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Showing posts with label Zohran Mamdani. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zohran Mamdani. Show all posts

Thursday, January 29, 2026

Senate Bill S8655 and Allah School in Mecca




     In my recent article New Executive Order will require Allah School in Mecca to be inventoried and reviewed by July 1, 2026 I shared about Executive Order 04 and Executive Order 5 that NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani signed into law on January 1st, 2026. I also explained how these laws would affect the Allah School in Mecca [2122 Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Blvd] -an undeveloped city-owned parcel that has served as our national headquarters.

     Executive Order 04 [LEVERAGING CITY-OWNED LAND TO ACCELERATE HOUSING] was created due to the housing shortage in New York City. Executive Order 04 created a fast-track process to identify and utilize city-owned land for housing development (AKA: economic development). For that purpose, Mayor Mamdani established an interagency Land Inventory Fast Track Task Force (the “LIFT Task Force”). According to Executive Order 04, "The LIFT Task Force shall consist of representatives from Mayoral agencies offices, and affiliated non-profit corporations, including the Department of Citywide Administrative Services [NYC DCAS], the Department of Housing Preservation and Development, the Department of City Planning, the Department of Buildings, the Office of Management and Budget, the New York City Economic Development Corporation, and representatives from other agencies, offices or entities affiliated with the City designated by the Chair." This LIFT Task Force will also seek participation and cooperation of additional public and other entities as the Task Force Chair deems appropriate. Some of those additional entities that were identified are the New York Public Library, the Queens Public Library, the Brooklyn Public Library, the New York City Department of Education, the New York City Housing Authority, the New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, and the Empire State Development Corporation. I spoke with the NYC DCAS and they confirmed that city-owned parcels, including 2122 Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Blvd, will be reviewed and inventoried no later than July 1, 2026 as specified in Executive Order 04. Executive Order 5 created the SPEED Task Force. The SPEED Task Force is tasked with identifying and developing city department policies, procedures, and processes for Streamlining Procedures to Expedite Equitable Development [SPEED] in NYC. According to Executive Order 5, these recommendations will be shared with Mayor Mamdani no later than April 11, 2026. 

     Following the publishing of my article it was shared on Facebook that on January 7th, 2026, NYS Senate Bill S8655 was introduced by Senator Cordell Cleare of the 30th Senate District. This Senate Bill 'Authorizes the conveyance of certain property by the city of New York to The Allah Youth Center in Mecca Inc.' After seeing this Facebook post I quickly learned that many of us did not understand the legislative process, assuming that this introduced senate bill addresses the active NYC Executive Orders 04 and 5 that I highlighted. Senate Bill S8655 does not, and this is why.

An introduced senate (or assembly) bill is only a proposal that has not been considered, let alone passed, in the state legislature and signed into law by a governor. An Executive Order that is signed into law by a Mayor or City Executive IS the law. You can only stop an Executive Order by 1.) signing into law a new Executive Order that overturns it, 2.) a Court Order that declares that the bill is unconstitutional, 3.) a City Council law that contradicts it, or 4.) the State (New York in this case) or the Federal government passes a law that contradicts the bill. None of these actions have occurred to override Mayor Mamdani’s Executive Orders 04 and 5.  


HOW DOES A BILL BECOME A LAW?


   When a senate bill is sponsored and introduced, an identical assembly bill must also be sponsored and introduced. As you can see below, Senate Bill S8655 has only been sponsored and introduced by Senator Cleare and is now in the Cities 1 Committee. You can also see that an identical assembly bill has not yet been sponsored or introduced by an Assemblymember.

     If an identical assembly bill is sponsored and introduced by an Assemblymember, it will then go to an Assembly Committee. If an Assemblymember does not sponsor and introduce an identical assembly bill, or refuses to take up Senate Bill S8655, this bill will die at the end of the two-year legislative term. 

     If an identical bill is sponsored and introduced by an Assemblymember, both the senate and assembly bill will move to the floor of both the Senate and the Assembly. Once on the floor, it is placed on the legislative calendar, allowing for debate, potential amendments, and a final vote by the full house. The full house consists of 63 State Senators and 150 State Assemblymembers (213 representatives) across the state of New York. For more information about how the legislative process works, you can check out this information: How A Bill Becomes Law in NYS.

