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Submitted by Melissa Martin, Ph.D., is an author, columnist, educator, and therapist. She lives in USA

The United States celebrates Black History Month annually. Let the world celebrate the history of all black women as well. Daughters of Africa (published in 1994) and the new volume New Daughters of Africa: An International Anthology of 20th and 21st Century Writing by Women of African Descent (published 2019) by editor Margaret Busby is an anthology about African women writers. Set the World on Fire: Black Nationalist Women and the Global Struggle for Freedom (2018) by Keisha N. Blain highlights black women leaders who demanded equal recognition and participation in global civil society.

Let us teach our black daughters and our white daughters about civil rights and activists for freedom. Let us care about black womanhood. Could the civil rights movement have happened without black women? No, indeed. Let It Shine, Stories of Black Women Freedom Fighters (HMH Books for Young Readers, 2013) authored by Andrea Davis Pinkney and illustrated by Stephen Alcorn is recommended.

Bold. Gutsy. Plucky. Scrappy. Determined. Spirited. Sojourner Truth, Biddy Mason, Harriet Tubman, Ida B. Wells-Barnett, Mary McLeod Bathune, Ella Josephine Baker, Dorothy Irene Height, Rosa Parks, Fannie Lou Hamer, and Shirley Chisholm are featured.

Born into slavery as Isabella Baumfree in 1797, Sojourner Truth was an Afro-American womenโ€™s rights activist. Her famous โ€œAinโ€™t I a Womanโ€ speech was delivered in 1851 at the Ohio Womenโ€™s Rights Convention. โ€œโ€ฆAnd ain’t I a woman? I have borne thirteen children, and seen most all sold off to slavery, and when I cried out with my mother’s grief, none but Jesus heard me! And ain’t I a woman?โ€

โ€œNobodyโ€™s free until everybody is free.โ€ Fannie Lou Hamer dedicated her life to fighting racial injustice. In 1964 she co-founded the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party and ran for Congress in Mississippi in 1965.

The first African-American woman elected to Congress, Shirley Chisholm of New York, won election to the House in 1968.

More Brave Black Women

Of the 127 women serving in the United States 116th Congress, 22ย are Black.ย In 1993, Carol Moseley Braun became the first African American female to serve as U.S. senator. Gloria Jean Watkins, known by her pen name bell hooks, is the author of Feminism is for Everybody. The bell hooks Institute in Berea, KY, celebrates, honors, and documents the life and work of this acclaimed intellectual, feminist theorist, cultural critic,ย artist, and writer. www.bellhooksinstitute.com. Known as the โ€œMother of the American Civil Rights Movement,โ€ Septima Poinsette Clark was an activist, teacher, and advocate for education. www.biography.com/.

โ€œIn the 20th century, African American women formed the backbone of the modern Civil Rights Movement. They were the critical mass, the grassroots leaders challenging America to embrace justice and equality for all,โ€ according to The National Womenโ€™s History Museum. www.womenshistory.org/.

There were countless unnamed black women who struggled for freedom and justice. Let us remember them as well. NASAโ€™s employees Katherine Johnson, Mary Jackson, and Dorothy Vaughan were black scientists featured in the film Hidden Figures. Astronaut Mae Jemison became the first African-American woman in space in 1992. Oprah Winfrey, Michelle Obama, Condoleezza Rice, Joycelyn Elders, M.D., Maya Angelou and other black women stand as female icons for civil rights and equality.

The Civil Rights Movement was triumphant in 1964 and 1965, with the federal governmentโ€™s passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

White women, let the named and unnamed black women of struggle, freedom, and equality nationally and internationally be nestled in our spirits and let their struggles be on our lips.

โ€œThere are still many causes worth sacrificing for, so much history yet to be made.โ€”Michelle Obama


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254 responses to “Remembering Black Women Around the Globe”


  1. Yes they can if they want to add value to the discussion and not make mock sport.

  2. WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog Avatar
    WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog

    “also what she was taught in schoolโ€ฆ.grade schoolโ€ฆas i saidโ€ฆfrom grade school, 6 or 7 years old, kids are taught in the old racist USโ€ฆhow powerful and strong the black women who were enslaved were, how strong Black women areโ€ฆ”

    Hence the reason when i get nostalgic i say, i can tell you 100 bad things about the US, but i can also tell you 100 good things aboug the US…and this is one of them.


