| "22
West" is the name of the Harlem Restaurant
- Bar - Jazz Club - Gallery & Banquet Room, located
at 22W.135th St., between 5th and Lenox in Manhattan.
While it is a friendly, casual, neighborhood spot, it is
also host to the personnel from the incomparable Schomburg Center for
Research in Black Culture and the Harlem Hospital, as well as
celebrities from the government, sports and entertainment
fields. Having
been carefully chosen by the Baldwin Theatre Company as
the site of the New York run of Boston's highly
successful "Live Bird", this is not the first
time "22 West" has opened it's
arms to be the kitchen, dining room and showcase for
great thinkers, literature, music and revolutions of
enormous impact on the world.
"22
West" is a popularly scheduled destination
for many tourists from all over the world and the United
States. It is also a regular stop on many of the bus
tours through Harlem. They come not only to enjoy the
home cooked soul food, gallery of paintings, bar, live
jazz and classic juke box full of Ellington, Basie,
Billie Holiday..etc, plus a constantly updated R&B
collection, but also due to it's historic significance.
This is Malcolm X's self described "Home Away From
Home". Malcolm X had his own booth at the
back of the restaurant, now formally dedicated to his memory
with a plaque and a luminous
black & white oil
portrait of him by renowned artist, Martha Glinski. This
painting was unveiled during a Fox-TV remote 2 hour
broadcast from "22West" of "Good Day New
York", with Malcolm X's youngest daughter Illysah
and CeCe Wynans on hand, in 1996.
The Restaurant
walls are adorned with postcards sent by Malcolm X to "22
West" to keep current during the famous
press "black out" of his legendary visit to
Mecca. He also did many of his famous radio broadcasts
from the payphone that was once located in the back of
the restaurant where the gallery is.
Alex Haley
regularly met Malcolm X at "22 West" to gather
information for the "Autobiography
of Malcolm X".
There is a stool
at the lunch counter dedicated to the memory of Howard
Bennett, former Labor Leader, who initiated the movement
and was instrumental in getting Martin Luther King, Jr's.
birthday designated as a National Holiday. Along with a plaque, directly across the street, dedicated by the
City of New York, there is the "Howard Bennett
Playground". This playground is traditionally one of
the host locations for the annual Basketball Tournament
in which local youths and NBA Stars, past & present,
participate and officiate.
The walls of "22
West" are also adorned with photos of visitors,
including Mohammed Ali, Martin Luther King, Jr. and Sugar
Ray Leonard.
"22
West" has traditionally been the spot where
political activists have gathered to discuss a grand
array of issues that affect the Black Community and the
Nation. Former Borough of Manhattan president Percy
Sutton in conversation with Livingston Wingate, Adam
Clayton Powell's Chief Assistant was common.
HARYOU-ACT, main ingredient of Lyndon
Johnson's Great Society held their regular meetings here.
Muslims even tried to have pork not served because of the
social importance of "22 West".
Owner Attorney James
Alston VI
has "22 West" as a family legacy dating back to
1962, when his father was proprietor.
From James
Baldwin to Jimmy Breslin; from Willie Mays to Walt Fraizer; from Lionel Hampton to Cab Calloway; from
Abraham Beame to John Lindsey to David Dinkins (all
former Mayors of New York); from John Henrik Clarke to
Dr. Ben Jochannan, from the most common to the most
renowned, 22 West has been and continues to be a stop on
the Harlem scene.
And for a place
that has so spawned much of the genius of American
Culture and is inevitably on the rise again, "22
West" is a fine example of the jewel that is Harlem.
With food that is perfectly prepared, it is
unquestionably the best food you can find uptown.
|