It is important to understand that passing a senate AND assembly bill is a process that takes time. That process does not supersede or override active Executive Orders that were signed into law within a municipality. In other words, Senate Bill S8655 does not stop the July 1st, 2026 city-owned parcel review and inventory specified in Executive Order 04 or the SPEED Task Force recommendations that will be shared with Mayor Mamdani by April 11, 2026. It is equally important to understand that the sponsoring of a senate bill, and potentially an assembly bill, broadens the discussion about who we are as the Five Percent beyond the municipal limits of NYC and the Mamdani Administration. This legislative process will call upon 213 statewide representatives to debate, potentially amend, and ultimately vote on the transferring NYC property to The Allah Youth Center in Mecca Inc. While introducing Senate Bill S8655 can be a powerful opportunity to move in a direction to secure the future of Allah School, it does not address the immediate need to engage the Mamdani Administration concerning Executive Orders 04 and 5. Equally important, it does not address the ongoing negative press, lack of revenue, disorganization, and estranged community partnership obstacles that we consistently deal with. In my previous article I discussed how unfavorable we appear in a quick Google or YouTube search, if surrounding Harlem anchor institutions were contacted about us, or if some city officials wanted to pop-up at the Allah School on a random Tuesday just to check out what is going on. Senate Bill S8655 now opens up the same assessment of us from Senators with partisan politics across NYS -many whose only point of reference for the Five Percent are correctional facilities, crime, juvenile delinquency, and gang affiliation in their legislative jurisdictions. The only way to combat these founded and unfounded assessments are to consistently show a better example. 

     Now that a senate bill exists, what can we do about it? In addition to monitoring this bill on the Senate Bill Search website to see its progress, to show support for Senate Bill S8655, you can create an account on this website and select ✔ Aye where it asks, DO YOU SUPPORT THIS BILL? You will find this on the right side of the webpage as shown below:


     Direct support for Senate Bill S8655 can also be shown by contacting the Cities 1 Committee Chair Senator Luis R. Sepulveda and other Committee members to express your support of this bill. You can also contact state legislators by phone, [registered] postage mail or email to express support of Senate Bill S8655. These efforts are even more powerful as an organized Lobby Committee that has crafted clear, concise, uniform talking points and literature about supporting Senate Bill S8655. This advocacy work can then be leveraged in our engagement with the Mamdani Administration to garner municipal support. ALL OF THIS effort hinges upon our public image and the actual work that we are doing as Five Percenters. If these same public officials looked us up, what would they see on our social media? If they did a background check, what would they see regarding criminal history, employment, education, etc.? Will the name(s) that we use to engage these public officials be interpreted as "aliases" or our legal identification and why? When someone sees us, online or offline, do our words and activities reasonably represent the provisions of Senate Bill S8655 which state that we provide "educational, social, recreational and developmental community-based services to the Harlem community in Manhattan"? ALL OF THIS means something. These public images and our actual work will contribute to how we are collectively perceived, as a culture and a nation of people, seeking the transferred ownership of prime NYC real estate for $0. If we took our public image for granted before, as if our ways and actions have ZERO impact on what happens in the public domain, we will now see this in real time. While it is my hope that public officials, both city and statewide, will have the capacity and diligence to cut through the noise to see the good that we do as the Five Percent, it is reasonable to say that many will not. 



