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Tuesday, July 24, 2018

Invite Your Friends

Your Celebratory Quote

“I felt that one had better die fighting against injustice than to die like a dog or a rat in a trap.”  -Ida B. Wells

FEATURED


Ida B. Wells Inspires Us to Never Back Down

Ida Bell Wells was born into slavery on July 16, 1862, in Holly Springs, Mississippi, but never succumbed to the fear society had tried to instill in Black Americans.

Like her father, Wells attended Shaw College in her hometown, but was expelled due to “rebellious behavior.” That didn’t stop her from continuing to learn, write, and investigate the injustice around her. Wells was always one to challenge the system.

One day, Wells refused to move to the smoking area of a train and was forcibly removed by the conductor and other passengers. She sued the railroad company and won $500—only for that decision to be repealed by the Tennessee Supreme Court. This began her writing career, publishing editorial pieces questioning Jim Crow laws.

However, she was most notably a prominent figure in protesting lynching in the south. After her three friends were unjustly jailed and lynched, Wells wrote pamphlets and books on lynching. She found that lynch victims were Blacks who successfully challenged whites in politics and business; and whites justified lynchings using the "rape myth".

Wells not only stood up for her friends, but she also actively campaigned for women's suffrage, helped launch the National Association of Colored Women, and was a co-founder of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.

She is the true embodiment of an activist—always acting to make a change, brought awareness to social issues, and remained outspoken. Her work is a legacy, and will never be forgotten. Just last Tuesday, on July 17th, 900 people fundraised enough to make a monument honoring Wells on the South Side of Chicago, where she lived. It will be installed by the end of 2019.

ARTICLES


  • Summary #1

    Minorities are sticking together. San Diego is currently the backdrop for the “Chicano Renaissance”—where Latinos and Afro-Latinos are standing up to the extremely racist alt-right attempting to remove iconic Latino murals from San Diego’s Chicano Park. More than 39 percent of this area is Latino and more than a third of those are 20 years old or younger. We couldn’t be more proud of today’s youth for continuously standing up for what they believe in.

  • Summary #2

    Meanwhile, in New York City, Ryan Murphy has made history by hiring the largest LGBTQ cast and crew in all of television for his new show Pose, which highlights trans stories in the 1980s. The storytelling of Pose does a fantastic job of centering this marginalized group while also including a cast of so many trans actors! The season finale aired Sunday, but have no fear! The second season (and escape from today’s Trump era) was renewed and is set to premiere in 2019. If there’s one thing we learned this week, it’s that good things come in large numbers and we have to continue supporting one another.

SHOUT OUTS


  • Shout Out #1

    This week we are shouting out The Poor People's Campaign; who are building on the work of our ancestors to challenge systemic racism, poverty, the war economy, ecological devastation and the nation's distorted morality. This agenda was formed after two years of listening tours across the country and culminated in 40 days of direct action this summer.Learn more about their work and how you can engage.

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