Showing posts with label African American. Show all posts
Showing posts with label African American. Show all posts

Thursday, February 16, 2017

Maya Angelou

Have you ever had a passion to make a difference in the world? To make a difference for yourself? Or to make a difference for everyone who is similar to you? There are countless number of symbols I can think of that have been an example of this throughout history. After all the world continues to change every day. The person whom I would like to talk to you about is a strong black female figure by the name of Maya Angelou. She was an author, poet, singer, and civil rights activist. She worked alongside Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X, two of the most notorious civil rights activists known in U.S history.
During a time where women were well into practicing their civil rights in America. There was a group of African Americans who were willing to fight for their rights, not to different from the fight for women’s rights. Civil rights activists were willing to go the distance to fight for equality. Through whatever way they could. Through words, speech, or even creative expression.
 Marguerite Johnson was Maya’s original name. She was born St. Louis Missouri on April 4th 1928.[1] When she was sixteen she dropped out of high school to pursue a life as a single mother of her only son Guy Johnson. In the Late 1950s she became increasingly committed to her writing skills and joined a group in New York City called the Harlem Writing Guild. It was a group made up entirely of African American Civil right activists. “So say the Asian, the Hispanic, the Jew, the African, the Native American, the Sioux, the Catholic, the Muslim, the French, the Greek, the Irish, the Rabbi, the Priest, the Sheik, the Gay, the straight, the preacher, the privileged, the homeless, the teacher. They hear. They all hear. The speaking of the tree.”[3](Maya Angelou). This line is from her poems titled On the Pulse of the Morning. It’s meant to represent equality and how we are all the same.
She worked closely with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. He asked her to coordinate the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. The SCLC is a Civil Rights organization completely made up of African Americans that is still around today[2]. Unfortunately MLK was killed on April 4th 1968, Maya’s birthday. She found comfort in her writing and she wrote one of her most famous autobiographies I Know Why the Cage Bird Sings. A book about her childhood from parents’ divorce to her siblings bond with her. “Words mean more than what is set down on paper. It takes the human voice to infuse them with shades of deeper meaning.” [1] I chose this quote from the book because I it reflects on a women’s write to have a voice and that if we don’t speak up no one will understand or listen.
Maya Angelou opened up many fields for women today. She was incredibly successful in living the life she lived. Being an author, producer, singer, actress, poet, and civil rights activist. She was a very passionate individual that expressed herself in a variety of ways that made it ok for us to follow in her footsteps. It was very unusual to see a black female back then do what she did. She is an inspiration.

Maya Angelou Receiving the Medal of Freedom from President Barack Obama in 2011




        
 Citation:
Photo: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/da/Angelou_Obama.jpg  
1.    Angelou, Maya. I know why the caged bird sings. New York: Random House, n.d. Print.
2.    "Maya Angelou Timeline." Maya Angelou Timeline. N.p., n.d. Web. 8 Feb. 2017. <http://www.datesandevents.org/people-timelines/19-maya-angelou-timeline.htm>.
3.    "Maya Angelou." Academy of Achievement. N.p., n.d. Web. 9 Feb. 2017. <http://www.achievement.org/achiever/maya-angelou/>.
4.    Angelou, Maya. On the pulse of morning. New York: Random House, 1993. Print.
5.    About Us." Southern Christian Leadership Conference. N.p., n.d. Web. 8 Feb. 2017. <http://nationalsclc.org/about-us/>.




[1] Angelou, Maya. I know why the caged bird sings. New York: Random House, n.d. Print.
 [2] "About Us." Southern Christian Leadership Conference. N.p., n.d. Web. 8 Feb. 2017. <http://nationalsclc.org/about-us/>.
 [3] Angelou, Maya. On the pulse of morning. New York: Random House, 1993. Print.