  3. This comment is only for those blacks who pleads ignorance to their history
    Do u know how long it took for blacks to be accepted by whites
    Do u know how long it took for blacks to drink from the same water
    fountains or used the same bathrooms as white
    Blacks have a long history of rejection by whites
    Blacks had to fight the fight for acceptance
    So why now should blacks be so keen and eager to let Whites play on blacks playing field with their already planned rules and regulations
    Isnt it time blacks rolled up their sleeves and take charge of their own interest whenever opportunity arises
    Hasnt the fox been standing guard at the outside the black race house long enough
    Our History is a gateway to defining who were are and one of the most powerful tools in gaining power and respect
    If you doubt that much ask those ethic groups who have used their history to pave their way towards better
    Also ask them if they included any other race to join in their writings


  4. Who owns Inno-Grow?


  5. @ David
    Your response baffles me! I was merely adding my two pennies worth to the discussion.
    Let me share a story with BU:
    It is a known fact ,that Barbadian whites entertaining Barbadian blacks in their homes. is not a common or popular social scene.
    Yet for several years on an annual basis I attended a get together, at the home of a Barbadian black and the whites present were of the upper echelon of our corporate society.
    This Bajan Black ,did not live in the heights nor terraces; was not alawyer nor doctor; and certainly had no wealth.
    This taught me a lesson: Sometimes it is not always the race on either side but it could be the relationship.
    Some whites just find delving into the black question to be an intellectual /academic relationship.
    Perhaps that could be the issue here.

  6. WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog Avatar
    WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog

    Mariposa….i await your article on the herculean strength of Black women.


  7. Everyone Recognises that Apartheid was a Bad thing but here it is that we have Mariposa and Others proposing Apartheid…People who like to suck and Whistle at the same time.

    @ Mariposa and ilk…

    Here is some History for Ya!!!

    An Address to the Colored People of the United States
    Frederick Douglass
    September 29, 1848

    โ€œNever refuse to act with a white society or institution because it is white, or a black one, because it is black. But act with all men without distinction of color. By so acting, we shall find many opportunities for removing prejudices and establishing the rights of all men.โ€

    https://thehoovercardinal.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/Frederick-Douglas-reddit.com-colorized-history-1-736×900.jpg


  8. A next article that I am unable to contribute to.
    I will just state that many whites aided in the civil rights struggle.
    Google Michael Schwerner, Andrew Goodman, and James Chaney.
    Google the formation of NAACP.


  9. One thing i have learned from the White establishment and a lesson that i have enshrined in the bosom of my heart is not to give your past or present enemy an inch or they will take a pound
    But when will we ever learn

  10. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    Mr Blogmaster I share @ Northern’s perceptive intervention: Had u not shown the pic of the author this well presented essay would have been likely glossed over by the BU regular visitors.

    You did well Mr Editor to generate a torrid discussion on racial prejudices (some quite innate and strong) from an otherwise intellectually toned piece.

    And @Mr Austin, you did well not to ‘dignify’ my earlier retort re your seemingly racist thrust with a reply … do tell WHAT dignity u would have given your insensitive note๐Ÿค”!

    On what basis (as others have noted) is the lady rewriting our history?….On what insane basis can you compare commentary from heinous historical racist figures like Hitler to this author ?

    As noted the BS from others is dismissed but from a man who wrote and edited on the international press scene and who delved directly into these type issues and surely faced them regularly as a professional it is beyond abhorrent to read such off-centered bias from you Mr Native Son NoteWriter.

    Alas!


  11. Since its formal beginning as Negro History Week in 1926, Black History Month has revealed the โ€œwhite lieโ€ of American history. It has been a project aimed at correcting the misrepresentations and stereotypes of black life throughout the country and at vindicating black people by celebrating our extraordinary achievements as a race.

