J. Samuel Cook

Samuel J. Cook, III (born November 12, 1983) is an African-American playwright, journalist, educator and writer currently serving as director of the 7th Ward Neighborhood Center in New Orleans, a non-profit organization designed to improve quality of life conditions for residents of New Orleans' historic 7th Ward. His one-act play Barren Fields won an NAACP ACT-SO medal in 2002. Also an educator, he formerly worked with at-risk youth at Walter L. Cohen Senior High in New Orleans. He was born in Toledo, Ohio.

Education

Samuel J. Cook, III attended Dillard University and Alcorn State University, earning a BS in Interdisciplinary Studies and holds a M.A. in Liberal Studies with an emphasis in historical sociology from the University of Toledo. He pursued doctoral work at Southern University in Baton Rouge.

Career

Cook began his career as a writer under the tutelage of playwright Ron Milner. As a journalist, Cook has written for The Black Collegian and Black College Wire and is a former blogger for the Clarion Ledger. He has participated in the New York Times Journalism Institute and the National Association of Black Journalists Student Projects Program. Cook is a former G.E.D. instructor for Claiborne County, Mississippi and served as an intern for the Tavis Smiley Foundation from 1998–2005. He also frequently writes for Preach2me.com, a religion and spirituality Web site.

Cook has given over seventy scholarly lectures on issues pertaining to race, culture, art and spirituality. Cook comes from a well-known black middle-class family of educators and is the cousin of educator and former Dillard University president Samuel DuBois Cook and entered the educational arena in order to follow his footsteps. His great-aunt, Jessie Randall, was the first African-American graduate of Mary Manse College in Toledo, Ohio and served as Middle School Supervisor for the Department of Guidance and Counseling in Detroit Public Schools. She was also the first black woman to play classical piano for the Toledo Symphony Orchestra. His grandmother, The Rev. Cassandra Cook-Butler, was a minister, social worker and pre-school teacher. His great-grandfather and great-great-grandfather, both named Samuel Cook, were both engineers and his great-grandmother was a nurse. He is a descendant of Mary Belle Thompson, a well-known minister who founded the Pinewood Tabernacle Church in Toledo, Ohio. His great-uncle is the Rev. Dr. Richard M. Randall, pastor of the Church of the New Covenant in Detroit, MI.

In 2012 Cook joined the Obama for America campaign as coordinator for Louisiana.

Cook has an adoptive son who lives in New Orleans.

Controversy

On August 25, 2012 during the 2012 Presidential election, Cook responded to a Twitter message from Republican Presidential candidate Mitt Romney that created a controversy in the media and for the Barack Obama presidential campaign while Cook was serving as a self-proclaimed "Coordinator" for the Obama for America campaign in Louisiana. Presidential candidate Mitt Romney tweeted a memorial to the passing of American Astronaut Neil Armstrong saying "Neil Armstrong today takes his place in the hall of heroes. The moon will miss its first son of earth." Cook responded with one word "Kolob?". Kolob refers to a star or planet in Mormon scripture. This created a firestorm on Twitter with a flurry of tweets from people on both sides of the political isle claiming bigotry. Cook responded that he was a Republican himself and continued making more inflammitory comments about the Mormon religion by making mention of "magic underware" referencing the practice of wearing "Temple Garments" by members of the Mormon religion and a "conspiracy" by the Mormon religion to "infiltrate the Government". Cook attempted to delete these comments and change his Twitter account to private but not before the comments were made public.[1]

Awards and Commendations

Cook has received numerous awards and commendations, including a nomination for EBONY Magazine's "Top 30 Under 30" Youth Leaders feature in 2006, the Tavis Smiley Foundation Youth Leadership Award in 2004, a Toledo NAACP Excellence in Education Award in 2002, the Toledo NAACP Activist of the Year Award in 2001 and a Proclamation from the City of Toledo, Ohio's Mayor, Jack Ford, in 2000. Cook is also a member of Omega Psi Phi.

In 2011, Cook was named one of New Orleans' top 40 leaders under the age of 40 by The Gambit Weekly.

References

External links

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