Tuesday, February 14, 2017

Ida B. Wells

Google celebrates Ida B. Wells on her 153rd Birthday
July 16th 2015

         While history shows us that Ida B. Wells as a famous anti-lynch activist, journalist, suffragist, sociologist and feminist, a lot of people don’t know or learn about her early life and the struggles she had to go through as a youth to accomplish what she did in her later years. Childhood is what shapes and teaches us what is wrong and what is right and few people do anything about it. Ida B. Wells had a pretty wild upbringing and it helped push her along through her life to become the well known journalist and cultural icon that she is today.
        On July 16th, 1862, Ida was born into a family of slaves in Mississippi in the midst of the Civil War. Her father was a carpenter and her mother was a cook. They were two slaves that fell in love and wanted to be together despite their bonding slavery and everything else going on in the world. But this war did not last much longer and after it was over, Ida’s father was invited to keep working for the white family, which he accepted. But they were no longer slaves. Education became the parents main focus, wanting to send Ida and her seven siblings to school. It was also when the truth of education came out, the slaves realized why they never got to learn anything like the white people they served. “Former slaves realized that education had been forbidden because it was a key to freedom and a source of white power.”[1]
         Ida could barely remember when she first started her education, that’s how young she was. The earliest memory of her education was being able to read the newspaper for her family and friends during breakfast and her mother going to school with all the little kids and herself[2]. She could even remember learning to read the Bible. During the Reconstruction period, there were many small schools completely filled with children and not enough books to go around. 
        Her parents were very big influences in Ida’s life and the lives of her other siblings. Her father was a “race man”[3] He cared so much for the lives of the other African American people in Mississippi and across the world. He was also deeply interested in politics, although he never tried to run for office because he cared too much about trying to take care of his family and bringing home the bacon for them. Her mother was a deeply religious disciplinarian who cared nothing more than her children’s well beings. That included their education. She often went to Ida’s school to check up on their learning and would give them tasks while at home to further their learning process. She was very involved in their education, especially outside of the children’s school. 
        As soon as Ida reached her teen years, she was enrolled in Shaw University. It was a deeply Christian school. Students were required to go to daily mass, weekly prayer meetings and Church every Sunday. It was all very different than what Ida knew from her childhood and growing up in her home. Like most African-American schools, most of the teachers and faculty at Shaw university were white. The white female teachers greatly influenced Ida’s views on womanhood. Ida B. Wells described her time at Shaw University as the “my dark days”[4] in her life. She fell in love with a boy named James B. Combs. He was five years older and for reasons unknown broke up with her. But because of this, she wasn’t able to commit to just one man again for a very long time. Although, she did get married to fellow journalist Ferdinand Lee Barnett in 1895. Thanks to her fiery temper she also had a confrontation with President Hooper, who expelled her from the University because of it. But she was able to enroll in a new college to further her education.
        Yellow Fever hit her homeland, and because of it, she lost both her parents and younger brother. Her siblings were young and on their own. So, she did the only thing she thought she could. She dropped out of school and made herself to look older than she was. So she could take care of her siblings herself. She managed to fake her age and take the teaching exam, which she passed, and made a living as a teacher to support her siblings at a school right down the street from where she lived.[5] She used got to use all that love and determination she learned from her parents to not only take care of herself, but to be there for her family and others in need. Can you imagine being sixteen years old, dropping out of school and taking care of five children? 
Ida has had all these struggles in her life, but she persevered and was able to survive and thrive throughout her life because of these experiences and the things she’s learned. But she still kept that fiery temper of her. And she controlled and used it to become an anti-lynching activist that we know today. 

[1] McMurry, Linda O.. To Keep the Waters Troubled : The Life of Ida B. Wells. Oxford UP, 2000. See page 8.
[2] Ibid. See page 9.
[3] Ibid. See page 11 
[4] Ibid. See page 14
[5] Ritchie, Joy, and Ronald, Kate, eds. Pitt Comp Literacy Culture : Available Means : An Anthology Of Women'S Rhetoric(s). University of Pittsburgh Press, 2001. See page 188.