When I was 10, my family went to Van Cortlandt Park in the Bronx, New York, for an impromptu evening concert, headlined by rap trailblazers The Sugarhill Gang.Donald Earl Collins, professorial lecturer of history and American studies, American University
When I was 10, my family went to Van Cortlandt Park in the Bronx, New York, for an impromptu weekend evening concert. It was 1980, and rap trailblazers The Sugarhill Gang headlined the event. Their hit song"Rapper's Delight" had made Billboard's Hot 100 at the beginning of the year . But it wasn’t the music and the dancing that made that night all Kool and the Gang for me. For me, what made it so memorable was being in a crowd of hundreds of Black folk, celebrating life in a nation seemingly dedicated to Black suffering and death. At least, that was the feeling I had about the U.S. after rewatching the miniseries"Roots" that spring — something I could know but in no way articulate back then.
One cannot fully understand Blackness and whatever successes Black people have earned in the U.S. without understanding the joy that Black people derive from being Black.
THINK What about the joy from having a completely progressive society that would come if we EatTheRich ?
THINK NBC news will apparently published about anything these days if it seems politically correct.
THINK BLACK IS BEAUTIFUL! I'M BLACK AND I'M PROUD! AND I SAY THIS LOUD!
THINK In today’s discussions, isn’t this racist? Or are there two prisms?
THINK This article is racist
THINK People need to recognize black fragility and be more careful in what they say.
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