    Negro History Week represented a formalization of what was already taking place throughout black America. Laypersons and scholars created an archive of black achievement to respond to the racist claims that African Americans contributed little or nothing to world history โ€” claims often used to justify our second-class status and white superiority.

    The historian Carter G. Woodson, co-founder of the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History (ASLAH) in 1915 and the Journal of Negro History in 1916, understood the significance of celebrating black history to uprooting the idea of whiteness that devalued black people


  12. ince its formal beginning as Negro History Week in 1926, Black History Month has revealed the โ€œwhite lieโ€ of American history. It has been a project aimed at correcting the misrepresentations and stereotypes of black life throughout the country and at vindicating black people by celebrating our extraordinary achievements as a race.

    Negro History Week represented a formalization of what was already taking place throughout black America. Laypersons and scholars created an archive of black achievement to respond to the racist claims that African Americans contributed little or nothing to world history โ€” claims often used to justify our second-class status and white superiority.

    The historian Carter G. Woodson, co-founder of the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History (ASLAH) in 1915 and the Journal of Negro History in 1916, understood the significance of celebrating black history to uprooting the idea of whiteness that devalued black people


  13. It is good we have access to better advice.

    “During my lifetime I have dedicated myself to this struggle of the African people. I have fought against white domination, and I have fought against black domination. I have cherished the ideal of a democratic and free society in which all persons live together in harmony and with equal opportunities. It is an ideal which I hope to live for and to achieve. But if needs be, it is an ideal for which I am prepared to die.” – Statement at the opening of his defence in the Rivonia treason trial, April 20, 1964 (Mandela)


  14. Cant wait till the horse is bolted to reign the horse back in
    History should be our one and only lesson from where we learn to say NEVER AGAIN sending a loud and clear message that blacks would not sit idly by and let the messengers of black History rewrite or interrupt our way of life again


  15. “That our condition has been gradually improving, is evident to all, and that we shall yet stand on a common platform with our fellow countrymen, in respect to political and social rights, is certain. The spirit of the age โ€” the voice of inspiration โ€” the deep longings of the human soul โ€” the conflict of right with wrongโ€“the up-ward tendency of the oppressed throughout the world, abound with evidence complete and ample, of the final triumph of right over wrong, of freedom over slavery, and equality over caste. To doubt this, is to forget the past, and blind our eyes to the present, as well as to deny and oppose the great law of progress, written out by the hand of God on the human soul.

    Mountains of prejudice have been removed, and truth and light are dispelling the error and darkness of ages. โ€ฆ

    It would be easy to present in this connection, a glowing comparison of our past with our present condition, showing that while the former was dark and dreary, the present is full of light and hope. It would be easy to draw a picture of our present achievements, and erect upon it a glorious future.”

    Fredrick Douglasโ€ฆ
    September 29, 1848

    https://i.pinimg.com/564x/aa/4e/1b/aa4e1ba3e6c8084cf5701d09cbb64100.jpg?b=t


  16. MOCKERY.
    What is there to celebrate?
    History had shown the guile meted out to the black race, and it is celebrated today?
    Yes, strides were made by few, who stared the beast in the eyes and said NO.

    Today in 2019 (creating future history), Blacks women in Libya are being sold, Asian countries round them up for slaughter,
    Police states in the US gun them down openly, Hollywood give them derogatory rolls, Haitians are seen as scum by their mulatto neighbors (in our backyard) while Black ruled African countries are exploited by strategist occupiers.

    “Prominent Blacks” who strived had mechanisms of interest in their sails, those who genuinely made progress, did so with struggle and opposition and without the “luxury of mafia” .. true antagonists.

    As per Barbados, and globally…What will Blacks celebrate in the future… if it is only by saying NO (more).