Peace,
Saladin #AtlantisBuild 

Friday, January 23, 2026

New Executive Order will require Allah School in Mecca to be inventoried and reviewed by July 1, 2026




       According to the Official Website of the Mayor of New York Zohran Mamdani, on January 1st, 2026, he signed into law Executive Order 04 [LEVERAGING CITY-OWNED LAND TO ACCELERATE HOUSING] due to the housing shortage in New York City. Executive Order 04 created a fast-track process to identify and utilize city-owned land for housing development (AKA: economic development). For that purpose, Mayor Mamdani established an interagency Land Inventory Fast Track Task Force (the “LIFT Task Force”). According to Executive Order 04, "The LIFT Task Force shall consist of representatives from Mayoral agencies offices, and affiliated non-profit corporations, including the Department of Citywide Administrative Services [NYC DCAS], the Department of Housing Preservation and Development, the Department of City Planning, the Department of Buildings, the Office of Management and Budget, the New York City Economic Development Corporation, and representatives from other agencies, offices or entities affiliated with the City designated by the Chair." This LIFT Task Force will also seek participation and cooperation of additional public and other entities as the Task Force Chair deems appropriate. Some of those additional entities that were identified are the New York Public Library, the Queens Public Library, the Brooklyn Public Library, the New York City Department of Education, the New York City Housing Authority, the New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, and the Empire State Development Corporation. The Executive Order goes on to state the duties of the LIFT Task Force below:


      In addition to the city-owned property inventory that must be completed no later than July 1, 2026, the review of (adjacent) Capital Projects that impact city-owned properties, and consulting on land use changes, it is important to consider what this can mean to citizens and our communities. More specifically, what can this mean to the Allah School in Mecca [2122 Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Blvd] -an undeveloped city-owned parcel that has served as our national headquarters? I spoke with the NYC DCAS and they confirmed that this city-owned parcel will be reviewed and inventoried along with all other city-owned properties via Executive Order 04. Following Executive Order 04, Mayor Mamdani also signed into law Executive Order 5 that creates the SPEED Task Force. The SPEED Task Force is tasked with identifying and developing city department policies, procedures, and processes for Streamlining Procedures to Expedite Equitable Development [SPEED] in NYC. According to Executive Order 5, these recommendations will be shared with Mayor Mamdani no later than April 11, 2026. 

Universal Parliament, P.S. 154 Harriet Tubman elementary school 
[
November 28th, 1982]

     In my 2024 article Anchor Institutions and the Fate of Allah School in Mecca I shared that it was always assumed among our (Five Percent Nation) members that our Allah School in Mecca [2122 Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Blvd] is a parcel that was gifted to us by the Lindsay Administration with a 99-year lease. However, it was discovered that no legal document exists to substantiate that claim of a 99-year lease. While some Five Percenters have argued that Allah School is Defacto ours because of our historical use, we are not the legal property owners. This parcel is classified as a miscellaneous religious facility owned by the NYC DCAS. In that 2024 article I went on to share some of the unique challenges that we face based upon this lack of ownership. Challenges that some of us dismissed at the time. Challenges that are now at the forefront due to the January 1, 2026, passage of Executive Orders 04 and 5. 


     To clarify some of these challenges that we face, in my article Are we winning the battle of Reputational Warfare? I wrote, "Striving to achieve more, individually and collectively, may require us to be more intentional with how we appropriate our time and where we invest our finances and resources. Investing our time, finances and resources to create a tangible project to better serve our community is more valuable than sitting around recording 4-hour reaction videos about people. Being more selective about the company that we keep is equally important. This may require us to disassociate from folks who are clearly making us look bad, tarnish the reputation of our community, and destroy the positive relationships that we are striving to build. That disassociation may also need to carry over into the digital space. Being consistent about celebrating our achievements and disassociating from negativity will enable us to slowly course correct the Ghost Brand trajectory that we are currently on. Like with any defunct brand that lost its growing success yet still maintains some old loyal customers, Allah's Five Percent has been similarly falling out of significance yet still maintaining some old loyal adherents to what we teach. This is due to our lack of positive public facing representation, successful youth outreach, and real community development." This analysis was based upon the fact that there are no professional revenue-generating workshops, classes, or projects being facilitated at Allah School every day. We have no grant-funded youth advocacy/community outreach programs being offered in the neighborhood. We have no collaborative initiatives with area organizations and institutions that are available on-site or virtually. Nothing is being offered by/for women and girls, even though women represent 75% of the professional non-profit workforce in the U.S. and the Allah School is a non-profit with allegedly no women board members. 

