"THE BLACKER THE BERRY THE SWEETER THE JUICE/
I SAY THE DARKER THE FLESH,THEN THE DEEPER THE ROOTS!"
TUPAC SAYS

BLACK SKINNED BEAUTY SUPREME!

BLACK SKINNED BEAUTY SUPREME!

"BLACK IS BEAUTIFUL" -NEW YORK CITY STREET SAYING

"BLACK IS BEAUTIFUL!
BROWN IS HIP,
PUERTO RICAN IS OKAY
BUT white AIN'T S___T!"

BLACK SKINNED BEAUTY OOO!

BLACK SKINNED BEAUTY OOO!

BLACK SKINNED BEAUTY OOO!

BLACK SKINNED BEAUTY OOO!

BLACK SKINNED BEAUTY SUPREME

BLACK SKINNED BEAUTY SUPREME
BLACK SKINNED BEAUTY SUPREME!

BLACK SKINNED BEAUTY SUPREME

BLACK SKINNED BEAUTY SUPREME

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WE MUST HAVE A BLACK STANDARD OF BEAUTY BASED ON THE BLACK SKINNED BLACKEST WOMAN
Showing posts with label BLACK BOYS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BLACK BOYS. Show all posts

Friday, June 23, 2017

BLACK PEOPLE OOO!-BACK TO AFRICA OOOO!-"WHY THIS BLACK AMERICAN MOVED TO AFRICA AT 50 AND NEVER LOOKED BACK"-"I DON'T LIKE AMERICA. I LOVE AFRICA"-FROM HUFFINGTON POST

FROM HUFFINGTON POST



BLACK VOICES

Why This Black American Moved To Africa At 50 And Never Looked Back

“I don’t like America. I love Africa.”


At 50 years old, Imahkus Okofu left New York City for Ghana, West Africa, and never returned. 
In the video segment above shot for the BBC in November, Okofu admits that as a native New Yorker, she had never had any desire to visit the continent of Africa, let alone live in one of its countries. 
“I didn’t want to be no African,” Okufu says.
“The pictures that the media painted of Africa, the only Africa saw was Tarzan and Jane... Would you want to come to Africa? I didn’t want to come to Africa at all, because there was nothing good that was told to us about Africa.”
But Okufu, who has now lived in Ghana for 25 years, has seen another side of the continent. The shift came after a trip to Elmina Castle in Cape Coast, where African slaves were held before being transported along the Middle Passage to the Americas.
“[I went into the women’s dungeon], and as I stood there... I remember being terrified,” Okufu explains. “Gradually, I could feel people touching me, soothing me, saying, ‘It’s alright. You’re home. You’re safe. Welcome back...’ I knew then that Ghana was going to be my home.”
After her experience, Okufu and her husband packed up their belongings, sold what they couldn’t sell, and moved to Ghana in 1990. Okufu’s story mirrors that of many African-Americans who have traveled or made the move back to Africa in an effort to better connect with their roots and ancestry. While Okufu emphasizes the fact that Africa isn’t perfect, she also insists that life in Africa isn’t as much of a struggle as it was in America. 
“I don’t like America,” the expat says. “I love Africa.”

Wednesday, February 24, 2016

BLACK MEN RISING!=="THEY TRIED TO BURY US -THEY DIDN'T KNOW WE WERE SEEDS"-HARVARD BLACK MEDICAL STUDENTS -FROM FACEBOOK-CODEBLACK LIFE

FROM FACEBOOK

Harvard Medical School Graduates #blacklivesmatter
1.6K comments
Comments
Neemael A. M. Lund
Neemael A. M. Lund Education is power#blacklivesmatter
Pat Barnes
Pat Barnes If your smart enough to go to Harvard, your smart enough to not believe the PROPAGANDA! All lives matter!
Chionye Ibonye Giwa-Osagie
Chionye Ibonye Giwa-Osagie All lives matter, so why does America act like black lives dont matter? how can a black woman leave her house in the morning and end up dead in the hands of the police that is supposed to protect her? what exactly is propaganda? are you saying that these things are not happening and the rest of the world is being fed fabricated stories?
Chia Marie
Chia Marie I've had a black family Doctor since I was a little girl. I'm now 31. He as a black man learned how to overcome obstacles a long time ago. He was around when there were separate bathrooms for blacks and whites. That is not the case now, but there is in...See More
Mari J McRae
Mari J McRae Wow, Harvard Medical School!
Donisha Mercedes
Donisha Mercedes This Is So Inspirational..
I Can't Wait To Start Medical School School

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

EMMITT TILL'S MURDER! -THE GREAT BLACK MOTHER WHO LIVED WITH IT AND PROTESTED UNTIL NOW!-FROM FOR HARRIET ON FACEBOOK AND AMAZON BOOKS

from for harriet on facebook
Page Liked · December 10, 2014 · Edited ·
 

The struggle affects us all.

