos come to D.C. colleges to soak up the federal ambiance. In the age of Starr and Lewinsky, they're learning their lessons well.
    Nov. 26 - Dec. 2, 1999
  • Soulsby on Ice
    MPD Chief Larry Soulsby has finally run out of denials.
    Nov. 28 - Dec. 4, 1997
advertisement
advertisement