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Today In Black History February 7th 1926: Carter G. Woodson Launched Negro History Week
EDUCATION, history Issa Khari EDUCATION, history Issa Khari

Today In Black History February 7th 1926: Carter G. Woodson Launched Negro History Week

On Feb. 7, 1926, Carter G. Woodson, initiated the first celebration of Negro History Week which led to Black History Month, to extend and deepen the study and scholarship on African American history, all year long. Here is an essay on the history and purpose of Black History Month, followed by recommended articles and resources on Black history.

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The Real Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
EDUCATION, history, culture Issa Khari EDUCATION, history, culture Issa Khari

The Real Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

On this day that America loves to memorialize the great leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., we at The Melanin Project would like to highlight the Man in his wholeness. From his philosophy of non-violent protest that America loves so much, to his self-revelation of leading us into “a burning house”. (United States of America) It is well documented that those around Dr. Martin Luther King were armed to the teeth and were more than prepared to protect the civil rights leader. Most known for his Dream Speech at the Capitol, there are many other speeches that detail the thought and radical approach to Dr. King’s aspirations for this country as well as his people. Most notable of those speeches was his talk of “The Other America”. The Capitol Riots in comparison to the Black Lives Matter riots just months earlier show case and point that there is very little difference from the 60’s to nearly 70 years later how America as a whole doesn’t see African Diaspora as equal culturally, monetarily, or legally.

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Professor Bayyinah Bello speaks on the Haitian Revolution of 1791
Black Power, history, EDUCATION Issa Khari Black Power, history, EDUCATION Issa Khari

Professor Bayyinah Bello speaks on the Haitian Revolution of 1791

This is Haitian Professor Bayyinah Bello’s full lecture on the Haitian Revolution of 1791. Led by Dutty Boukman, Jean-Jacques Dessalines, Toussaint Louverture the revolution toppled one of the greatest empires known to man and change the course of history.

Bayyinah Bello is a Haitian historian, teacher, writer, and humanitarian worker, who in her earlier career spent 15 years living and traveling in West Africa, including four years in Nigeria, as well as in Benin, Togo, and other countries in the region.

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A Dialogue: James Baldwin & Nikki Giovanni
Community, history, EDUCATION Issa Khari Community, history, EDUCATION Issa Khari

A Dialogue: James Baldwin & Nikki Giovanni

In November of 1971, fifteen months after his remarkable conversation with Margaret Meadabout race and identity, James Baldwin sat down with another extraordinary woman, the poet Nikki Giovanni, for another conversation of astonishing timeliness today. The event was hosted by the PBS television series SOUL! and took place in London. Baldwin was forty-six and Giovanni only twenty-eight. For hours of absolute presence, intellectual communion, and occasional respectful rebuttal, they explored justice, freedom, morality, and what it means to be an empowered human being. The transcript was eventually published as A Dialogue

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Today In Black History: October 17, 1888 Capital Saving Banks Opens
EDUCATION, history, Journalism Issa Khari EDUCATION, history, Journalism Issa Khari

Today In Black History: October 17, 1888 Capital Saving Banks Opens

On Oct. 17, 1888, Capital Savings Bank, the first bank organized and operated by African-Americans, was founded in Washington, D.C. Capital Savings BankCapital Savings helped stimulate Black entrepreneurship by offering loans to Black-owned businesses and landowners when white-owned banks would not. Confidence in the bank continued to grow, and, by 1892, deposits were estimated at $300,000.

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