     In a more recent 2025 article Political Financial Illiteracy: How much does a Policy (Law) cost? prior to Mamdani's election, I further elaborated on the changing NYC Administration, what that could potentially mean to our nation (of the Five Percent) and Mayor Zohran Mamdani creating, amending, or repealing any NYC Policies (Laws) that he would like to implement -such as Executive Orders 04 and 5. I shared these words below;

"Building relationships with any Administration is the key to collaboration and maintaining cultural assets. Being prepared to show and prove our value as a community asset, cultural resource, and historic site will always be the difference between what we build or destroy. We have to ask ourselves, where do we stand regarding the Policies (Laws) that will be created, amended, or repealed during Mamdani's Administration? What will this cost our nation, and the community of Harlem, where we call our headquarters home? Are we at the table or positioning ourselves to be at the table to help create, amend, or repeal these Policies (Laws) to help better serve our nation and community? If we are not at the table, that is evidence that we are on the menu, either as an appetizer, entrĂ©e or a dessert. I am unaware if any Five Percenters were actively involved in Mamdani's campaign or if any Five Percenters saw the election result signs in advance and made contact with his campaign to begin building those relationships. Are any Five Percenters striving to be a part of his new Department of Community Safety?" 

     Since Covid-19, I have consistently written/spoken on the subjects of historic preservation, controlling our IP (Intellectual Property), and various procedures and programs that we can use to maintain our cultural continuity. Times are clearly changing and while some of those insights are still being dismissed, some folks are now starting to see the importance of changing how we do things, when to share our time, and where we should invest our finances and resources. I get the impression that some of us are waiting around to react to what happens instead of being proactive. As I am not in NYC or a resident in the Harlem community, there is only so much that I can do, based upon physical proximity, and how open some nation members actually are to receive what I have to share. 

     Some time ago I shared that it was not a great idea when I learned that a few Five Percenters met with city officials under the Eric Adams Administration to share a slide presentation about our ideas for developing their city-owned parcel: 2122 Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Blvd [Allah School in Mecca]. I thought it was premature because we had no capital funding to do it and we still do not have the capital funding in the bank to do a multi-million-dollar economic development project. It was simply an idea that we shared with no funding or even Memorandums of Understanding (MOU) with partnership businesses or organizations who support this project. If there is a record of those Five Percenters meeting with city officials' pre-Mayor Mamdani, it can be used by the current Administration to show a timeline and our incapability to develop their city-owned parcel. If there is no record of those Five Percenters meeting with city officials' pre-Mayor Mamdani, it still puts us in a vulnerable position with the LIFT Task Force review happening no later than July 1, 2026. We are especially vulnerable if none of us were actively involved in Mamdani's campaign, are actively communicating his Administration or actively involved with any of his departments such as the Department of Community Safety. Mamdani's Administration simply may not know who we are. With a quick Google or YouTube search, his Administration will get some answers. Answers that I am not sure that we would like concerning how collectively engaged, organized, and competent we are. If his Administration did further research by contacting surrounding anchor institutions such as P.S. 154 Harriet Tubman, P.S. 92 Mary McLeod Bethune or housing developments such as the St. Nicholas Houses to learn who we are, I am also not sure that we would like their answers. Even if some city officials wanted to pop-up at the Allah School on a random Tuesday just to check out what is going on, they won't see anything of socioeconomic value, especially with 50% of their parcel inoperative [CommonUnity CENTER]. None of these things are favorable for us. 


     So, what can we do about it? At this point I think it requires radical change. That radical change requires more effort than guys showing up every week to stream a pixelated video for a handful of viewers, dudes posting three-hour videos talking about what other people are doing, or unemployed people just hanging out at the school. It requires more than that to show and prove that we are serious about the socioeconomic growth and development of Allah School. Especially at this critical time when the city-owned parcel that we have occupied all of these years is clearly undeveloped and underused compared to all of the development happening around it. As a part of this radical change there are a number of things that I would do, from restructuring the board, exploring historic preservation, grant writing, community engagement initiatives, youth programs, strategic partnerships, and etc. If or when people [men and women] are seriously ready to add-on like this and remove all of the obstacles out of the way that will undermine those efforts, I would be willing to build. Other than that, I'll continue to do the work that I do and continue to share information for those who have the eyes to see, the ears to listen, and the mouths to speak. If something is not radically done to ensure the ownership and socioeconomic development of our Allah School, we risk losing our national headquarters. With that lost, the adjacent "Allah, Justice & The Five Percenters Square" street sign will become a political consolation prize. A sign that will now serve as the only remaining evidence and historical reminder of who we once were in this Harlem community. This is no different than any other street signs that are named after figures who are no longer there. I don't want that, and I am sure many others don't want that either. We need to do something about it then.

