Home arrow Blogs arrow BLACK IN TIME: A Moment In OUR History
Welcome to the iZania Blogs, where you will find black professionals, black entrepreneurs, and other members of the iZania community participating in creating their own blogs.  Topics range from black business advice; business blogs; news, information, and opinion; to personal journals.

iZania Blogs

Member Blogs from the iZania Community


May 14
2007

BLACK IN TIME: A Moment In OUR History

Posted by Hugh in Untagged 

Hugh

Mary Church Terrell:

On May 15, 1949, The Following Letter To The Editor (Excerpted) Appeared In The Washington Post. It Was Written By Civil Rights Activist And NAACP Co-Founder, Mary Church Terrell:

"I am urging the Post and others willing to advance our interests and deal justly with our group to stop using the word, 'Negro.' The word is a misnomer from every point of view. It does not represent a country or anything else....

To be sure the complexion of the Chinese and Japanese is yellow. But nobody refers to an individual in either group as a colored man.... They say he is Chinese.... When I studied abroad and was introduced as an 'American'  ... occasionally somebody would say, 'You are rather dark to be an American, aren't you?' 'Yes,' I would reply, 'I am dark because some of my ancestors were Africans.' I was proud of having the continent of Africa part of my ancestrial background. 'I am an African-American,'  I would explain. I am not ashamed of my African decent. Africa had great universities before there were any in England and the African was the first man industrious and skillful enough to work in iron. If our group must have a special name setting it apart, the sensible way to settle it would be to refer to our ancestors, the Africans, from whom our swarthy complexions come."

Mary Church Terrell Was Born During The Civil War, In 1863. She Graduated From Oberlin College in 1884,  And Was One Of The First Black Women In America To Receive A College Degree.
 
She Was A Charter Member And First President Of The National Association Of Colored Women.

Mary Church Terrell Died In 1954.

"In Order For Black History To Live, We Must Continue To Breathe Life Into It." -- Hubert Gaddy, Jr.

Trackback(0)
Comments (0)add
Write comment
quote
bold
italicize
underline
strike
url
image
quote
quote
smile
wink
laugh
grin
angry
sad
shocked
cool
tongue
kiss
cry
smaller | bigger

security image
Write the displayed characters


busy