Monday, November 29, 2021
The way black history is colored
Monday, November 1, 2021
African Civilization older than European civilization.
It boggles my mind that there are those who would resist teaching American History in American classrooms where it relates to slavery, that resistance made me realize that most of my growing up years I was privy to more information about what African American people couldn't do than could. Even if history is not always written by the victorious it should still be accurate. A society that cannot learn from its own mistakes must surely not be teaching its own true history.
School-age generations of children should know about the dark days of slavery in the United States and the rest of the world. It would have been helpful for me when I was in grade school to know about all of the white people, working alongside black abolitionists to build a resistance movement that would eventually topple slavery's empire in the U.S., and to know about black union soldiers fighting for their own freedom and ours.
I do know that the study of African American History when I was in school would have been one of my favorite subjects. Instead, most of my real learning about African American History came just before I graduated college and into my adult life. I remember thinking that if people are writing that Africa is the birthplace of mankind shouldn't it be obvious that following the history from Africa into Europe would be the logical progression of the historical scholars?
When I was a kid all of the heroes from Africa (like Tarzan) were white, watching movies like the Ten Commandments showed me that all of the Egyptian people were white with very dark makeup tans. There were some black and white people in that movie who were slaves. When I was a boxer, as a kid, at the local gym in Hunters Point, I remember asking my trainer, retired boxer Hard Punchin' Herman Henry, why there were no black quarterbacks in the NFL? I didn't even consider a black coach, back then. He told me "eventually there will be black quarterbacks and when that happened every NFL team would want one."
I realized that like the movie business, the NFL also colored things the way it wanted to see things. I'm sure Cecil B. DeMille didn't see Harry Belafonte, James Earl Jones, or Sidney Poitier as lead material for his classic movie production but I would surely have had the above black actors read for one of the roles:-) Slavery was replaced by racism and the lack of opportunities institutional racism provided for African Americans extended even to the NFL back in the late 60s early 70s. Replace the word black with good and I realize what my Parks and Recreation mentor was saying to me. All NFL teams want a good quarterback no matter what their skin color.
The good news is that over time like the turbulent days of the 1960s things started to change in the movie business for African Americans and even in the NFL. Nowadays there are black actors in leading Hollywood roles, black quarterbacks, and coaches so my hope is that there will also be black history classes in schools so that Africa's true history can be learned. History that unravels the lies, half-truths, and misconceptions of the African colonizers so that Africa's true history up to and including the Atlantic Slave Trade can be a part of the ongoing teaching of American History in American schools.
Tuesday, August 24, 2021
Juneteenth Freedom Day
Emancipation Day, Freedom Day, Black Independence Day, Jubilee Day, Officially Juneteenth National Independence Day are some of the other names for Juneteenth. On June 19th, 1865 the United States moved a step closer, as a nation, to honor the words written in the U.S. Constitution about all men being created equal. To Fredrick Douglass and his abolitionist colleagues, Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation wasn't passing the truth test. When the truth about the Emancipation Proclamation was known it became clear the document completely overlooked all of the slaves in friendly northern states so: what to the northern slaves was the Emancipation Proclamation on June 19th, 1865?
Not much, and especially not a document of freedom for the slaves in friendly union states. By the end of that year (1865) that oversight would be remedied with the passage of the 13th Amendment, and the following year, 1866, on the one-year anniversary of General Gordon Granger's reading of General Order No. 3 the first official Juneteenth Celebration was held. This time ex-slaves, north and south, could participate in the freedom celebration because it was the 13th amendment that abolished slavery everywhere throughout the United States.
The following year in June congress would pass the 14th amendment, which was ratified in July 1868. The 14th amendment made the ex-slaves citizens of this nation they had sacrificed their African identities for and toiled as slaves for more than 400 years. In my opinion, the most important part of the 14th amendment is the equal protection under the law the 14th amendment gave to the ex-slaves and their descendants.
