Thursday, March 22, 2018

Amsterdam News Journalist Herb Boyd Pays Tribute to Les Payne

 Pulitzer Prize recipient Leslie "Les" Payne


The following commentary was submitted by Mr. Boyd. 

Leslie Payne was the consummate journalist, a reporter and editor of unimpeachable integrity, and he could regale you with story after story on the people he knew and covered during his remarkable career. The journalism may have ended in 2006 when he retired, but he was still working determinedly to complete his biography of Malcolm X. We will have to wait on the status of that project. Payne, 76, died suddenly Monday night at his home in Harlem.

It is hard for me to be objective about Les—and objectivity was one of his calling cards—as he lived up the street from me and we would see each other in the neighborhood on many occasions during our walks. Those occasions allowed us to talk politics, and few were as up to date on local, national and international affairs as he was.

Our last real extended conversation occurred in New Orleans at last year’s National Association of Black Journalists Conference. We spent time with Larry Goldbetter, president of the National Writers Union, and Les told him about the NABJ and his role as one of the founders. He also recalled for us the last time he was in New Orleans in 1993 when he was president of the organization. Later that evening I would spend time with his son, Jamal and several of his friends.

Last summer he enthralled my City College students with a spellbinding recollection of Malcolm X during one of our stops on a tour of Harlem not too far from his home and where Malcolm X worked at Jimmy’s Chicken Shack. From that discussion I learned that he was nearing completion of his research and writing on Malcolm that had consumed his time for more than a quarter century.

During one of the last visits to his home we discussed the works of H.L. Mencken; he had a shelf full of the writer’s books and was able to quote chapter and verse on the man’s satire and linguistic skills. And then there was his long elucidation on art—he was a devoted collector. I remember meeting him once at Swann Gallery and listening to his exchanges with the noted authority on African-American culture, Wyatt Day.

Click here for the full article.  


Herb Boyd, also an educator and best-selling author, was in Birmingham, Alabama. He grew up in Detroit, Michigan, where he attended Wayne State University in the 1960s. Boyd went on to graduate with his B.A. degree in philosophy from Wayne State University in 1969.

Source: http://www.thehistorymakers.org 

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