  17. Talking Loud Saying Nothing Avatar
    Talking Loud Saying Nothing

    @ Freedom Crier,

    I am glad that you agree that apartheid was bad. What are your views on the apartheid system and the fierce levels of racism that are encountered by black Africans as practised in the region of your ancestors? I seem to recall recently that the Kenya or the Ethiopia government instructed their women and girls to refrain from working as domestic servants in a number of middle eastern countries and Arab countries. Where most are abused and in some cases killed or have committed suicide.

    I wonder if Donna, SSS, Waru or anyone of those bad-arsed black females who reside on BU could get away with the persistent comments that you make on this platform if they resided in the region of your ancestors.

    How strange that BU gives you a platform to express your views. And how bizarre that the majority black population appear blind-sided or ignorant in the knowledge that the vast majority of minorities who reside in Barbados have come from regions and countries that continue to discriminate and abuse their black populations.

    You may appreciate the link below: “Confronting anti-black racism in the Arab world
    The Arab slave trade is a fact of history, and anti-black racism in the region is something that must be addressed.”

    https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2013/06/201362472519107286.html

  18. Talking Loud saying Nothing Avatar
    Talking Loud saying Nothing

    Again Mr Blogmaster you have censored my comments.


  19. David February 15, 2019 8:15 PM…” I have cherished the ideal of a democratic and free society in which all persons live together in harmony and with equal opportunities. It is an ideal which I hope to live for and to achieve. But if needs be, it is an ideal for which I am prepared to die.โ€

    Thanks David Good Advice indeed.

    That is why Mandela was Regarded throughout the world and it was this type of Attitude that Mandela possessed that made DeKlerk who was the President of South Africa Stop Apartheid.

    One Man can make a Difference for the Power of Good while another man by his Hatred can cause untold untold misery!


  20. This is not Black versus White, or Left versus Right or Jew versus Palestinian, this is a Good versus Evil, Freedom versus Tyranny and the culprit from the beginning of time has always been the Adversary. We have our eyes so clinched where they want us to in stirring up racism that we are forgetting the others that suffer Great Atrocities right now in real time, being slaughtered by the thousands. After the WWII genocide, we kept saying “never again”. But since then there has been Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia and the Christians Middle Eastern territories. Even Saddam, as horrid as he was, never performed such atrocities. These people have lived there with their beliefs since the 5th century or earlier. Now convert to Islam or die. Are they less worthy of our outcries???

    A Rose by another name will still smells as sweet in much the same way Slavery to a Slave is STILL SLAVERY!

    The Chiefs in Africa used to war with each other and would sell their Captives to European Traders to get them out of the Country so they would not have to fight them again.

    The Europeans engaged in the Slave trade as TRADERS they did not go into Africa and Conquer and capture Slaves.

    Have you heard about modern day Slavery in Africa? What do you call when Muslim Extremist in Africa raid villages and capture children and make them solders to fight their cause?

    Have you read of Boca Harran taking young women from their tribes and selling them as SEX SLAVESโ€ฆIs that a different kind of Slavery??

    This is Satanโ€™s game, he was a liar from the beginning of time…The Adversary plans to destroy Liberty and Freedom-Economic, Political, and Religious, and set in place thereof the greatest, most widespread, and complete Tyranny that has ever oppressed men. He is working under such perfect disguise that many do not recognize either him or his methods and he has been at it since the beginning of time.

    It is well to remember that Slavery in any shape form or colour whether from Ireland, Scotland and England or Africa is Anti-Christ, for where the Spirit of the lord is there is Liberty โ€ฆ 2 Corinthians 3: 17 and the opposite is Tyranny, Bondage and Slavery.

    I only know of One Race the Human Race

    One Father of us All โ€œOur Father who Art in Heavenโ€!!

    BECAUSE OF HIS AMAZING GRACE WE ARE ALL CONNECTED!!!

    https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0189/1568/products/S4W-Amazing-Grace-Image_-Amazing-Grace-PowerPoint-image_-Amazing-Grace-background-TM_2048x.jpg?v=1514492838


  21. Here are disturbed by a rather ordinary article.
    I ask again:
    Is there a Black/ African studies program at UWI?