The 14th amendment did much to help form the more perfect union referred to in the constitution and the reason I believe Juneteenth is the true National Independence Day. When asked to speak at a 4th of July celebration Frederick Douglass asked in his speech: what to the slave is the 4th of July? Because not only were the enslaved Americans not free at that 4th of July celebration, celebrating freedom from British rule, those same slaves were not considered citizens of the nation so many had fought and died for in the colonial war.
The 13th amendment made it possible for blacks and whites to celebrate a national independence day. Freedom from British Rule and Freedom from slavery, reduced down to its lowest denominator, freedom. The name chose for that new National Independence Day was Juneteenth. That is how all of the above appears to me anyway.
Slavery needs to be talked about in our schools, up to and including the end of slavery because the slave trade was a big part of American History, in much the same way slavery was part of Roman and British history as well as dozens of other world powers. New and better school textbooks are needed, more detailed than the textbooks I had in school along with teachers willing to teach history the way American history really was. Juneteenth and its rise to a national holiday should also be included along with the people and politics to make it happen because while Juneteenth is now a federally recognized National Holiday it is still illegal to teach about Juneteenth in more than a dozen states.
Saturday, June 19, 2021
Juneteenth 2021 The First
Friday, June 11, 2021
The African Ancestors
The blessings of the ancestors are greater than
those of living human beings. It's important to remember that as you do for
your ancestors, your children will do for you. Slavery created countless
forgotten family memories for the African Americans whose families had been
pulled apart, with family members scattered by the wind. The end of slavery in
the United States did very little to mend the African American family.
Families could still be separated by
circumstance because newly freed slaves hand nothing. The Freedmen's Bureau was
set up to assist the ex-slaves but it did not work. Most slaves ended up
returning to their former masters as laborers and sharecroppers in an agreement
that almost guaranteed their ability not to prosper. The system former slave
owners set up meant most sharecroppers could work the entire year and still end
up owing most if not all of their money to the former slave owner.
When I think about the African ancestors, I end
up feeling that in spite of the fact they were no longer amongst the living
they were the lucky ones. Those who chose to be drowned rather than be
carried away from home and into the unknown, and all of the drowned slaves, who
through no choice of their own, were purposefully drowned because of sickness
or to prevent a slave ship captain from being caught with slaves on board his
vessel during a surprise boarding by the British or American governments,
tasked with maintaining a blockade to prevent new slaves from being shipped to
America.
African and African American ancestor's souls,
that had long since found their way back to the motherland were spared the days
of slavery in the U.S., and even though we do not speak the language of our
ancestors, hundreds of years later African Americans today can still feel the
unwelcome heat of racism the ancestors learned to live with. Everything that
made our African ancestors unique in their clothing, their language, their religion,
and their families were taken from them upon arrival in the United States.
Out of that social and cultural deprivation for colored people associated with slavery in the United States came today’s modern-day Americans of African descent, like me, that honor our ancestors with events like the Juneteenth Celebration. In the African world and cosmological view of life, the ancestors are forever alive. It is said that the ancestors do things like connect Africans to their beloved ones, bless their fertility, even intervene when there is a spiritual blockage or polluting elements that threaten happiness, order, health, and life.
Our African slave ancestors came from a continent that consisted of a mixture of countries and various tribes that each possessed their own unique characteristics which in my opinion, is not only worth celebrating but worth studying as well. While I have not yet gone to African Ancestry and submitted any DNA to be traced back to the continent of Africa I have for a long time been able to trace my family roots back to the state of Texas, the birthplace of the Juneteenth Celebration and the home of many of the ancestors I celebrate.
Monday, May 24, 2021
Should the History of Slavery be Taught in school?
Wednesday, April 7, 2021
The Reasons for the Civil War
Black troops did indeed put on the union uniform and participate in the Civil War and for those soldiers, their freedom was not simply given to them. They fought for the right to be free and for the ending of slavery in this nation.
