Afeni Shakur Davis, the mother of one of hip-hop's most seminal and iconic figures, has died
at age 69, the Marin County, California, sheriff's office said Tuesday.
Though she is best known as Tupac Shakur's mom, she was also a
Black Panther as a young adult and an activist and philanthropist in her later
years.
Deputies responded to a call reporting "a possible cardiac
arrest" at her Sausalito home around 9:34 p.m. Monday, the Marin County Sheriff's Office said.
Shakur Davis was taken to the hospital where she died at 10:28
p.m., the office said.
"Sheriff's Coroner’s Office will lead investigation to
determine exact cause & manner of Afeni Shakur's death," the office
said in a tweet.
Information is still being gathered, and the sheriff's department
will answer questions regarding her death later Tuesday morning, it said.
From drugs to arts
In a 2005 interview ahead of the opening of the now-shuttered
Tupac Amaru Shakur Center for the Arts in Stone Mountain, Georgia, Shakur Davis
recalled how her life was almost derailed by drugs and how her son got it back
on track.
Her drug use made her so oblivious to what was happening in her
life that when someone told her in 1990 that her son -- then on the precipice
of becoming the biggest name in hip-hop -- was going to be on "The Arsenio Hall Show," she thought the person was lying, she said.
In the mid-1980s, she was homeless in New York City and
"messing around with cocaine," she said. Despite the drug use, she
was still coherent enough to realize that Tupac would become a product of the
streets if she didn't make different choices.
"I was running around with militants, trying to be badder
than I was, trying to stay up later than I should," she said in the 2005
interview.
She decided to enroll Tupac in the 127th Street Ensemble, a Harlem
theater group, something she called "the best thing I could've done in my
insanity." They later moved to Maryland, where she enrolled him in the
Baltimore School for the Arts, and then to a small town outside Sausalito.
It was there that Tupac confronted her about her cocaine use.
"He asked me if I could handle it, and I said yeah because
I'd been dipping and dabbing all my life," she said during the interview.
"What pissed him off is that I lied to him."
'Pac told the local drug dealers not to sell to her, she said, and
he told his mother to get clean or to forget about being involved in his life.
'Arts can save children'
She got clean in 1991, she said, and when her son was gunned down
in Las Vegas in 1996, she resisted the urges to delve back into her old bad
habits. She instead founded Amaru Entertainment to keep her son's music alive.
Later, she realized that her life mistake-ridden as it may have
been might serve as a lesson to others.
"Arts can save children, no matter what's going on in their
homes," she said. "I wasn't available to do the right things for my
son. If not for the arts, my child would've been lost."
She provided the majority of the money to begin the $4 million
first phase of the arts center, while her Tupac Amaru Shakur Foundation hosted
poetry and theater camps for youngsters in the Atlanta area.
"I learned that I can't save the world, but I can help a
child at a time," she said, pointing out that her new life of philanthropy
wouldn't have been possible without the influence of her legendary son.
"God created a miracle with his spirit. I'm all right with that."
And as much as she credited Tupac with inspiring her to help
others, the tribulations she endured in raising him weren't lost on the
multiplatinum artist. He regularly invoked her in his music, perhaps never as
directly as in his chart-topping song, "Dear Mama."
In it, he rapped, "And even as a crack fiend, mama, you
always was a black queen, mama. I finally understand, for a woman it ain't easy
trying to raise a man. You always was committed, a poor single mother on
welfare, tell me how you did it. There's no way I can pay you back, but the plan
is to show you that I understand."
Shakur Davis is survived by daughter Sekyiwa Shakur.
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