  22. David

    I have dreamt of democratic society where all people live together in harmony …

    David, what you have described above is an idealist dream … even in Africa where social tribalism is the Achilles heel … most Africans put tribe before country …


  23. Not interested in the color race based comments included in some commentary
    My interest lies solely in the security and protection of Black History and not allow it to be wrestled out of the hands of its rightful owners by clandestine and overt actions by those who would appear at face value to be doing the right thing on behalf of blacks but when the smoke is clear and the veil of transparency is lifted a history which was once ours is being retooled and retrofitted to mislead and left to anyones interpretation


  24. Isn’t it odd that no other race has a “Month of History”,
    Black history is etched in psyche and DNA.
    Each year to “celebrate” those atrocities reinforces the psychological imprints for continuous exploitation and abuse.
    The unsuspecting generational targets fall victim to its ploy until they say NO MORE.


  25. @ BU People (and Sheeple)

    THis specific blog WAS NOT CHOSEN BY the Old David of BU but by one of the other 2 BU BORG

    The Old David of BU would have weighed the article which ONLY was chosen because it is Black History Month and this segment of the Blog looked at the item sw=aw some “blackness” and put up the topic AS IT.

    It was not properly researched but it has elicited several comments some of note and some not worth dog shy$e

    Commenters were able to jump left right and centre BECAUSE THE CENTRAL ARTICLE is devoid of real meat and did not really present any ral position and ended with a platitude of little? significance

    I am surprised that Sir Simple Simn has not commented here as yet heheheheh

    @ Freedom Crier

    You do know that I have a beef with you and your Selective Eclectism which choses the parts that you like and think are palatable

    Another blogger above pinpointed it most adequately when he asked you about the rights of women in the Middle East but de ole man will not go so far as the Middle East.

    I would ask you to name 5 black women who were or are appointed in significant positions in your family’s slavery institution here in Barbados

    Name 5 who you have personally intervened to have them promoted in the Empire of Greasy Chicken

    I know that you will not be able to answer this question.

    Further to my claim that you are eclectic and only choose thi=ose things THAT SUPPORT YOUR TRICKERY i would wish to expose you to the BU people and sheeple here

    You conveniently chose Frederick Douglass’ speeches from the 1840 as opposed to those later in his life

    For example that called “What to the Slave in the 4th of July?” but i guess that it serves your purpose to speak of the qualities and desirability of docility in us people of colour does it not?

    While it is true that every years should not be SOLELY A CHANT OF THE ATTROCITIES THAT SOME OF YOU STILL PERPETRATE AGAINST US, equally so one still would hope that BU seeks more pertinent materials rather de ole man should say, Let Daddy Chhose these Subjects” and dont just toss up an item for comment


  26. In Bim, black history month should be celebrated in August. It makes more sense as that is our period for celebrating Emancipation and the culmination Crop Over which ends with Kadooment. The very fact that the island is usually full of visitors and returning nationals at this make it an opportunity to further financial gain. I am sure that many more events can be conceived to make black history month more culturally enjoyable then.

  27. Sunshine Sunny Shine Avatar
    Sunshine Sunny Shine

    Talking Loud Saying Nothing

    It amazes even me to see the lengths that one would go to defend an obvious bias. It appears that you have a bias and an anti-white position. And, because of that bias disposition, you would relegate anyone who dares defend the few who are not filled with hate and racist ideals. Sorry buster, but I am not like you. I am a bad arse and strong woman because I choose not to follow shite, be influenced by shite, or go against the grain just because a disgruntle few decide to do otherwise. I defend the few whites who are liberated in heart and mind from the shackles of their white evil ancestors because they chose not to perpetuate hate or support the white supremacist thinking that they are better than their fellow man of colour. They are few, Talking Loud Saying Nothing, even if your brain would not allow you to believe that they are. So if you have to go right back to Africa to concoct a hypothesis to support your vile guile that Donna, Waru or me could not make the same statements we are making here on this blog in the lands of our ancestors, that is your prerogative to make. Maybe you should go back to the region of your ancestors and propagate your white anti-slogan hate with them. In that way, you can be souled with your black roots and continue the hate with those who think like you.

