6th Annual James Thindwa Grassroots Organizing Fund
Solidarity and Internationalism Then and Now: From Free South Africa to Free Palestine
YOU'RE INVITED
Join us in person for Solidarity and Internationalism Then and Now: From Free South Africa to Free Palestine at the 6th Annual James Thindwa Grassroots Organizing Fund Celebration on Thursday, November 13, 2025, at 5:30 PM on Chicago’s West Side. The event address will be shared with registered attendees only.
In a harrowing time of war, genocide, fear and the erosion of democracy, this evening’s conversation aims to find pathways toward hope and action. A new book explores the importance of building solidarity with international struggles. The acute injustices of South African apartheid and Portuguese colonialism, underwritten by American arms and dollars, inspired a global movement for liberation. Activists in the United States forged novel and creative ways to end US support for apartheid while striving to support the creation of independent, democratic societies. In recent times, US activists have heard and heeded the cry for solidarity from Palestinians in Gaza, the West Bank and worldwide. They clamor for the end of genocide and recognition of Palestinian human rights. What can these two contexts teach us about the vexed but vital task of building solidarity against ethnic cleansing and military aggression, that might be faraway but is subsidized by United States tax dollars?
This year’s celebration honors the visionary work of historian and activist Martha Biondi. Her powerful new book, We Are Internationalists: Prexy Nesbitt and the Fight for African Liberation, released this fall, explores global solidarity through the life and legacy of Prexy Nesbitt. Join us for a timely and urgent conversation featuring Prexy Nesbitt, Martha Biondi, and Sarah Schulman, author of The Fantasy and Necessity of Solidarity, moderated by historian Lynette Jackson. Together, they’ll reflect on past and present struggles for liberation—from South Africa to Palestine—and the internationalist movements that connect them.
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This event is free to attend, and the location will be shared with you upon registration.
By donating through the registration process, you’re helping sustain the work of the James Thindwa Grassroots Organizing Fund.
Purchase Books
We Are Internationalists: Prexy Nesbitt and the Fight for African Liberation
By Martha Biondi
IN CONVERSATION with:
MODERATOR
LYNETTE JACKSON
Lynette Jackson is an associate professor of Gender and Women’s Studies and Black Studies at UIC. A scholar of African history, Dr. Jackson is the author of Surfacing Up: Psychiatry and Social Order in Colonial Zimbabwe and numerous articles relating to women, the state and medical and public health discourses in colonial and postcolonial Africa, particularly having to do with the regulation of African women’s sexuality. She is currently writing a book about Winnie Mandela.
PANELIST
Sarah Schulman
Sarah Schulman is a novelist, playwright, screenwriter, nonfiction writer and AIDS historian who teaches Creative Writing at Northwestern. She was a member of ACT UP, New York from 1987 to 1992, and a co-founder of the Lesbian Avengers. Today she serves on the Advisory Board of Jewish Voice for Peace and is co-director of The ACT UP Oral History Project. She is the author of 21 books.
Panelist
Prexy Nesbitt
Prexy Nesbitt, a lifelong organizer, was a key leader of US solidarity work with African liberation struggles from the 1960s through the 21st century. Prexy Nesbitt was a founder of several pivotal internationalist organizations, including the Mozambique Solidarity Network, the Chicago Committee for the Liberation of Angola, Mozambique and Guinea Bissau, the Chicago Coalition for Illinois Divestment from South Africa and the Chicago Committee in Solidarity with Southern Africa. Nesbitt worked for Mayor Harold Washington, the World Council of Churches, several unions and taught for many years at Columbia College in Chicago.
PANELIST
MARTHA BIONDI
Martha Biondi is the Lorraine H. Morton Professor of Black Studies and Professor of History. She’s the author of The Black Revolution on Campus, which explores the Black student movement of the late 1960s and the rise of Black Studies and affirmative action on college campuses across the country. Her book To Stand and Fight: The Struggle for Civil Rights in Postwar New York City, charts the northern origins of the modern Civil Rights Movement, describing a grassroots movement for jobs, open housing, equal education, and defendants’ rights that fell victim to anticommunist repression.
2025 JAMES THINDWA GRASSROOTS ORGANIZING FUND GRANTEES
2025 GRANT RECIPIENT
BUILD COMMUNITIES NOT PRISONS
Build Communities Not Prisons was created in response to the tragic death of Michael Broadway at Stateville Correctional Center due to the egregious, inhumane prison conditions. They foster a community of advocacy amongst folks affected by the carceral system to ensure their perspectives are not only heard, but lead.
2025 GRANT RECIPIENT
MAMAS ACTIVATING MOVEMENTS FOR ABOLITION AND SOLIDARITY (MAMAS)
Mamas Activating Movements for Abolition and Solidarity (MAMAS) uplifts the interconnectedness of parenting and political work; nurturing and building power, to cultivate spaces for collective healing, mutual support, and liberation from the sexist marginalization of mothers and caregivers. Their Mothers of The Kidnapped (MOK), is a primarily Black and Latiné working-class group of mothers caring for incarcerated survivors of Chicago Police violence.
