"YOU PEOPLE"

Got my OWN mic, stage, key, seat & door!

MS. IVORY

on February 6, 2023

YOU are the STANDARD

YOU are the ORIGINAL

YOU are the FIRST…….

FacebookNo photo description available.

 

Marcus Garvey" Poster for Sale by Jahva1 | Redbubble

 

Marcus Garvey quote - a people without knowledge of their past history, origin and culture is like a tree without roots" Photographic Print for Sale by Artonmytee | RedbubbleMarcus Garvey quote - a people without knowledge of their past history, origin and culture is like a tree without roots" Photographic Print for Sale by Artonmytee | RedbubbleMarcus Garvey quote - a people without knowledge of their past history, origin and culture is like a tree without roots" Photographic Print for Sale by Artonmytee | Redbubble

Africa for Africans Spoken words by Marcus Mosiah Garvey Jr

The white liberal is the worst enemy to America - ImgflipCarter G. Woodson quote: History shows that it does not matter who is in...Geoffrey Philp: John Henrik Clarke Speaks About Marcus Garvey's Influence.Chris J. Suggs on Twitter: "Church leaders that call for peace instead of working towards change & justice are not following Christ, but instead are resembling the 'white moderate' that Dr. MartinMalcolm X on the manipulation of the Media | The Extreme History ProjectSystemic oppression demands a systemic exodus — Rise Up for StudentsQuotes About Malcolm X Prison. QuotesGramMalcolm X on the Media – Paul Salahuddin ArmstrongVuyani Pambo on Twitter: "I can hear brother Malcolm X asking us “who taught you to hate yourself ? https://t.co/qKptF0A6fV" / TwitterMalcolm X quote: There can be no black-white unity until there is first...Malcolm X quote: Ignorance of each other is what has made unity impossible...Verify: Did NFL players only start coming onto the field for the national anthem in 2009? | 9news.comThe Other 98% - The Other 98% added a new photo.Africa Is a Country on Twitter: "James Baldwin said this when we was in his 80s. And, yes, local conditions aren't all the same, but black lives, especially the lives of poorImage

 

Pin by Lorraine Freeman on Quotes | James baldwin quotes, Famous african americans, Historical quotes

Engaging Students in Meaningful Learning Activities | National Geographic Learning: In FocusImageMaster Teachers | African diaspora, Black history books ...

John Henrik Clarke quote: There has been a struggle to reclaim the African self...

TOP 25 QUOTES BY JOHN HENRIK CLARKE (of 140) | A-Z Quotes

John Henrik Clarke Said It Best at What Point Are We Going to Stop Imitating Imitators? You're Imitating Someone Who Is Imitating You Unity Love Peace~AHS | Meme on ME.ME

 

BlackHistoryStudies on Twitter: ""When are we going to stop imitating people, that imitate us?" - Dr John Henrik Clarke https://t.co/v4DIKhSixM" / Twitterjohn henrik clarke - Google Search | Black history facts, History facts, History

 

 

SHADE

Black is not a color. it's the essence from which all color comes from. Black people are not a race. We are the original family from which all races come from. -

25 The gene..... “EVE" ideas | the eve gene, mitochondrial dna, mitochondrial eve

Is this claim about the existence of the “Eve gene” in black women true? She has “mitochondrial DNA with all the possible variations for every kind of human being. When the DNAPin on Things I LOVE25 The gene..... “EVE" ideas | the eve gene, mitochondrial dna, mitochondrial eve

 

FEATURES

Honky Kong : r/BlackPeopleTwitterFor Centuries Some Whites Have Said That Black People Look Like Monkeys but Take a Closer Looks at Whose Lips Are Actually More Like That of a Monkey's Lips the Monkevs HairWhat are the most recent examples of african people being exhibited in human zoos? - QuoraSarah Baartman 1789-1815 1813 Taken From Cape Town to London in 1810 She Became One of the First African Womento Be Puton Disrespectful Sexual Display at Exhibitions by Europeans Prostituted Until SheMr. Imhotep - Do you know the story of Sara Baartman?! Sexism - During 1814–70, there were at least seven scientific descriptions of the bodies of Black women done in comparative anatomy.

