Category: Blog

  • Little Known Black History Fact:

    Carter G. Woodson, known as the “Father of Black History”. He was born on December 19th, 1875, in New Canton, Virginia to former slaves Anne Eliza (Riddle) and James Henry Woodson.

    Woodson was not able to attend school as a young child but through self-teaching he exceeded in all subjects. At the age of 17, Woodson moved to Huntington, West Virginia. Three years later he started Douglass High School as a full-time student and graduated in 1897. He became a teacher at a school in Winona, West Virginia and later selected to become the principal of Douglas High School. He achieved great success and furthered that success by becoming the second African American to graduate from Harvard University with a doctorate degree and becoming a member of the first Black professional fraternity Sigma Pi Phi and a member of Omega Psi Phi.

    After getting a doctoral degree, he continued teaching in public schools, as no university was willing to hire him. Eventually he became the principal of the all-Black Armstrong Manual Training School in Washington D.C. He later became a faculty member at Howard as a professor and then served as a dean to the colleges Art and Sciences department.

    What a magnificent journey through oppression, trials, and tribulations. Having gone through many adversaries he still prevailed and was determined to succeed. Today we highlight his industrious nature, courage, strength, and tenacity! Thank you for founding Black History Month Sir.

  • The History behind Cornrows

    Valerie German 

    Fact to know

    Did you know Cornrows were used to help slaves escape slavery?

    Slaves used cornrows to transfer information and create maps to the north.

    Since slaves were not allowed to read or write they had to pass information through cornrows.

    It is believed to have originated in Colombia, South America where Benkos Bioho, in the late 1500’s came up with the idea to have women create maps & deliver messages through their cornrows. They were also called “canerows” to represent the sugarcane fields that slaves worked in.

    One style had curved braids, tightly braided on their heads. The curved braids would represent the roads they would use to escape.

    Also in their braids they kept gold and hid seeds which helped them survive after they escaped. They would use the seeds to plant crops once they were liberated.

    Cornrows was the best way to not give back any suspicion to the owner. He would never figure out such a hairstyle would mean they would escape or the route they would take. #BlackHistoryMonth

    R3: Very interesting fact about the history behind African American cornrows. Very intelligent people. Our ancestors were amazing and very creative. Thank you for paving the way. Thank you for the sacrifices you made. Thank you for your willingness, courage and determination to change the trajectory of history as we know it today. Thank you for your economic contributions. Thank you for the movements. Thank you for solid foundational principles that some of us live by today. You are greatly cherished and we will never forget all that you had to endure for your kind to be where we are today. #thankyoufromthebottomofourhearts

  • Black History Month Reveals the Deception Behind White “Discomfort”-Peniel E. Joseph

    Black History Month Reveals the Deception Behind White “Discomfort”- Peniel E. Joseph

    Peniel E. Joseph is the Barbara Jordan Chair in ethics and political values and the founding director of the Center for the Study of Race and Democracy at the LBJ School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas at Austin, where he is also a professor of history. He is the author of Stokely: A Life and The Sword and the Shield: The Revolutionary Lives of Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr.

    This year, Black History Month commemorations will unfold alongside efforts in numerous states to ban the teaching of its content. Efforts that purport to bar the teaching of “Critical Race Theory” have evolved into a full-scale assault, with Republican lawmakers unleashing attacks on Black History under the guise of protecting White children from “discomfort.”

    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who seems intent on riding anti-CRT sentiment all the way to the White House, has made national headlines by backing a bill that would prevent any content that would make students or state employees feel “guilt” about their individual identities. Meanwhile, Virginia — home of the capital of the Confederate States of America — also banned CRT.

    And now, Glenn Youngkin, Virginia’s first Republican governor in a decade (whose victory was largely orchestrated by his savvy participation in race-fueled culture wars), has now created a tip line for parents who object to the content being taught in public schools. Unsurprisingly, the line has already been flooded by memes using sarcasm to state the obvious — this isn’t about preventing teachers from making kids feel uncomfortable. This is about avoiding discussions of racism — and by extension, Black history — altogether.

    Republican lawmakers in multiple states and counties have effectively set out to cancel histories that White parents may find uncomfortable and in the process are seeking to cancel Black History Month and discussion of other uncomfortable histories, including the Holocaust and murderous campaigns unleashed against indigenous peoples as a result of settler colonialism.

    Black history offers the nation an unvarnished origin story — one that transcends the mythology of America’s founding and conveys the lived realities of native peoples and Black Americans and their centrality to the United States we live in today.

    Sharing these stories with school children in an age-appropriate manner is not something we should fear. But the erroneous narrative that teaching Black history provokes anxiety, discomfort, guilt or anger for White children has insidious roots. Let us not forget that the classrooms of White children have been a battleground before, and that the cry of parental rights and choice were the order of the day back then as well.