Read Death of Innocence: The Story of the Hate Crime That Changed America by Mamie Till-Mobley and Christopher Benson - http://amzn.to/1GhBNaD
You and 31,486 others like this.
434 comments
Comments
Beverly D. Johnson
Beverly D. Johnson I heard Mamie Till never got over the brutal murder of her son....she died with a heavy hurting heart....no mother should have to go through life like that..Jesus, have mercy....
Alvin Robinson
Alvin Robinson It important for us as African Americans to start educating ourselves myself included, to start reading anything we can that will educate us of our heritage from Africa to now. We are more than athletes and entertainers. With that we will look at each other in a positive light instead of the negative bs that is driven down our throats. We need each other now more than ever. We can't afford to judge each other when we're being thrown under a blanket as a sub class of people. Be proud of who and what you are and don't let no one show you any different. Especially when they come at you with that inferior bs.
Charley Grier
Charley Grier I still have nightmares after see the picture in history class
Deanna Trick
Deanna Trick I watched a documentary about the horrible attack on this young man because he whistled at a white woman. Although I am happy about the progress we've made since the civil rights movement, I am not so naive to think we have completed that journey. We...See More
Cecelia Jones
Cecelia Jones "The world suffers greatly .. Not because bad people are evil... But because good people are silent" Napoleon
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Death of Innocence: The Story of the Hate Crime That Changed America Paperback – December 28, 2004


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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful 20, 2004

Format: Hardcover
k college student that is from Clarksdale, MS. This is a little Delta town near where Emmet's murder was committed and also is mentioned in the book. The horrors described in this book are ones that every child from the Delta is aware of and is cautioned about. The men that murdered Emmett were brutal, merciless, tyrants that deserved the death penalty.
This book moved me to tears simply because of the fact that Mrs. Till never hated or wanted revenge for these men. She just wanted them to show some remorse and hoped that their little boys didn't grow up with the same kind of hatred that killed her son. This book clarified a lot of the myths that I have heard over the years about his death and also showed how strong and determined his mother was. He was her only child, the only boy, and yet she pushed and kept on fighting for him. They brought him home in a box filled with lime so he could deteriorate faster, and she said he didn't even look human, but she fought and never lost in the war of racism. She opened that box that was sealed by the state of Mississippi, and said "let the world see what I've seen". I think that this book is an eye-opener for anyone not familiar with Mississippi and for people that are, it is a raw look at the ugly truth. Mrs. Till went on to become a teacher and influenced lots of more kids with the passion that she would have given Emmett, and I thank her for this look into a heart that was wounded beyond repair and thanks to God, she made it. We made it. Emmett will never be forgotten, his story lives on still.
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25 of 25 people found the following review helpful By L. Allred on February 27, 2004
Format: Hardcover
For everyone who has heard of Emmett Till and sworn "never again" and for those who don't believe the horrors of life for too many Blacks in the South, this book is essential. This is a mother's story of the brutal murder of h young son and the travesty of justice that followed in a rural Mississippi town in the mid-1950's. She refused to let her son's murder be hidden, and it became an early rallying point for the Civil Rights Movement. Mamie Till-Mobley moves the rock under which the roaches of racism hide and exposes them to the bright light of truth. Her words are both inspirational and disturbing. We don't want to believe that this happened fifty years ago here in the "Land of the Free", but it did. We can't even tell ourselves that it could never happen now, because she tells us of a recent and terrifyingly similar murder of a young Black male in the South. Not far from where I live, four young men have just been charged with burning a cross in the yard of a Black family who had moved into a white neighborhood. Mamie Till-Mobley had her son's casket kept open so the world could see what was done to her son. Now, her book opens the "casket" of the buried past to show us once more.
Mamie Till-Mobley was a courageous woman whose story is very moving. She talks about her youth, her family, her relationship with Emmett, the lives of Blacks in the south and in Chicago. Her story would be an important one solely because she lost a child to violence. However, her story is much, much more. She stands with other Black women of the 20th century: Marian Anderson, Rosa Parks, Coreta Scott King, the mothers of the girls killed in the church bombings.
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17 of 17 people found the following review helpful By doc peterson VINE VOICE on August 25, 2009
Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
Most Americans, one assumes, know who Emmitt Till was: a 14 year-old African-American boy who was murdered and brutally mutilated for allegedly whistling at a white girl in Money, Mississippi in the summer of 1955. Few know anything more about the boy or the travesty of justice that followed the trial of those accused of the murder. _Death of Innocence_ is a hard read - a reminder of our not-too-distant past, and of who we Americans are.

The book is Emmitt's story - and that of his mother - written in what I can only assume is her voice: it is plain, simple, and almost bursts with a mother's pride, love and joy for her son. This, of course, makes the reading all the more powerful and tragic reading her reaction and emotions upon learning of the death of her son. The book is also the story of the Civil Rights Movement - of what the Jim Crow south was like, of its petty indignities, the daily injustices African-Americans had to face, and of the brutal realities those who did not "play by the rules" faced. For me, these were equally powerful - too many think only of lunchcounter sit-ins, Rosa Parks and the bus boycott, or Brown v. Board (the Supreme Court decision ironically handed down the same year of Emmitt's death.) This is a reminder that it was much more about who gets to eat or sit where.

The first quarter of the book is a bit dull as Mamie Till shares the minutae and details of Emmitt's growing up; this later serves to heighten the emotional impact of her loss. The retelling Mamie gave her son before he went to Mississippi to visit family is chilling: always respond with "Ma'am" or "Sir" when speaking to a white person. Don't look white folks in the eye. When a white approaches, step off the sidewalk into the street, look down, and don't look back when they pass.
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