 

HAIR

CoHeir Multimedia GroupOur people are so talented and amazing Did you know Cornrows were used to help slavesHow hair was used to smuggle grains into the Caribbean by African slaves - Face2Face AfricaAFRICAN & BLACK HISTORY on Twitter: "Did you know Cornrows were used to help slaves escape slavery? Slaves used cornrows to transfer and create maps to leave plantations. It is most documentedFacebookWhat is wrong with non-black celebrities wearing cornrows? I don't mean to be ignorant, I just want to understand why the African American community takes offence to this. - QuoraPinterest ♥☆@badgalronnie☆♥ | Black girl problems, Black knowledge, Black livesCultural appropriation corn rows box braids | Boxer braids, Braid styles, HairdoNo photo description available.May be an image of text that says 'c REATING A R ESPECTFUL & PEN ORLD FOR N ATURAL HAIR'May be an image of 2 peopleNo photo description available.

 

SO AFTER USING HAIRSTYLES TO BE INVISIBLE YET VISIBLE MAPS TOWARDS FREEDOM, THEY MADE US COVER OUR HEADS…….

 

Shocking History Why Women of Color in the 1800s Were Banned From Wearing Their Hair in Public Tignon Law in 1789 Tignon Laws Were Established in Louisiand Forced to Adapt the Newtignonlaws - Explore | FacebookMulti-screenshot post) For any Black Vaushites, I'd like to hear your thoughts/opinions on this : r/VaushV

 

Why there should be a White History Month

 

 

Isaac Murphy became one of the best jockeys in history - Sports Illustrated BlackHistoryStudies on Twitter: "America's First Bond Market Was Backed By Enslaved Human Beings https://t.co/w4B2bhHr92 #enslavement #slavery #stockmarket #humanproperty #commodity https://t.co/wx6GbvQatM" / TwitterNo photo description available.No photo description available.No photo description available.May be an image of 6 people and text that says '6:24 PM google.com/sear Blog Talk Radio × BEFORE AFTER LG WAYAFTER WAY Christianity vs Ancient Kemet" FINAL AUTHORITY... Images may be subject to copyright. Learn More Visit Related content Horus Jesus 0 Blog Talk Radio Christianity vs Ancient... Mary sis-Mari Melancholia+'

May be an image of 4 people and textMay be an image of text that says 'No Service Instagram 5:58 PM 10% kemeticscienceinstitute Christian idea of God Kemetic/ Kemetic/Egyptian origin idea of God big white The universe, dude force in the sky 十 vs Cultivatea Recognize your own relationship to God divinity Serve him to gain favor Evolve into the best you inner conflict Inner peace 303 likes kemeticscienceinstitute Reminder Kemet predates Christianity by thousands of years, so you be the... more View all 6 comments'No photo description available.No photo description available.No photo description available.May be an image of text that says '3000 Bce COMMON ERA 9 FEMALE TO MALE 中 MALE MALE Egyptian ankh Cross Based on the feminine principles of nature, spirituality and Based on the peace masculine principles Of theocracy, politics and war'No photo description available.No photo description available.May be an image of 8 people and textNo photo description available.

No photo description available.May be an image of text that says 'The thought of' the inferiority of the Negro is drilled into him in almost every class he enters and in almost every book he studies. Carter G. Woodson'No photo description available.No photo description available.No photo description available.No photo description available.May be an image of 1 person and text that says 'FJ Be Dissertatin' @FeministaJones And most of you cannot either. And you have to admit that you, too, do not consider some of the most brilliant Black thinkers to to be "classic philosophers" That is the consequence of Eurocentric education, and what Carter G Woodson spoke of when he talked about mis-education.'May be an image of text that says 'Negroes sre trained exclusively in the psy chology and economies of Wall Street and are, therefore, made to despise the opportunities to run ice wagons, push banana carts, and sell pea- nuts among their own people. Foreigners, who have studied economies but have studied Negroes, take up this business and grow rich. In schools of journalism Negroes are being taught how to edit such metropolitan dailies as the Chicago Tribune and the New York Times, which would hardly hire a Negro as a janitor;'No photo description available.No photo description available.No photo description available.May be an image of text that says '"Education, whether in elementary, secondary, or higher education institutions have been seen as a way for Black people and communities to resist...When When Carter G. Woodson founded Negro History Week in 1926, he saw it as a way to provide a space and resources to critically educate students about their history. The grassroots network of Black teachers used this week not only to lionize individuals and narratives, but also to teach students about racial progress, and as well as shared and collective responsibility." 2023 Black History Theme Executive Summary: Black Resistance, ASALH'No photo description available.No photo description available.May be an image of 2 people and textMay be an image of text that says 'Many Black people have misdiagnosed our condition as being the Stockholm syndrome. That condition is a natural occurrence that sometimes happens whenever captives spends significant time with their captors, adopts their captor's ideology, and develops an allegiance towards their captors. STOCKHOLM SYNDROME Franklin Jones This is not the condition that afflicts most Black people. What afflicts Black people is far worst and more insidious because it's by deliberate design. Black people have been deliberately socialized to revere our oppressors. www.theblackpeoplesmatrix com'