    I just want you to answer two questions for me.

    Must those whites who are not racist, who do not discriminate, who holds no bias, be always guilty as charge for the sins of their fellow whites or even their racist inclined family members?
    Where do the words of Nelson Mandela hold a place in your heart when he states and I quote.

    ”During my lifetime I have dedicated myself to this struggle of the African people. I have fought against white domination, and I have fought against black domination. I have cherished the ideal of a democratic and free society in which all persons live together in harmony and with equal opportunities. It is an ideal which I hope to live for and to achieve. But if needs be, it is an ideal for which I am prepared to die. ”

    If there is to be the third question, it would be this

    What are you doing to promote black unity so that our people can start pooling their resources together and build there own industries, commerce, etc instead of promoting additional bias against whites? What are you doing to combat the crab-in-the-barrel mentality that keeps blacks down and out?

    The floor is yours!


  28. With regards to this post, my concern is not with the writer being white. It is that the content does not live up to its title nor my expectations of someone who has a Ph. D. It is in no way scholarly. It made me also wonder what her Ph. D was in or if she could defend a dissertation. She did not bring anything new to the table or any empirical evidence for that matter.
    Her strength does not appear to be Black History.
    She ends by asking white women to put the struggle on their lips. It is 2019 we have long passed that stage.
    Personally, if she wants to celebrate black women around the world, she should join the struggle of the thousands who struggle daily with poverty, being single mothers, working for low wages and those who now live in fear that the police will kill their sons.
    The writer seemed out of her comfort zone so I google her and found a contributor to a Small Town Newspaper in Ohio.

  29. NorthernObserver Avatar

    @Heather
    I made an earlier comment, but I had googled her, and here is what I found…http://www.melissamartinchildrensauthor.com/about.htm

    Melissa graduated with a Ph.D. in Counselor Education from Ohio University and a Masters in Counseling/Minor in Psychology from Marshall University. She holds a Bachelors of Science in Dietetics/Nutrition and a Degree in Early Childhood Education. She is an Ohio Licensed Professional Clinical Counselor/Supervisor (LPCC-S), former Ohio Licensed Chemical Dependency Counselor/Supervisor, (LICDC-S), former Ohio Licensed Social Worker (LSW), Registered Play Therapist, behavioral health consultant, and former adjunct professor. Melissa received a community service award from the Columbus Dispatch for volunteer projects for children at Ohio domestic violence shelters. She is a Certified Laughter Yoga Leader and Certified in Dancing Mindfulness. She is trained in EMDR, TF-CBT, Emotion-Focused Family Therapy, and Sand Tray Therapy.


  30. Why not focus on the topic? Does it matter who writes what if the message is on target? We are too immature a people, it is why we continue to occupy the bottom of the socioeconomic pole.


  31. Yes, it matters who the author is. Would you buy cou-cou from a Canadian? What about white Soul singers, and rappers? What about Chinese making Bajan rum? What about having exclusively white or Chinese teachers in our schools? How about English police officers patrolling our streets? Let us have all Indian doctors and nurses at the QEH, since the quality of service is the all important thing.
    The decision to publish was a bad one, particularly so in 2019.


  32. The blogmaster enjoys Michael Bolton, go and check the genre of music he sings or ask Hants. You know nothing about the author which makes your point irrelevant. You do know that she is White which is like a red rag waved at a bull. The blogmaster takes this opportunity to invite submissions from Muslims to share their views on the subject. Let ALL the views contend and those who do not like it lump it. Thanks for the reference Sir Lloyd!


  33. @ Hal Austin, I’m sure you are aware that one must be very careful and tread cautiously when dealing with black women on black and white issues; inside of most black women is that desire for things white. I doubt this is the first time in your life some fool black woman references her white friends and how good they are to her when the subject is about blacks universally. From my experience, all of these black women who speak of their white friends, co-workers and bosses so eloquently are suck ups, ass kissers and Tillies. See the movie ” guess who’s coming to dinner” to get an idea of Tillie, the black ass disgusting maid. I’m sure if this SSS person was a militant black woman or very Afrocentric she wouldn’t enjoy the close relationship with her white people. I can’t understand why so many black women are keen to bring up their relationship with their white masters when the topic is not about how many white friends some nappy head fool has. Then again, on second thought; their slave master Willie Lynch’s experiment is today bearing fruit.