Past Recipients of the James Thindwa Grassroots Organizing Fund:
Black Midwifery Collective (2024)
Black Midwifery Collective’s mission is to improve health outcomes for Black birthing individuals by actively addressing disparities in maternal and infant health that have disproportionately affected communities of color. They work to revolutionize midwifery models of care by increasing the racial diversity of Community Midwives to combat obstetric racism and dismantle institutionalized birth practices.
Final 5 Campaign (2024)
The Final 5 Campaign is dedicated to closing Illinois’s final five youth prisons. Just ten years ago, eight youth prisons incarcerated nearly 1,200 young people across our state. Now, five prisons incarcerate 100 youth. The failure of these “Illinois Youth Centers” (as they are officially called) to provide care and respect to young people is no longer acceptable. The Final 5 Campaign exists to say that the time is now. We are at the finish line.
Dissenters (2024)
Dissenters are leading a new generation of young people to reclaim our resources from the war industry, reinvest in life-giving services, and repair collaborative relationships with the earth and people worldwide. They work to take back our resources from elites and their violent wars, prisons, police, weapons, and walls. In short, defund militarism and endless wars.
Bring Chicago Home (2023)
Bring Chicago Home Campaign (Housing Justice) is a grassroots movement of Chicagoans committed to creating a dedicated revenue stream to combat homelessness in Chicago. The coalition aims to restructure the Real Estate Transfer Tax (RETT), a one-time tax on properties when they are sold to create a substantial and legally dedicated revenue stream to provide permanent affordable housing for people experiencing homelessness. The new tax would generate $163 million annually to be dedicated to combating homelessness.
Illinois Worker Cooperative Alliance (2023)
Illinois Worker Cooperative Alliance (Workers Rights) is a multiracial, multilingual alliance of worker-led organizations formed to promote, educate and support the development of worker cooperatives in Illinois. IWCA is proud to be the first Seed Commons lending peer active in Illinois. Their vision is to create stable economic resources and workplace democracy for low-wage communities.
Not Me, We (2022)
Not Me, We is a Black-led organizing group in the South Shore neighborhood of Chicago fighting for issues around racism, housing, and education. They organize poor and working-class community members, allowing for mutual aid and collective power.
Survivors Know (2022)
Survivors Know is a membership organization of survivors that channels the power of those most impacted by sexual violence and sexual harassment to organize workplaces against misogyny and violent patriarchy. They place survivors’ needs, rights, and hopes over those of perpetrators, corporations, and institutions.
Coalition to Decarcerate Illinois (2021)
The Coalition to Decarcerate IL is a group of activists, loved ones of the incarcerated, and formerly and currently incarcerated individuals working to end the extreme, unending, and ineffective prison lockdown in the Illinois Department of Corrections (IDOC). Since March 2020, their incarcerated community members in IDOC have often been confined to their cells for 23 hours a day, while COVID-19 continues to spread and their mental health worsens. For the past year, the coalition has been mobilizing and advocating for protecting the mental and physical health of people in prison. Their work is focused on pressuring the Illinois Government and IDOC to implement effective COVID-19 precautions, end the ineffective and torturous lockdown, and release people.
IL Workers in Action (2021)
The Illinois Workers in Action is a grassroots organization that empowers Black and Latinx workers through education, organizing, solidarity, worker power, and rights. They address violations and discrimination in the workplace, build leadership and worker power. Some of the violations and discrimination include wage theft, harassment, sick days, and OSHA violations.
Lift the Ban on Rent Control (2020)
Lift the Ban Coalition is a statewide coalition advocating for rent control and the repeal of the Rent Control Preemption Act — which prohibits local communities from implementing rent control — as a policy option to sustain affordable hous-ing throughout Illinois. Passing the referendum offers a tool for Chicago’s economic well-being and access to affordable housing for all.
SoapBox Productions and Organizing (2020)
SoapBox Productions and Organizing utilizes multimedia curation to elevate social movements in Chicago centering education, entertainment, and structural change. Their video and photography work challenges dominant narratives to raise consciousness and critique oppressive systems. Their long-running podcast “Bourbon ‘N Browntown” creates dialogue with guests about important historical and con-temporary social movements.
Who was James Thindwa?
James Thindwa, a former Crossroads Board member and longtime Chicagoan, died of cancer in January 2020. James had a passionate commitment to social justice and an abiding belief in the power of ordinary people to change the world. Born in Harare Zimbabwe and raised as well in Blantyre Malawi, James moved to the United States in 1974 to attend Berea College in Kentucky. There he began his commitment, as an African immigrant, toward forging solidarity with African American struggles. Upon earning an MA from Miami University, and briefly considering a career in academia—and wisely rejecting it—James began his beloved work as a community organizer. Spanning issues from climate justice to racial justice and the right of workers to unionize, James’ incredible organizing skills touched countless people and communities. The staff director of Citizen Action Coalition of Indiana, Ohio Citizen Action and Metro Seniors in Action in Chicago, he also served for many years as executive director of Chicago Jobs With Justice, where he fought in numerous campaigns, most memorably in the fight for a municipal living wage ordinance. His work with JwJ was featured on a Bill Moyers show in 2009, of which James was very proud.
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