Saturday, March 20, 2021
Celebrating Juneteenth at Home
Celebrating Juneteenth at home
In these Covid-19 crazy days depending on what area of the U.S. you're in gathering in large groups may still be on a shelter in place basis. Juneteenth is celebrated in black communities throughout the United States and in other parts of the world. Juneteenth had been celebrated on a regular basis until the coronavirus happened. This past year most outdoor large-scale gatherings for the Juneteenth holiday were canceled, and several went virtual.
The drive continues to make the Juneteenth celebration a national holiday, but this year I am encouraging a stay-at-home Juneteenth celebration if a large gathering Juneteenth celebration is forbidden in your area. A Juneteenth celebration for family and friends with red-velvet cake, and strawberry soda, or whatever red food you choose. For those of you familiar with the Juneteenth celebration you know that red food and drink are very popular on Juneteenth.
Enjoying this day of freedom, the June 19th, 1865 day of independence for the slaves turned free people, and after the passage of the 14th Amendment, a citizen of this nation with equal protection under the law. We celebrate Juneteenth for all of the ancestors who lived and died, praying for a day of freedom they would never see. It's too bad racism didn't end when slavery did, and while the racism itself might not have come as a surprise to our ancestors the fact that racism is growing in this day and age rather than subsiding might surely have held some surprise.
But as the ancestors' dealt with slavery and racism, today their descendants the African American people of today are left only to contend with racism. Like the Africans, African Americans, and the abolitionist worked together to bring slavery to an end, that work, and us African American, abolitionist, and politicians now needed to gather those same energies to combat racism. So to me, Juneteenth is both a poignant reminder of the past and a way to remind us all, on each June 19th, that because of racism there is still much work that needs to be done organizing and creating opportunities for all those that racism is hurting.
If you've ever attended a Juneteenth celebration then I don't need to tell you that a Juneteenth celebration at home can not be compared to the food, drink, community, and excitement an outdoor festival style Juneteenth celebration can offer. But it can offer family and friends tired of sheltering in place a way to gather and a chance to honor all the ancestors before us and with good food and drink, family and friends make June 19th, 1865 a day worth remembering and celebrating.
Monday, March 15, 2021
Heroes of the Colored Race
Back in 1865, the heroes of the colored race were black, white, northerners and southerners who not only championed the cause of freedom for all but in many cases took the extra step to make emancipation happen for some slaves. Many of these heroes worked tirelessly to change the laws associated with slavery and to assist slaves brave enough to purchase their freedom with their life and self emancipate (runaway) on their own.
It was these heroes who set up and ran the underground railroad, an illegal operation until no longer needed in 1865. Paperwork related to the operation of the underground railroad was well guarded and hidden because to be caught with such records could have meant the loss of your freedom, property, and in some cases your life, especially if you were a black abolitionist.
The Underground RailroadWilliam Still did manage to maintain the written record of his work on the underground railroad, not only to chronicle the exploits of the runaway slave but in the hope of someday being able to reunite black families torn apart by slavery the way his own family had been separated by the rules of slavery a long time ago.
In fact, one of the runaway slaves that would come William Still's way during his work on the clandestine underground railroad would turn out to be his own brother Peter Still.
Thomas Garrett, a white abolitionist, whose religious-driven antislavery belief had him working on the underground railroad, another hero of the colored race during the days of slavery in this nation. The secret written records Garrett kept would show that he had helped more than twenty-one-hundred slaves escape to freedom. Thomas Garrett was one of the people who were overjoyed about the Juneteenth Day Celebration and the end of slavery in the south.
Garret was hoisted upon the shoulders of a crowd of jubilant black men and carried through the streets of Wilmington Delaware in celebration of the passage of the 15th Amendment, he was carried along by those who saw him as a hero of the colored race. Thomas Garrett was recognized for his work on the underground railroad, his commitment to, and the work within his own community to combat slavery.
The black history heroes list is long and almost always includes abolitionists like Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman, the list of unsung heroes I would say is just as long. My hope is that each and every one of the stories associated with the heroes of the colored race will find its way into a manuscript and into a book, I love reading about this stuff especially keeping in mind today's African American heroes, like our first black female vice-president Kamala Harris.
Juneteenth Books Juneteenth Jewelry