 

No photo description available.No photo description available.No photo description available.

 

The Mis-Education of the Negro
by Carter Godwin Woodson.

Chapter I: The Seat of the Trouble

THE “educated Negroes” have the attitude of contempt toward their own people because in their own as well as in their mixed schools Negroes are taught to admire the Hebrew, the Greek, the Latin and the Teuton and to despise the African. Of the hundreds of Negro high schools recently examined by an expert in the United States Bureau of Education only eighteen offer a course taking up the history of the Negro, and in most of the Negro colleges and universities where the Negro is thought of, the race is studied only as a problem or dismissed as of little consequence. For example, an officer of a Negro university, thinking that an additional course on the Negro should be given there, called upon a Negro Doctor of Philosophy of the faculty to offer such work. He promptly informed the officer that he knew nothing about the Negro. He did not go to school to waste his time that way. He went to be educated in a system which dismisses the Negro as a nonentity.

At a Negro summer school two years ago, a white instructor gave a course on the Negro, using for his text a work which teaches that whites are superior to the blacks. When asked by one of the students why he used such a textbook the instructor replied that he wanted them to get that point of view. Even schools for Negroes, then, are places where they must be convinced of their inferiority.

The thought of the inferiority of the Negro is drilled into him in almost every class he enters and in almost every book he studies. If he happens to leave school after he masters the fundamentals, before he finishes high school or reaches college, he will naturally escape some of this bias and may recover in time to be of service to his people.

Practically all of the successful Negroes in this country are of the uneducated type or of that of Negroes who have had no formal education at all. The large majority of the Negroes who have put on the finishing touches of our best colleges are all but worthless in the development of their people. If after leaving school they have the opportunity to give out to Negroes what traducers of the race would like to have it learn such persons may thereby earn a living at teaching or preaching what they have been taught but they never become a constructive force in the development of the race. The so-called school, then, becomes a questionable factor in the life of this despised people.

As another has well said, to handicap a student by teaching him that his black face is a curse and that his struggle to change his condition is hopeless is the worst sort of lynching. It kills one’s aspirations and dooms him to vagabondage and crime. It is strange, then, that the friends of truth and the promoters of freedom have not risen up against the present propaganda in the schools and crushed it. This crusade is much more important than the anti-lynching movement, because there would be no lynching if it did not start in the schoolroom. Why not exploit, enslave, or exterminate a class that everybody is taught to regard as inferior?

To be more explicit we may go to the seat of the trouble. Our most widely known scholars have been trained in universities outside of the South. Northern and Western institutions, however, have had no time to deal with matters which concern the Negro especially. They must direct their attention to the problems of the majority of their constituents, and too often they have stimulated their prejudices by referring to the Negro as unworthy of consideration. Most of what these universities have offered as language, mathematics, and science may have served a good purpose, but much of what they have taught as economics, history, literature, religion and philosophy is propaganda and cant that involved a waste of time and misdirected the Negroes thus trained.

And even in the certitude of science or mathematics it has been unfortunate that the approach to the Negro has been borrowed from a “foreign” method. For example, the teaching of arithmetic in the fifth grade in a backward county in Mississippi should mean one thing in the Negro school and a decidedly different thing in the white school. The Negro children, as a rule, come from the homes of tenants and peons who have to migrate annually from plantation to plantation, looking for light which they have never seen. The children from the homes of white planters and merchants live permanently in the midst of calculations, family budgets, and the like, which enable them sometimes to learn more by contact than the Negro can acquire in school. Instead of teaching such Negro children less arithmetic, they should be taught much more of it than the white children, for the latter attend a graded school consolidated by free transportation when the Negroes go to one-room rented hovels to be taught without equipment and by incompetent teachers educated scarcely beyond the eighth grade.

