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Friday, 16 March 2012

African American People

By Adam Bell


An inquiry into African American people often reveals the most recognizable names. Barack Obama is by far the most famous African American, followed by Martin Luther King, Frederick Douglass, George Washington Carver and many others who come to mind. From horse racing to hockey, an African American notable can be attached to just about every professional calling as a pioneer.

When America took shape as a nation, African Americans played a significant role in every confrontation, every battle, every war, in the name of freedom. The legacy of African Americans began as slaves transported from Africa through the slave trade to the southeastern shores of the Carolinas. Their native climate matched up well, making them ideal for tending to cotton, tobacco , sugar and rice crops for British and southern plantation land owners . Naturally, the road to respectability for a race of people would take generations. It is easy to see that African American men had to overcome social barriers, degradation, threats and brutal treatment to selectively become fearless warriors bent on survival.

Not everyone fared well. Of the African Americans who made a name for themselves, thousands of others failed to see the world as other ethnic groups did. Nearly every meaningful statistic in health, education, and professional trends (short of modern sports) reveal that African Americans lagged behind the “norm” in meaningful ways well after the worst eras in history such as the Jim Crow era came and went.

Exploration of African American historical past suggests its individuals suffered from little or no vanity for generations, and little or no people lore about probably the most completed African-Americans would ever be taught in American schools. Writers of American historical past merely selected to miss the successes of an ethnic group as soon as downtrodden by law. That point has ended way back . However the respect towards those that got here earlier than is hardly noticeable now .

With an African American president of the United States of America came a new sense of pride and belonging for the African American. Teens and college students feel a sense of belonging brought on by the ongoing fight for equality from previous generations. For African-Americans of Generations X and Y, a new day sees a new sense of purpose, and this is a good thing for all other Americans. Greater contributions should become the new “norm” as these bold young African Americans seek to define their place in a changing American culture.

However earlier than African American and American historical past will get a makeover, there nonetheless exists an opp ortunity to fix fences with the WWII technology, the true pioneers of social revolution. Neglect the famou s names for one minute and honor the lives of those that did a lot with far much less fanfare.

Why the WWII technology? When Tom Brokaw wrote The Greatest Generation in 1998 , he could have included African Americans however little was mentioned about them. They too suffered extreme deprivation throughout The Nice Depression. They too fought the Japanese and the German armies to free all Americans from fascism. And although few African Americans had been ever heard from throughout any of the battles and wars deemed profitable, they too had a narrative to tell.

Few would ever know of the primary black sailor to interrupt the color barrier on the USS NORTH CAROLINA battleship as a 20mm gunner when black males couldn't hearth a weapon onboard. The unlikely gunner and his gun crew helped save their ship from kamikaze assault by recognizing and serving to to shoot down the aircraft that crashed into the Pacific Ocean simply 30 ft away. Few if any black sailors escaped poverty, survived the Nice Depression, or contributed through the struggle within the Pacific and by no means shined a shoe or ironed a shirt.

With solely a 4th grade training, one such man confronted the racial cruelty, ethnic bias, and brazen indifference with a resolve and tenacity that helped change the f ate of even his most offensive peers. He refused to just accept what others wished him to believe. Dedication drove him to take cost of his personal future and he made essentially the most of his circumstances.

Towards difficult odds of survival after the struggle, this man left the south, settled within the north, raised a household constructed round religion, discovered success, and returned to his southern roots to share his prosperity




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