    Today’s children should have the chance to know and relate to the Black school children, mostly young girls, who braved White mobs during the 1950s and 1960s — and experienced their own anxiety, fear and trauma. That history deserves to be reckoned with by new generations of school children, irrespective of the manufactured concerns of Republican Party officials or White parents.

    R3: Being uncomfortable forces you to recognize, acknowledge and accept things for what they are. We can not change the past and that is ok. Telling history no matter how uncomfortable or difficult it may be empowers and encourages people to see it for what it was, think beyond and heal. We must push past the stigma of slavery and oppression. Change our way of thinking and our hearts, that’s how we can truly make the world a better place. It’s up to us to face what was, embrace what is and work towards what could be. Oppression whether its people, places or things does nothing for humanity. Change it people and change this democrat and republican bs. We are all one people!!

    #blackhistory #knowledgeispower #realizationcomesfromdiscomfort

  • Growing up in a single parent home: It’s OK!

    You’re not your parents. You’re not those generational curses. History doesn’t have to repeat itself. Just because something happens to you that’s unfortunate doesn’t give you a pass to wallow in it. You’re great & magnificent despite of! You’re OK. You’re better than OK! #absentparentsmakeusstronger

  • You can’t handle the truth or You can’t handle my reaction….Let’s Talk! Share your thoughts…..

    The TRUTH is something a lot of people struggle with. We say we want the truth no matter how bad or ugly it may be but….. is that the truth or is that a misconception?

    When a person asks for the truth they do not fully embrace the fact that it could possibly bring pain, hurt, humiliation, sadness, anger, fury, thoughts of retaliation, and bruised egos. What we are asking is something we are not always ready and prepared for. Understand if you want the truth you need to have thick skin to be able to handle it when its presented to you.

    Be open to listening attentively, be understanding, exercise reasoning, and control your emotions and impulsive urges to lash out. This reaction makes the person who is telling the truth feel as though they can not open up and talk to you. It makes them feel gaurded and restricted from having conversations that need to be had. They see your reaction(s) as you not being able to handle the truth. This is the very reason men or women OMIT the truth, LIE or say nothing at all.

    Also, let me make this very clear. When the truth is given to you, don’t discredit it and act as though you still don’t believe it. In other words, just because the truth is not what you EXPECTED or ASSUMED doesn’t make it a lie. Acknowledge and accept the truth for what it is.

    Be careful of what you ask for if you are not prepared for what comes next.

    #truth #misconception #understanding #reasoning #reaction #expectations #assumptions #personal-development

  • Black History Month

    Black History Month starts today, February 1, 2022, and will be celebrated all month long, ending on March 1, 2022. We will be spotlighting prominent figures who shaped the world we live in today. Today we spotlight Cheslie K. Let’s take a moment to remember a bright light that became the face and voice for the USA in 2019. Miss Cheslie Kryst. She was an American lawyer, correspondent for EXTRA, model, beauty pageant titleholder who was crowned Miss USA 2019. One of three black women who won in the same year. She was a bright light and will be remembered by so many for her “sparkle”, “megawatt smile”, beauty and imprint she left on the world. She studied law at Wake Forest University in North Carolina from 2013 to 2017. The brilliant, intelligent 30-year-old rose to fame and used her voice to do what she passionately loves to do, advocate for social change. Some question if there was foul play, and we know from a source that saw her on the terrace of the 29th floor that she was alone. She lived a life that only one could imagine one day living. She was seen in numerous pictures smiling, vibrant and so full of life. From the outside looking in one would think that she had it all together and had no worries in the world. Let this be a reminder that just because people smile on the outside doesn’t mean they aren’t hurting in the inside. Take time out of your busy schedule to check in on family and friends, co-workers, and those you don’t talk to on a regular basis. Depression, stress, and anxiety are sometimes silent and go unnoticed. Do your due diligence to make sure you are doing what you can in making the world a better place for those who live in it. Suffering in silence takes a toll on people mentally. It’s not ok. Be there for others, reach out to them, stop judging, be understanding and considerate, be empathetic and sympathetic to other people feelings. When tragedy strikes, it hits hard and when it does it wakes us up. You never know what a person is going through, their mental state or how heavy the burdens of life really are for some. What a beautiful picture that she posted to her Instagram page @ https://www.instagram.com/chesliekryst/But the message is disturbing. Who was she speaking to when she posted that message shortly before she plunged to her death? “May this day bring you rest and peace”. That day was a tragic day. That day doesn’t bring rest or peace. It brings tears, sorrow, hurt, pain and so much more. Was SHE tired of all the burdens and heaviness the world placed on her? Did she believe that she would finally have rest and peace by leaving a world she probably felt was so cold? The racing thoughts of many. A beautiful light that shined bright is forever gone and will be forever missed. Rest in peace Cheslie K.