In schools of theology Negroes are taught the interpretation of the Bible worked out by those who have justified segregation and winked at the economic debasement of the Negro sometimes almost to the point of starvation. Deriving their sense of right from this teaching, graduates of such schools can have no message to grip the people whom they have been ill trained to serve. Most of such mis-educated ministers, therefore, preach to benches while illiterate Negro preachers do the best they can in supplying the spiritual needs of the masses.

In the schools of business administration Negroes are trained exclusively in the psychology and economics of Wall Street and are, therefore, made to despise the opportunities to run ice wagons, push banana carts, and sell peanuts among their own people. Foreigners, who have not studied economics but have studied Negroes, take up this business and grow rich.

In schools of journalism Negroes are being taught how to edit such metropolitan dailies as the Chicago Tribune and the New York Times, which would hardly hire a Negro as a janitor; and when these graduates come to the Negro weeklies for employment they are not prepared to function in such establishments, which, to be successful, must be built upon accurate knowledge of the psychology and philosophy of the Negro.

When a Negro has finished his education in our schools, then, he has been equipped to begin the life of an Americanized or Europeanized white man, but before he steps from the threshold of his alma mater he is told by his teachers that he must go back to his own people from whom he has been estranged by a vision of ideals which in his disillusionment he will realize that he cannot attain. He goes forth to play his part in life, but he must be both social and bisocial at the same time. While he is a part of the body politic, he is in addition to this a member of a particular race to which he must restrict himself in all matters social. While serving his country he must serve within a special group. While being a good American, he must above all things be a “good Negro”; and to perform this definite function he must learn to stay in a “Negro’s place.”

For the arduous task of serving a race thus handicapped, however, the Negro graduate has had little or no training at all. The people whom he has been ordered to serve have been belittled by his teachers to the extent that he can hardly find delight in undertaking what his education has led him to think is impossible. Considering his race as blank in achievement, then, he sets out to stimulate their imitation of others The performance is kept up a while; but, like any other effort at meaningless imitation, it results in failure.

Facing this undesirable result, the highly educated Negro often grows sour. He becomes too pessimistic to be a constructive force and usually develops into a chronic fault-finder or a complainant at the bar of public opinion. Often when he sees that the fault lies at the door of the white oppressor whom he is afraid to attack, he turns upon the pioneering Negro who is at work doing the best he can to extricate himself from an uncomfortable predicament.

In this effort to imitate, however, these “educated people” are sincere. They hope to make the Negro conform quickly to the standard of the whites and thus remove the pretext for the barriers between the races. They do not realize, however, that even if the Negroes do successfully imitate the whites, nothing new has thereby been accomplished. You simply have a larger number of persons doing what others have been doing. The unusual gifts of the race have not thereby been developed, and an unwilling world, therefore, continues to wonder what the Negro is good for.

These “educated” people, however, decry any such thing as race consciousness; and in some respects they are right. They do not like to hear such expressions as “Negro literature,” “Negro poetry,” “African art,” or “thinking black”; and, roughly speaking, we must concede that such things do not exist. These things did not figure in the courses which they pursued in school, and why should they? “Aren’t we all Americans? Then, whatever is American is as much the heritage of the Negro as of any other group in this country.”

The “highly educated” contend, moreover, that when the Negro emphasizes these things he invites racial discrimination by recognizing such differentness of the races. The thought that the Negro is one thing and the white man another is the stock-in-trade argument of the Caucasian to justify segregation. Why, then, should the Negro blame the white man for doing what he himself does?

These “highly educated” Negroes, however, fail to see that it is not the Negro who takes this position. The white man forces him to it, and to extricate himself therefrom the Negro leader must so deal with the situation as to develop in the segregated group the power with which they can elevate themselves. The differentness of races, moreover, is no evidence of superiority or of inferiority. This merely indicates that each race has certain gifts which the others do not possess. It is by the development of these gifts that every race must justify its right to exist.


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Skip to toolbar