Greetings...
In
the past few decades, Africans have begun to uncover a history that
was largely discarded, overlooked, and ignored. After all, history
books are written by and for those in power and reflect their point
of view.
European exploration of the New World in the 15th, 16th, and 17th centuries
revealed both alien peoples thought to be in need of civilizing and vast
tracts of underutilized land.
As European traders tapped into the centuries-old internal African slave
trade, they began to realize the potential benefits of slavery. They
could draw on the tropical farming experience and disease resistance
of Africans and work enormous tracts of land for only the upkeep of the
slave population.
In the process of developing the New World, Europeans transported millions
of people from Africa. And as they sought to justify this practice and
retain their advantages, they also created a racial system that would
define social relationships throughout the world.
Despite all this, Africans and African Americans after them would rise
above the positions to which they had been relegated. They created poetry,
drama, literature, and film, they sang the blues, they invented jazz,
and they fought for justice and equality.
Black History Month represents an effort to trace the African American
experience and achievements in the United States, Africa and the rest
of the world.
SOURCE:
Encyclopædia
Britannicas Guide to Black History
Join us
for "28
DAYS OF BLACK HISTORY"
Beginning February 1st on blackonblackrhyme.com
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Shadow,
Co-Founder/Webmaster
shadow@blackonblackrhyme.com
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