Black History equals living history: Do something
I just submitted The Honorable Barbara Jordan as someone (among many) worthy of memorial, and especially for our commercial-related 'Black History Month'.
Yet, I am also persuaded to reiterate that we shouldn't just salute a 'tree-lined and predefined worthy persons street' where you will those known for their success according to what the system allows - but we should boldly began to go down a less beaten path whereas beautiful black people like Sandra Bland and Trayvon Martin (and many others) are part of a growing list of unlikely heroes whose lives were prematurely (and it continues) snuffed out by racist acts.
I challenge all black people to start thinking outside of the box (that we've been put in) and give some (more) overdue reverence to the persons and events that may even supersede at some points the importance of some who [we] have identified as 'famous'. Try to critically elevate to different contexts.
If you can expand, you will probably most likely recognize a plethora of individuals, and their lives how their situations (and the events surrounding them) have touched the masses.
Thank you Sandra and Trayvon (and so many other 'real-time' unsung involuntary heroes) for the monuments created in our soul by your lifetime event that today provokes us to continue the unfinished journey - and inspire us (or should) to resist, and to awake (shake) us from slumber. Today, we all are at-risk for being blindsided, especially in wallowing in follies like not recognizing that our 'living history' does not diminished the importance of someone like a Dr. King - and it shouldn't. Yet if the spirit of Dr. King lives in real-time (We are not talking about physical monuments by the way) we will be open to restoration, replenishing, and the reconstitution for reaching our predestined purpose.
We must persevere, be aware, and proactively interpret events that connects with our ancestral roots - and, we must respond, accordingly (n our alertness) until there is true post-racial society. Then "freedom can ring" - completely. Black History is a living and evolving thing.
Submitted by: Jerel Shaw
(Original article appears at https://www.facebook.com/thetruthof/)
Yet, I am also persuaded to reiterate that we shouldn't just salute a 'tree-lined and predefined worthy persons street' where you will those known for their success according to what the system allows - but we should boldly began to go down a less beaten path whereas beautiful black people like Sandra Bland and Trayvon Martin (and many others) are part of a growing list of unlikely heroes whose lives were prematurely (and it continues) snuffed out by racist acts.
I challenge all black people to start thinking outside of the box (that we've been put in) and give some (more) overdue reverence to the persons and events that may even supersede at some points the importance of some who [we] have identified as 'famous'. Try to critically elevate to different contexts.
If you can expand, you will probably most likely recognize a plethora of individuals, and their lives how their situations (and the events surrounding them) have touched the masses.
Thank you Sandra and Trayvon (and so many other 'real-time' unsung involuntary heroes) for the monuments created in our soul by your lifetime event that today provokes us to continue the unfinished journey - and inspire us (or should) to resist, and to awake (shake) us from slumber. Today, we all are at-risk for being blindsided, especially in wallowing in follies like not recognizing that our 'living history' does not diminished the importance of someone like a Dr. King - and it shouldn't. Yet if the spirit of Dr. King lives in real-time (We are not talking about physical monuments by the way) we will be open to restoration, replenishing, and the reconstitution for reaching our predestined purpose.
We must persevere, be aware, and proactively interpret events that connects with our ancestral roots - and, we must respond, accordingly (n our alertness) until there is true post-racial society. Then "freedom can ring" - completely. Black History is a living and evolving thing.
Submitted by: Jerel Shaw
(Original article appears at https://www.facebook.com/thetruthof/)
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Thank you for opting to join the dialogue on important issues. Be respectable - and watch your language.