Peace,

Saladin, #AtlantisBuild


Monday, November 10, 2025

Political Financial Illiteracy: How much does a Policy (Law) cost?

Zohran Mamdani speaking at the Islamic Cultural Center of the Bronx mosque,
New York, October 24, 2025

     

     After engaging someone in an online discussion regarding Policy (Law), I realized something that hit me like a ton of bricks. It wasn't a new revelation, it was an "Ah ha!" moment about something that I have witnessed since 2017 with the election of Donald Trump. Everything instantly clicked and I found the words to articulate it: citizens generally lack a basic understanding of the political process and the relationship between Policy (Law) and Procedure. It is political financial illiteracy, and this is how I came to that conclusion.

     One of my Facebook friends shared a status about requiring I.D. to vote here in New York State. If you didn't know, here in New York State citizens are not required to present government-issued I.D. in order to vote. It is against the law. Because of this law, some New Yorkers, usually Republicans or Conservatives, have promoted the idea of voter fraud and undocumented citizens being allowed to participate in the political process. My Facebook friend's argument was that since people need I.D. to buy cigarettes, alcohol, medication, get a loan, cash a check or travel by bus, train, or airplane that people should be required to have a valid government I.D. to vote. What this person did not consider is the relationship between any government Policy (Law) and the Procedures required to implement. It costs money. It was also obvious that they lacked an understanding of how government works when it comes to its financial and legal responsibility to create, amend or repeal any Policy (Law). 

     Regardless of where someone stands on a political spectrum, if there is a Policy (Law) that they believe needs to be created, amended or repealed, the local, state, or federal government that creates, amends, or repeals that Policy (Law) assumes the primary financial and legal responsibility for implementing that Policy (Law). That. Costs. Money. If that Policy (Law) is to require citizens to show I.D. in order to vote, New York State (NYS) is financially and legally responsible for ensuring that eligible voters can obtain the necessary government issued I.D. without incurring significant costs or undue burdens. By law, NYS cannot simply say to citizens, “Get a damn I.D. to vote!” or "You got money and can pay for an I.D. to vote." The procedure of creating, amending, or repealing a Policy (Law) include financial and legal obligations, in perpetuity. For example, some of the financial and legal obligations that NYS would be responsible for to implement a new Voter I.D. Policy (Law) are: NYS government administration costs, training for board of election staff and machine inspectors across the state, multilingual/visually impaired voter education outreach materials to inform citizens about the law, covering associated costs for acquiring the "6 points" of documentation to obtain a valid NYS government I.D., insuring accessibility (elders/citizens with mobility issues, etc.), updating voting technology/machines, material/digital signage, and etc. If financial and legal responsibilities like these are not met, state and federal courts are there to ensure that this Policy (Law) is upheld. This is just a basic example of associated costs and the legal obligations that come along with creating, amending or repealing a Policy (Law). So… take a guess who would be required to pay some of these associated costs and legal obligations to make this Voter I.D. Policy (Law) happen? The same folks who believed that people simply need to, “Get a damn I.D. to vote!” or "You got money and can pay for an I.D. to vote." Sometimes the associated costs and legal obligations for the Policy (Law) is not the grass that people think is greener on the other side. They may find out that this "grass" was actually non-sustainable artificial turf that needs to be constantly replaced, and they're going to be paying the big, beautiful, bill.  We saw the financial and legal responsibility during Covid when federal, state and local governments created, amended, and repealed Policies (Laws) around closures, public services, PPE (Personal Protective Equipment), social distancing and etc. We also saw people get rich because of it and people become poor, if we were paying attention. 


