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Dinah's Legacy

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Feb 02 2025

Reflections

Grandma Ella

Remembering Connecticut 2024

We visited Uncle Herbert and Aunt Doretha just a few weeks after going through some family challenges. The pain was still very fresh but my daughter and I endeavored to make this trip. I’m glad we did. Uncle Herbert and Aunt Doretha laid out the red carpet and took us to lunch and a tour of the city. We ate a Cheesecake Factory, it’s one of their favorite restaurants. I was so amazed that my 89 year old uncle was driving us around the city, showing us all of his stomping ground, if you will. We also got a chance to visit other family before we made it back to visit out on the back deck.

We sat and chat until sunset. One of my favorite memories during this time was reminiscing about old times and his sharing stories with us. We got to see so many family photos and a picture of Grandma Ella. You would think I would have a picture of Uncle Herbert and Aunt Doretha on this page but instead I have a picture of Grandma Ella. I think deep down inside all of us have a desire to know where we came from and who and how we became the person that we are. I wholeheartedly believe and am grateful for the legacy that those who went before us left behind.

Written by admin · Categorized: Legacy

Feb 03 2025

Day Two

I am very excited about the buzz surrounding Black History Month in our community. We must pick up the mantel and carry on the tradition of sharing our stories. I have been reading various books throughout the past year or so. I finished two books in January that referenced historical figures. I had no idea how much I would enjoy historical fiction, but I did.

You have got to add The Personal Librarian and The First Ladies to your list. Reading The Personal Librarian led me to read The First Ladies. What I liked about each is that they allowed me to see the world in which these notables lived and the context in which they overcame limiting circumstances.

In The Personal Librarian, Belle deCosta Greene was a trailblazer; she became J.P. Morgan’s personal librarian. What was so intriguing about her story is that she was a Black woman who passed. The First Ladies was also intriguing because it chronicled the friendship between Mary McLeod Bethune and Eleanor Roosevelt. The former became known as the “First Lady of the Struggle,” and the latter was the First Lady of the United States. I learned so much about each of these historical figures. While each of these women was incredible and driven, I became fascinated with Ms. Bethune’s life. I remember the scene from Six Triple Eight where Ms. Bethune visited Ms. Roosevelt to encourage her to consider the women of the 6888 for deployment. That was intriguing enough, and then to find out through The First Ladies that they had a decades-long friendship was shocking and fascinating!

I look forward to finding out more about Ms. Bethune through her granddaughter’s book, The Bethune Blueprint: Transforming Your Life Using the Lessons of Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune.

Written by admin · Categorized: Uncategorized

Feb 02 2025

Black History Month 2025

Day 1 – February 1st

“Real education means to inspire people to live more abundantly, to learn to begin with life as they find it and make it better,”

            ― Carter G. Woodson, quote from The Mis-Education of the Negro

Dr. Carter G. Woodson is considered the father of Black History. He instituted Negro History Week, which became Black History Week. Black History Week eventually became Black History Month. Dr. Woodson selected February to recognize the birthdays of two prominent Americans: Fredrick Douglass and Abraham Lincoln.

Beginning today, our version of Project 2025 recognizes the contributions of Africans throughout the diaspora, beginning with Americans of African descent. How this will be achieved is still a work in progress. However, since I love to read, I think I am going to start off by discussing some of the readings I have completed and am in the process of reading.

I want to start by recognizing Dr. Woodson’s book The Mis-Education of the Negro. I started reading this book last year when Dr. Greg Carr and other Knubians discussed it in Knarrative. To be honest, I can’t remember if it was last year or the year before (2023). Nevertheless, the book is compelling and thought-provoking, mainly because it was written nearly a century ago. A lot has changed, yet a lot is still the same. Today’s climate is eerily similar to other times in the 20th century when fascism and authoritarianism were on the rise.

A consistent message in our community throughout intensely troubling times is that the Most High God is on the throne, and when we cry out, He answers. Although I am still troubled, this awareness gives me peace as long as I keep my eyes on Jesus.

Written by admin · Categorized: Uncategorized

Feb 02 2025

My Outside Voice

Day Two

admin
February 3, 2025

I am very excited about the buzz surrounding Black History Month in our community. We must pick up the mantel and carry on the tradition of sharing our stories. I have been reading various books throughout the past year or so. I finished two books in January that referenced historical figures. I had no idea…

Continue Reading Day Two

Black History Month 2025

admin
February 2, 2025

Day 1 – February 1st “Real education means to inspire people to live more abundantly, to learn to begin with life as they find it and make it better,” ― Carter G. Woodson, quote from The Mis-Education of the Negro Dr. Carter G. Woodson is considered the father of Black History. He instituted Negro History…

Continue Reading Black History Month 2025

grandma-ella

Reflections

admin
February 2, 2025

Remembering Connecticut 2024 We visited Uncle Herbert and Aunt Doretha just a few weeks after going through some family challenges. The pain was still very fresh but my daughter and I endeavored to make this trip. I’m glad we did. Uncle Herbert and Aunt Doretha laid out the red carpet and took us to lunch…

Continue Reading Reflections

Legacy and Storytelling

Dr. A
August 16, 2020

Have you ever been so consumed with something that you go to sleep with it on your mind? You wake up with it. You even dream about it. You can’t shake it no matter how hard you try. That’s how much legacy has consumed me over the past several years. There was always something at…

Continue Reading Legacy and Storytelling

Written by admin · Categorized: Uncategorized

Aug 16 2020

Legacy and Storytelling

Have you ever been so consumed with something that you go to sleep with it on your mind? You wake up with it. You even dream about it. You can’t shake it no matter how hard you try. That’s how much legacy has consumed me over the past several years.

There was always something at the back of my mind that kept gnawing at me. At one point, I was so consumed with learning about who I was in the context of a broader definition of identity. You should have seen me. There were some nights I was so inspired and driven; I stayed up all night reading. Sometimes the discoveries would lead to tears and more reading. And then more revelations. And it went on and on. Finally, one of the desires of my heart was given to me. I found the link from myself to the Continent. An African ancestor!!!

I was humbled! Excited! I was so excited! Did I mention that I was excited?! One of the things that I had learned over time is that “You can’t know where you’re going until you know where you’ve been?” I also believe knowing who you are and where you come from plays a huge role in that path and direction.

While I will be sharing my reflections and thoughts about my ancestors, I will also spend time sharing what my legacy is or hope that it will be. Part of that is steeped in my passion and love of storytelling. What I learned is that storytelling is an inherent and integral part of legacy. We must tell our stories to our children and share our stories with as many people as will listen or show interest.

I remember sitting in on a recent webinar on Zoom and the speaker emphasized that quantitative data are important but stories change hearts and minds. Reclaiming that narrative and sharing stories told from my community’s perspective matter. I look forward to exploring various aspects of legacy through telling my story. Ase’

Written by Dr. A · Categorized: Legacy

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Dinah’s 3rd Great-Granddaughter

The YouTube icon links directly to Diedre’s performance in honor
of the 50th anniversary of the commemoration of the
Selma to Montgomery March.
Residents from Gees Bend were there on Bloody Sunday in 1965.
We honor you. Ase’

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