  34. I knew nothing about the white slave masters who battered our forefathers and mothers. If the victor writes the history, then we owe it to future generations to make sure we tell our own story.
    I do not want to know anything about the author, for all I know she helps old black ladies to cross the streets and feeds the hungry in Africa; but that does not negate the central contention that on a black-focused blog the story of the black experience should be told by black people. To suggest otherwise is to suggest black people cannot tell their own story. As to the article being enlightening, I suggest you study Plato’s allegory. Should a white actor, no matter how good, play Othello?
    It was a bad decision and history will show this. Only in Barbados, and among Barbadians, will this be an issue.


  35. Theogazerts

    Who in the year 2019 does not know that Whites were instrumental in the struggle for Civil Rights in America?

    You ought also know that Whites were also instrumental in the struggle against slavery … John Brown is a notes example, and White man who gave his life for the cause of Black liberation…


  36. @Whitehill,

    Plse read my notes. It is a very important issue, one that we avoid, but one the white man s very aware of. The black man is the enemy, not the black woman.
    Of course, we must wait until David BU gets a liberal white woman to tell us about the nature of our relationships with black women.


  37. Hal Austin

    There is no such thing as White Slavery … it is just a ploy Whites use to appease their consecience, or to justify the enslavement of people of African and African extraction…


  38. Hal Austin

    If any of the Whites who advanced this claim can show me where in the historical records were Whites kidnapped, beaten and made to work for free … then I shall accept such claim but until them I shall stand by my above claim….


  39. @Heather

    I would rather have Rawdon Adams’ MA in Political Sociology than a PhD in what David BU’s celebrated author is qualified in. It appears as if celebrating mediocrity is part of our cultural DNA.
    David BU for prime minister.

  40. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    Mr Blogmaster, what continues to bamboozle me from mainly people like @Hal is the bruggadung style of brash reverse racism which is seen as normal because in short the Black historical exposition is ‘we ting…no white faces allowed’.

    The examples he uses (Hitler, Chinese teachers in our schools) to defend his bias are ridiculously non-comparative but yet he persists.

    That @Ms Cole would offer her 1:52 AM is perhaps understsndable…if one sees it as her boomerang retort for the similar irrational personal attacks she herself received on these pages when she first offered up opinions…many queried then who she was, as if that really mattered rather than what she said!

    I will revert to a long form anecdote of an earlier comment to reinforce your rhetorical “Why not focus on the topic?” …And to reinforce that the sentiments exposed here by several commenters are bluntly racists … not saying anyone here will go out there and physically abuse someone based on their ethicity but they surely have exhibited the very same behaviour as exemplified below…so what does that say about our verbal onslauts!

    “Dr. Tamika Cross, a black physician at the Lyndon B. Johnson Hospital in Houston, could not immediately come to the phone on Friday. She was busy delivering a baby boy by C-section….So, yes, in case anyone has any doubt, Dr. Cross is an โ€œactual physician.โ€…But the 28-year-old doctor said that was the question hanging in the air, raised by a flight attendant, when she volunteered to treat a sick passenger on a Delta flight…she had put her hand up to help, but was met with the kind of skepticism she had encountered before as a black doctor. A flight attendant demanded her โ€œcredentialsโ€ and confirmation that she was a real physician….โ€œShe said to me: โ€˜Oh no, sweetie put ur hand down; we are looking for actual physicians or nurses or some type of medical personnel. We donโ€™t have time to talk to you.โ€™ โ€

    The flight attendant then without pause then accepted the word of a Caucasian male that he was a qualified doctor …never asking him for credentials. The passenger fortunately was none the worst for the delay but could have been.

