Dr. Ben profile picture

Dr. Ben

That dude, the Minister from Belly

About Me

For bookings and speaking engagements contact: [email protected] Russell Simmons established the Hip-Hop Summit Action Network (HSAN) to empower the Hip-Hop community to utilize their commanding cultural influence for freedom, justice and equality, he needed someone with a strong mind and commitment to youth, national civil rights experience, political skills, vast spiritual knowledge and an adept human touch to head up the organization. That man was Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis , also known as Minister Benjamin Muhammad, who had already proved his mettle by organizing the historic New York Hip-Hop Summit in 2001. That two-day event--“an unprecedented meeting,” according to the Los Angeles Times—found Chavis and Simmons guiding industry hip-hop leaders, artists, and civil rights and political organizations towards an agreement on a series of initiatives and commitments that will affect the artistic and social landscape of American society and the global community, as a whole. One month later, the HSAN was born and Dr. Chavis was named President and CEO.Chavis comes to the HSAN with a professional history of solid principles, demonstrated courage and immense diversity. A native of Oxford, North Carolina , he holds a number of prestigious degrees: He received a Bachelor of Arts in Chemistry from University of North Carolina; a Master of Divinity, M.Div., magna cum laude, from Duke University; a Doctor of Ministry, D.Min ., from Howard University; and completed course requirements for a Doctor of Philosophy, PhD, from Union Theological Seminary.Dr Benjamin Chavis began his career in 1965, as a statewide youth coordinator in NC for the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC). In 1969, Chavis was appointed Southern Regional Program Director of the 1.7 million member United Church of Christ Commission for Racial Justice (UCC-CRJ) and by 1985 was named the Executive Director and CEO of the UCC-CRJ. In 1988, Dr. Chavis was elected Vice President of the National Council of Churches of the USA . Then in 1993, Dr. Chavis achieved what no other before him had achieved. He became the youngest person ever to be the Executive Director and CEO of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).In 1995, as National Director of the Million Man March , Dr. Chavis looked straight in the face of the skeptics, and despite tremendous controversy, pulled off arguably one of the largest, most vocal, most effective gatherings of our time. To accomplish that coup, Chavis drew on many years of experience. No stranger to the civil rights struggle, Benjamin Chavis and nine others in 1978 were officially classified “American political prisoners” by Amnesty International as members of the Wilmington , NC Ten. Although Chavis and his teenage codefendants were unjustly imprisoned in NC for most of the 1970's because of their challenge to racial segregation in the Wilmington public school system, the Wilmington Ten emerged victorious after nearly a ten-year international political and legal battle when the 4th Circuit US Court of Appeals overturned their convictions and cleared their names. While in prison, Dr Chavis authored two books: An American Political Prisoner Appeals for Human Rights and Psalms from Prison.Because of Dr. Chavis' scientific background, in 1981, he was the first person to coin the term environmental racism: “Racial discrimination in the deliberated targeting of ethnic and minority communities for exposure to toxic and hazardous waste sites and facilities, coupled with the systematic exclusion of minorities in environmental policy making, enforcement, and remediation.” To prove the validity of his definition, Chavis in 1986 conducted and published the landmark national study: Toxic Waste and Race in the United States of America, that statistically revealed the direct correlation between race and the location of toxic waste throughout the United States. Benjamin Chavis is considered by many environmental grassroots activists to be the “father of the post-modern environmental justice movement” that has steadily grown throughout the nation and world since the early 1980's.Along the way, Dr. Chavis evolved into a serious journalist and commentator through his nationally syndicated newspaper column and radio program, Civil Rights Journal from 1985 to 1993.On the career track, Chavis became Executive Director and CEO of the National African American Leadership Summit (NAALS) from 1995 to 1997, and was then appointed East Coast Regional Minister of the Nation of Islam and Minister of the historic Mosque Number Seven in Harlem , New York . Subsequently, he was also named as Special Assistant to the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan, a position he still maintains today.The journey into the Hip-Hop culture actually had its roots for Chavis dating back to 1969 when he was the proprietor and regular “DJ” and “MC” for The Soul Kitchen Disco in his hometown of Oxford, NC. In the 1970's, Chavis envisioned that there was a direct connection between the urban underground music and the post-civil rights era. During the1980's, Chavis witnessed the growing popularity of hip-hop with disenfranchised youth entrapped into urban poverty. While serving as a mentor to Sister Souljah, Kevin Powell, Little Rob, Ras Baraka and other hip-hop activists, Chavis met Russell Simmons and Lyor Cohen in 1986 at Def Jam Records. As head of the NAACP in 1993, he worked with Run DMC to mobilize youth voters. Thus, it made perfect sense when hip-hop's premier video director, Hype Williams, cast Chavis in the pivotal role as the “Minister” in the 1998 hip-hop classic movie “BELLY,” which starred superstar hip-hop artists Nas , Method Man and DMX. More recently Dr. Ben performed the Intro and Outro to Jim Jones and the Diplomats 2004 hip-hop album, “On My Way to Church.” In 2005, Dr Ben was the spoken word artist feature in Cassidy's latest platinum selling album ”I'm A Hustler.”When Dr. Chavis organized both the Million Man and Million Family Marches in 1995 and 2000 respectively, Russell Simmons worked with him to mobilize hip-hop leaders to support the marches. Ultimately, the two men realized they had a similar vision for this generation of hip-hop youth, and to that end, they created the first national Hip-Hop Summit in New York City, from which grew the Hip-Hop Summit Action Network (HSAN).One-and-a-half years later, the HSAN is the largest and broadest national coalition of hip-hop artists, recording industry executives, youth activists and civil rights leaders. With the support of the major hip-hop labels, the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) and others, the HSAN has sponsored successful Hip-Hop Summits in New York , Kansas City, Oakland , Los Angeles , Washington , DC, Miami , Seattle and Dallas .But HSAN does not stop there: meetings with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), Federal Communications Commission (FCC), vocal stands before the U.S. Congress on the unconstitutionality of censoring rap lyrics, the development of literacy programs, Youth Councils, voter registration drives in conjunction with Rap The Vote, the voice for the poor, and the fight for children's public education, fill Chavis' days (and nights). Just last June, he and the HSAN joined the United Federation of Teachers and the Alliance for Quality Education (AQE) to organize the largest public demonstration since New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg took office. The Washington Post reported, “Hip-hop's brightest stars, from P. Diddy to Jay-Z to Alicia Keys, lent a little star power today to a demonstration by roughly 100,000 students, teachers and rap fans who crammed eight blocks outside City Hall to protest drastic school budget cuts proposed by the new mayor.” Recently, Chavis joined “Sex and the City” star Cynthia Nixon, actor Bruce Willis and Russell Simmons to demand adequate funding for education across the state of New York .Dr Chavis is married to Martha Rivera Chavis and the father of eight children.The Hip-Hop Summit Action Network has benefited greatly from the leadership of Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis, Jr. And the feeling is mutual: “The hip-hop generation is the most talented and socially conscious generation of youth that has ever emerged on the world stage to demand respect and justice for all,” he said.Another one of my bio's is available on the website below www.hiphopreader.com/leadership/detail.php?id=19In short I love hip-hop and I will defend the culture because it represents the struggle for freedom, justice and equality that I have been a part of all my life.

