Mr. Spontaneous!

Back in the days before 9/11, you could buy a plane ticket for someone and spring it on them at the airport just before boarding. That is just what Bert did with his lover, John, for his 26th birthday. He had pre-packed an overnight bag for John, told him he was taking him on a trip, but didn’t reveal the destination — New Orleans! — until they arrived in the PanAm terminal at JFK International.

It would be John’s first visit to The Big Easy. Despite not being alcohol drinkers, they enjoyed tooling around the French Quarter, took in at least one jazz club, and even made it to nearby Biloxi, Mississippi, where they patronized a feminist bookstore and napped on a beach at the Gulf of Mexico.



Denise Carty-Bennia ~ Rest In Power

Denise Carty-Bennia, B.Michael’s dear friend and mentor from law school, died tragically at the age of 43. Her obituary appeared in the New York Times.


At Northeastern’s memorial for Denise, B.Michael was one of two Alumni Tributes; he read a poem he wrote called “Shades of U.”


The Northeastern University School of Law created the Denise Carty-Bennia Memorial Bar Award in her honor.


A year after her death, the City University of New York School of Law at Queens College dedicated the Denise Carty-Bennia Auditorium:


Just a few examples of Carty-Bennia’s legal scholarship and leadership that B.Michael kept in his files.


A discussion on “Affirmative Action: Where Are We Headed” held by Carty-Bennia at Barnard College, her undergraduate alma mater, was recorded in 1990.


One of Carty-Bennia’s Constitutional Law lectures was recorded at Northeastern some time in 1981-82.


Palm of My Hand

If I had one dream in the palm of my hand
It would be to see tomorrow

If someone questioned me
And asked me to say
What would you hope for
My reply
simple and sweet
is to see tomorrow

Now there is some joy
in knowing that you had
the joys of today
It’s good,
to be in the moment
look back over what has been
but the thought
of facing yet another day
now that’s some joy
I want to have

So I will say
simple and sweet
I’d like so much
I’d like so much
you can be sure
I’d like to see tomorrow
I’d like to see tomorrow


© B.Michael Hunter 1990

“It’s 11:10 on the 5th of June and I’m trying to record — no, I am recording — the melody to a song that I just wrote the rest of the words for. I wrote the first line about a week or two ago and it goes like this …”

Below, on the back of a 4″ x 6″ index card, is where B.Michael wrote the “first line” along with the “rest of the words” for Palm of My Hand.

On the front of the same index card is a single line: “Know my hand has taught the waters …” Or is it: “Know my land has taught the waters …”? Wondering if B.Michael auditioned this lyric for the same song or as the seed of another.

To all of you within earshot of B.Michael’s voice, what song or poem emerges for *you* in this moment with this ancestor’s line as a prompt?

Commencement

Graduating from law school at Northeastern University was a tremendous achievement for B.Michael.

Several members of his extended family were present to witness the occasion of the first, but not the last, of his cousins’ generation to earn a graduate degree.

Below left: B.Michael flanked by his parents, Bert and Sheila. Below right (from left to right): his grandmother, “Mother”, B.Michael, mother Sheila, cousin Christopher, father Bert, sister-in-law Lisa, older brother Stephen. Not pictured: cousin Sheilah.

IBM: First Contact

In early 1984, during his final semester of law school, Bert began weighing his options. On the one hand, he considered taking the bar exam and practicing as an attorney. He also explored companies that would offer him professional advancement while allowing him to pay down his student loans.

In February of that year, he interviewed with IBM. Here is a draft of his post-interview letter of continued interest:

Soon after graduation, Bert accepted a position with IBM in Boston and would remain with the company for 5.5 years.


(1) Mugging for the camera. (2) The lone Person of Color, posing with fellow IBM newbies, most likely at training camp. (3) Featuring thigh, Walkman, and IBM tee, rehearsing for what seems to be a water- or beach-themed workplace skit. All photos circa 1984-85.

Prof. Denise Carty-Bennia

What was it like for B.Michael, a Black Queer man, to attend law school in Boston in the early 1980s?

Here is a taste of at least what he experienced in the classroom with brilliant professors like Northeastern’s Denise Carty-Bennia, who taught Constitutional Law, a staple class for everyone in their “1L”, or first year of law school.

The excerpt, recorded some time during the 1981-82 academic year, captures roughly 1.25 hours of lecture (with a gap of five seconds at the 37:40 mark) when someone flipped the cassette tape to the B side. Was it B.Michael himself, or did someone make the recording for B.Michael because he was absent?

And if you were in the classroom that day with Carty-Bennia, please contact us here. Bonus points if you recall the date of the lecture!

This unlabeled tape was found in B.Michael’s archives. Many thanks to Lisa Evans-Chapman, B.Michael’s good friend and fellow 1L, for confirming Carty-Bennia’s voice and the material.

Kenya

Early in 1980, while still a student at Adelphi University, Bert applied to volunteer with Operation Crossroads Africa, a US-based, non-governmental agency that, “sponsors cross-cultural exchanges and small-scale service projects in Africa.” His first time out of the U.S. and the personal significance as as a Black American to travel to Africa specifically, as well as an opportunity to earn academic credit for an independent study, the trip would serve multiple purposes. It would be a life-altering sojourn that expanded his vision of the world and his place in it. He wrote about his experience here, which also foreshadows his aspirations of becoming a teacher.

Receiving his acceptance letter in March set in motion a robust checklist of must-do’s related to Adelphi coursework, medical requirements, and an ambitious goal to raise $2,000 toward his trip.



Originally destined for Tanzania, at the last minute he was reassigned and spent six weeks on a community development/construction project in Kapsara, Kenya.



Tucked away in one of his storage boxes were a couple dozen negatives, (6 cm x 6 cm, shot in 120 film or “medium format”), together with three faded printed photos, one of which, fortunately, bore the Kodak logo and the date-stamp of August 1980, confirming that these uncaptioned images were taken by Bert on this, his first trip to Africa.

Bert wrote that he was one of ten participants — “3 black American women, 2 white American women, 2 black American men and 3 white American men.” This crew is most likely interspersed with native Kenyans in the images below. If you, or someone you know, joined Bert in Kapsara, we’d love to hear your stories and/or photos of Bert to include here.

Tanzania (Almost)

Bert was set to visit Tanzania on a study-abroad experience via Operation Crossroads. But due to “political complications” in that country, he was reassigned to Kenya. Always flexible, Bert pivoted and embraced the change in plans. His final paper on his Kenyan experience can be found here.

The reassignment occurred some time between May 16th and June 20th, as indicated by the faded red postmarks on these envelopes from Operation Crossroads.

Here is a fact sheet Bert would have received from Operation Crossroads to help orient him to his destination country.

And here is how the sausage was made — the pre-trip application forms, the university approvals and, of course, the mad dash to raise funds!

Bertram Hunter, 4th Grader

A priceless cache of B.Michael’s earliest known work! Memorabilia from kindergarten to third grade which hibernated in his mom’s storage boxes, which he inherited when she died.

B.Michael was attending P.S. 146 in Manhattan at this time. One assignment, dated April 5th (see page 34), would have been done the day after Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated in Memphis. Coincidentally, B.Michael wrote a poem, Bridgetown, in which he references MLK’s murder.

Check out page 2 for a highlighted commentary on the 45th POTUS and a call to action for the 2020 presidential election!

Though undated, the worksheet below probably hails from this same year. There was a side of B.Michael that was optimistic, upbeat, hopeful, symbolized by the notion of “tomorrow” (highlighted below), which appears several times in B.Michael’s writing.