     With all eyes on the recent election of Zohran Mamdani as New York City's next Mayor, this transition will provide an excellent opportunity to see the primary financial and legal responsibilities that comes along with creating, amending, or repealing any NYC Policies (Laws) that mayor-elect Mamdani would like to implement. There is always a cost. Folks on both sides of the political spectrum have already begun to weigh-in regarding his campaign promises of a rent freeze, city-owned grocery stores, fare-free buses, free universal childcare, the creation of a new Department of Community Safety, affordable housing construction and other ideas. While some see these things as unattainable pie in the sky delusions, others see practical possibilities. All of them, whether they realize it or not, are indirectly assessing what this will cost; what primary financial and legal responsibilities will come along with these campaign promises? Some folks believe that the cost is too high, others believe that it is not. While most folks see this as a binary argument, either we cannot or we can, the reality is there will be a combination of both. As a government body consisting of two branches, Executive and Legislative, mayor-elect Mamdani will have to work with these branches of government, city departments, county government, and the state government to create, amend, or repeal any NYC Policies (Laws) and determine his city government's financial and legal responsibilities. This is not a unilateral decision, and all of these entities do not always agree. In other words, just like any mayor elected to office, they will get some things done in their first term and other things they will not get done. Sometimes things simply don't get done because it is a multi-year project or initiative beyond the term that someone was elected to serve. That brings up another important point; sometimes the ribbon-cut project or initiative that folks are crediting to a current mayor, current members of city council, or current county legislators started a decade ago when none of these folks were in office. Many times, the political architects of these projects and initiatives are not acknowledged or given any credit for it. Of the many reasons that history is important, this is one of them. It enables you to chart the trajectory of change that happens in any given environment, how those changes shape the legal landscape, who are the folks responsible, who does/doesn't benefit from these changes, and what can be done to create, amend, or repeal any Policies (Laws) to make the environment better and legal landscape more equitable. While this is how I see the value of history, there are others who have used the exact same thought process to make the environment worst and the legal landscape inequitable. American Apartheid or Segregation is one of the most obvious examples where races were legally and inequitably separated for almost a century in all aspects of public and private life (anti-miscegenation laws), even in death (cemeteries were segregated).  These were the same Policies (Laws) that deputized the KKK to enforce them, which included murdering Black folks for voting. Yes, some Black people literally died to vote. Consider the story of Maceo Snipes.

WWII Veteran Maceo Snipes
Shot for Voting. Died July 20th, 1946.

      Maceo Snipes was a WWII Veteran who had recently returned home to a segregated Georgia after serving overseas. On Jully 17th, 1946 Snipes cast the first vote in the Primary Election for Governor of Georgia, despite threats from the local KKK that Black citizens didn't have the right to vote. The next day four white men came to Snipe's grandfather’s farmhouse where Snipes and his mother Lula were having dinner. One of those men who came to the house was a military acquaintance of Snipes, WWII veteran Edward Williamson. According to a Department of Justice memo, Snipes was called to come outside. Lula said that she heard Snipes speak to the men and then three gunshots ring out. When the men left the scene Snipes lay shot, bleeding profusely, on the porch. A wounded Snipes and his mother Lula walked almost 3 miles to the home of Homer Chapman for help. Chapman owned the land where Snipes and his mother worked as sharecroppers. Snipes was then driven to the Montgomery Hospital in Butler. After addressing his wounds, Snipes was refused a blood transfusion because doctors stated that there was no "Black blood" in the hospital. Snipes died two days later on July 20th. Edward Williamson eventually admitted to shooting Snipes but claimed that it was over a $10 debt dispute and in self-defense because Snipes approached their car with a knife. While all obvious signs lead to Snipes being murdered for voting, the local coroner acquitted Williamson days later. In 2008 the FBI reviewed the case and determined that the shooting arose from a personal dispute. The case was officially closed on April 10th, 2010, yet not for the family members of Maceo Snipes who are still seeking justice. At the time of Snipe's murder, the family owned 202 acres of land yet were forced to leave their land because of threats to their lives.