My Interests

.. width="300" height="80" .... Islam,Christianity, Judaism, Yoga, Hip-Hop, Civil Rights, Human Rights, Youth Leadership Development, Da Streets, Chemistry, Mathematics, Music, Dance, Poetry, Frighting for Freedom, Soldiering for justice, Unity of Humanity and the Oneness of God.

I'd like to meet:

I like to meet freedom fighters. If you are down with the cause join My Group visit this url: http://groups.myspace.com/HSAN

Music:

Dip Set (Jim Jones, Juelz, Cam, Jha Jha, Hell Rell... Shouts out to you all!), Foxy "Boogie" Brown, Dead Prez, The Game, Jay-Z, Mos Def, Talib Kweli, Dame Dash, Doug E. Fresh, Paul Wall, Mike Jones, Luda, Kanye, Common, Twista, Lil' Jon, Bone Thugs, Loon, Hump of Sucka Free, Nelly, Chingy, JD....

Movies:

BELLY

Books:

Psalms from Prison, Message to the Blackman, Life and Def, Torchlight for America....

Heroes:

The Most Honorable Elijah Muhammad & The Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan; John Chavis, Benjamin and Elisabeth Chavis, Nat Turner, Martin Lulther King, Malcolm X, Nelson Mandela, and Russell Simmons

My Blog

Youth movement: Keeping the spirit alive!

By Jesse MuhammadStaff WriterUpdated Feb 22, 2006, 08:18 pm (FinalCall.com) - Over 50 percent of the attendance on October 15, 2005 in Washington, D.C., for the10th Anniversary Commemoration of the Mi...
Posted by Dr. Ben on Mon, 06 Mar 2006 10:25:00 PST

FOXY BROWN IN RACIST COURTROOM ATTACK...

Eye Witness to Judges Unjustified Attack on Foxy Brown By Dr. Benjamin Chavis December 23, 2005, New York, NY: The following is the truthful account on what really happened to Foxy Brown to...
Posted by Dr. Ben on Sun, 25 Dec 2005 09:13:00 PST