At the Argus, we are intentional about creating space—space to pause, to look again, and to honor those whose work has shaped our communities without fanfare or formal recognition. Too often, the narratives of local history overlook the people who carried the heaviest loads, asked the hardest questions, and stayed the longest when attention faded. Argus Flowers Now is our way of changing that.
We cannot wait for someone else to acknowledge those among us who are worthy of honor and remembrance. Nor can we allow history to be written in ways that obscure the achievements of people who labored in plain sight, building institutions, consciousness, and courage. Flowers exists to bring those stories forward—while those we honor are still here to receive them.
This week, Flowers recognizes Zaki Baruti, President of the Universal African Peoples Organization (UAPO), longtime community organizer, and publisher of African Newsworld. For decades, Baruti has been a front-line advocate for African-American empowerment, self-determination, and redress—linking cultural consciousness to concrete political and economic action.
Baruti’s work has consistently advanced African-centered thought as both grounding and strategy. Through UAPO, he has pushed for proportionate representation, community control, and policies that directly address the lived realities of African Americans. His approach insists that empowerment must be organized, disciplined, and rooted in community institutions rather than episodic moments of protest.
A central theme of Baruti’s organizing has been the need for independent political voice. He has long argued that the traditional Democratic and Republican structures too often leave African Americans outside the rooms where critical decisions are made. In response, he has worked to build alternative political formations that speak directly from the community—on its own terms—rather than through intermediaries.
That commitment has required personal and political sacrifice. Baruti’s run for Governor of Missouri in 2016 was emblematic of this approach. The campaign was less about electoral odds than about expanding political imagination and asserting that African Americans can pursue power without permission or compromise of principle.
Baruti is also widely known for establishing and sustaining annual celebrations honoring Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, and Marcus Garvey. These events have preserved the revolutionary substance of their legacies, resisting attempts to reduce them to symbolism detached from struggle. His community work extends into education initiatives, grassroots programs, and international engagement, including travel to Africa and sustained support through clothing and book donations.
Through his television program, Conversations with Zaki, and his role as publisher of African Newsworld, Baruti has provided consistent platforms for dialogue on Black history, politics, culture, and global solidarity—often ahead of mainstream attention.
Flowers is not about perfection. It is about presence, persistence, and impact. Zaki Baruti’s work has shaped consciousness, institutions, and action across generations. It is right—and overdue—that we name it.
For more information on Zaki Baruti and the Universal African Peoples Organization, and to support their work, visit www.uapo.org.