    So yes, that little story is what Black folks deal with repeatedly: Total disrespect of our professional ability….so here we go in a different guise but just as purposefully returning the favour and it’s all good because “this is we ting and they does do it all the time”… All for a brief script on a series of possible reading materials and a compendium of historical figures….sounds perfectly logical to me….steeupse!


  41. @Dee Word

    This is why some of us who know better must lead the narrative. And be relentless doing so. In fact some of the comments serve to motivate the blogmaster.


  42. There is a video on social media in which a local is lamabasting a tourist and of course the response coming from the locals in regards to the man behaviour was harsh and forth coming
    There is an article in local media where the man explain his side and tells reason as to why his response was harsh and revolting namely because he was called a Ni.gger by the tourist
    The article in the media in regards to the mans explanation for his outrage is worth reading as it gives a real view as to how blacks can be easily ridicule and provoked and have their dignity attacked and then placed under a microscope after being attacked by whites

  43. WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog Avatar
    WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog

    The dude was right to blast these arrogant racist tourists, that the black useless governments enable and encourage to disrespect their own people andvpractice racism against them in their own country while telling them how dependent they are on scum tourists,.,.dude said he and the tourist came to an understanding…after the drama…you ususally have to put them in their place to get any respect.

    Dont know why airhead Symmonds and the police think they can victimize this black man.,.airhead Symmonds need to use his one brain cell to find a way to be less dependant on racist tourists so they do not insult and disrespect his people….and practice their racism at will and with a government greenlight……goddamn idiots.


  44. Why is it i posted the link to the story which i made mention and it is not posted
    Yet an error message states duplicate comment detected


  45. A clip from the story with exchange between tourist and the man

    –‘–‘-”””’–””–”””””

    The man however indicated he was still upset by the way the Scottish tourists treated him. According to him, they used a derogatory and racist word in reference to him saying: โ€œYou canโ€™t speak to her like that. You canโ€™t speak to her like that little n****r. Go off the beach and go and sell some drugs or something,โ€ he recalled.

  46. The Truth Shall Set You Free Avatar
    The Truth Shall Set You Free

    Offence is taken because an article written by a white woman was posted to a โ€œblack blog?โ€

    Here we have a black man, who takes pleasure in coming to a โ€œblack blogโ€ on a daily basis, to constantly remind us black bloggers how dumb, silly and appallingly ignorant we are as a result of learning by rote…….just because we may not agree with his opinions or he with ours.

    He spent most of his life in the white manโ€™s land, working for the white man, building up the white manโ€™s economy, and he CRITICIZES EVERYONE and EVERYTHING in the land of his birth, which he constantly says is a failed state……….but not his adoptive home land of the white man.

    This is the type of thing I would expect to see a white man post about black people on a white blog.

    Once again I say Bush Tea is right.


  47. Here in tge article posted on BU

    This woman in part of the commentary states ” let us teach our black children
    Her premise to interject that black parents is not teaching their black children about black History and those blacks involved
    Tantomounts to intellectual snobbery


  48. *โ€œDuring my lifetime I have dedicated myself to this struggle of the African people. I have fought against white domination, and I have fought against black domination. I have cherished the ideal of a democratic and free society in which all persons live together in harmony and with equal opportunities. It is an ideal which I hope to live for and to achieve. But if needs be, it is an ideal for which I am prepared to die.โ€ โ€“ Statement at the opening of his defence in the Rivonia treason trial, April 20, 1964 *

    Hahah. LOl…Oh shiirt

    HOW HAS THAT WORKED OUT FOR SOUTH ARFICA?


  49. @Dullard

    You are more comfortable with the de Klerk and pre Mandela period when apartheid was institutionalized?


  50. @ De Word

    You are an embarrassment.

    Mr Blogmaster, what continues to bamboozle me from mainly people like @Hal is the bruggadung style of brash reverse racism which is seen as normal because in short the Black historical exposition is โ€˜we tingโ€ฆno white faces allowedโ€™.

    Please explain. What is ‘reverse racism’?

    What a weak-willed coward!

    With “men” like you around no wonder we are in such a state.

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