     While some things have changed since ending the legalization of Segregation, some segments of the American population are still fighting hard to maintain or reinstate Policies (Laws) that would make these American Apartheidists proud. In fact, many of these Baby Boomers who were in the pictures holding racist signs outside of public schools, spitting on and throwing bricks at marchers, smiling in front of lynched Black bodies, and burning down homes, businesses, and churches are still here today. They didn't disappear and they still serve as judges, lawyers, CEOs, board members, wardens, managers, police chiefs, teachers, business owners, politicians, and in other influential positions today. Many of them voted for the current POTUS; they are in the same peer group! At the same time, there is a new guard of progressive folks across the nation who are bringing a fresh perspective on what local, state, and federal government can be for everybody. Like him or not, mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani is one of those folks. As a Five Percenter in New York, yet not NYC, I think it is also important for those of us within Now Why Cee (NYC), especially near our national Harlem (Mecca) headquarters, to position ourselves to prepare for this new Administration and what that can mean to the future of our nation and our headquarters. One of Mayor-elect Mamdani's biggest criticism was his lack of connection with the Black community. There are many who have even gone as far as to coin the phrase "Mamdani Gentrification", claiming that his primarily non-Black campaign team, policies and backing by younger, wealthier white and white-adjacent residents have contributed to rising costs that price out and displace longtime residents in historically Black communities. Taking points like this from everyday New Yorkers and the voting statistics in the 2025 NYC Mayoral Election Exit Polls also appear to corroborate that apprehension, where nearly half (44%) of Black women voted for disgraced former governor Andrew Cuomo instead of Zohran Mamdani, even though Cuomo resigned as governor after NYS Attorney General Letitia Jame's report found him guilty of sexually harassing eleven women while serving as governor. 


     In my April, 2024 article Anchor Institutions and the Fate of Allah School in Mecca, I highlighted the fact that our Five Percent Nation's national headquarters at 2122 Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Blvd. is a parcel that is owned and classified as a miscellaneous religious facility by the New York City Department of Citywide Administrative Services [NYC DCAS]. This is important to note because many Five Percenters were under the impression that this property is Defacto ours because of our historical use and a belief that we possessed a 99-year lease signed by the Lindsay Administration in the 1960s. As of today, there is no legal documentation, no lease agreement, or no property deed that we possess to substantiate the claim that "we own" this property. With this being the case, along with the gentrification criticisms of mayor-elect Mamdani and the sociopolitical unpredictability that comes along with any Administration change, I again echo the sentiment that we need to protect and preserve Allah Youth Center in Mecca. While some of us may assume that as a practicing Muslim, mayor-elect Mamdani may be more relatable to our nation, that is no guarantee. Building relationships with any Administration is the key to collaboration and maintaining cultural assets. Being prepared to show and prove our value as a community asset, cultural resource, and historic site will always be the difference between what we build or destroy. We have to ask ourselves, where do we stand regarding the Policies (Laws) that will be created, amended, or repealed during Mamdani's Administration? What will this cost our nation, and the community of Harlem, where we call our headquarters home? Are we at the table or positioning ourselves to be at the table to help create, amend, or repeal these Policies (Laws) to help better serve our nation and community? If we are not at the table, that is evidence that we are on the menu, either as an appetizer, entrĂ©e or a dessert. I am unaware if any Five Percenters were actively involved in Mamdani's campaign or if any Five Percenters saw the election result signs in advance and made contact with his campaign to begin building those relationships. Are any Five Percenters striving to be a part of his new Department of Community SafetyPoliticians use Politics to create, amend, or repeal Policies that are ultimately enforced by the Police. There are always financial and legal costs to this, which in many historically instances, have cost us our lives. Today is no different, and if we continue to be politically apathetic and unengaged, sitting back debating on social media and participating in empty monthly vent sessions instead of doing the actual work, we will find ourselves, and our legacy, displaced and erased. 


Peace,

Saladin