Showing posts with label black history month. Show all posts
Showing posts with label black history month. Show all posts

Friday, February 23, 2024

An enjoyable affair

 Dubbed Black History Month Fashion Show, the afternoon get together at Tamarac Senior Center was a hit with everyone.

M.C. Sam Munro and the volunteer organizers

We got a  rendition of the Black National Anthem "lift every voice and sing" from Holly Bowen, who has a wonderful voice and is described as a foundation member of the well known South Florida Caribbean Chorale. 

                  The songbird Holly Bowen.

Our art teacher Michelle (center) was there and posed with students Joan and Helena.

Michelle and Hellena

About half of those who attended wore some form of African dress and there were some really beautiful prints and styles.

It was from the participants that the  'models' were drawn.

Seniors in their colorful garb waiting in line for the door to open



Noor, another art student. She came in her Pakistani national dress. Very nice.

As I was one of those who thought I could model, I got no pics of that segment.😊

The Haitian drummer doing the cuckoo dance.

The food was delicious and I hear it was Sam the M.C who organized it all. 

It sure fuelled our bodies to get on the dance floor.


The drummers gave us solos before the proceedings officially started .


The drummers were Caribbean, African descendants of course. The lady was from Haiti and the gentleman from Clarendon, Jamaica.


It was a nice function from start to finish and all the seniors had a great time. 

According to the  M.C.  Sam, (who is also our Site Supervisor at the Tamarac Senior Center,)  the function was organized in record time by the volunteers above.


 He promised that it will become an annual affair during Black History Month. 

Great going guys.

P.S. 

Thanks to our wonderful art teacher Michelle, I finally got some pics of the 'models' in their African garb and a few other pics. 

I am sharing these memories of the wonderful day below.

Michelle with her students Helena and Jennifer 

At the table with top artist Diana

The models








Sunday, February 18, 2024

An outstanding performance

 If Ron DeSantist ever saw the Musical Memphis, now showing at Lauderhill Performance Center in Florida, he would have a heart attack and ban it immediately!

I ran into leading man Samuel Cadieux on the way out.

For according to him, performances like that which highlight the racist past in the USA should never see the light of day. 

I am sure, given the chance he would even ban Black History Month! 

That musical is very appropriate for this period though.

'Scrabble' Camille and I got there early

It's a story partly about forbidden love, set in Memphis, Tennessee during the 'jim crow' period.

The main setting is this bar on Beale Street 

The leading man is Samuel (above) and the leading lady, the super-talented Sydney Archibald, an African American actress, who is also a fantastic singer.


Because of the period in which it is set, it is full of white rage and violence against the couple, so there is no-make believe happy ending to that affair.


However it is a marvelous production with non-stop energy, fantastic music, dance, love, comedy, hope and passion.


Really an outstanding performance, even worth seeing more than once!😊






Monday, June 20, 2022

Juneteenth

 I was recently at a Yoga class in Florida when out of the blue, the instructor who is a white lady who appears to be in her early 70’s, stopped mid-sentence in her regular instructions, to apologize.

It was for comments she had made in a class on the previous Monday (which I never attended), she said.

She went on to explain that she did not know what Juneteenth was, so when she had grumbled that the regular Monday holidays were upsetting her schedules, she was being ignorant, not disrespectful. She said it was only when she went home and told her daughter what she said and was berated for not knowing that Juneteenth was a “Black Lives Matter” holiday, that she recognized that her remarks had been insensitive.

Realizing that clearly neither she nor her daughter really understood what Juneteenth is, (it has nothing to do with Black Lives Matter, as that’s only the name of an activist group), I decided to have a word with her after the class. Not to quarrel with her, but to educate her.

For she is just one of the millions of people in the USA who know nothing about the history of slavery/oppression of black people in America.

It was Winston Churchill who said ‘history is written by the victors,’ and that is ever so true.

In America, most of the original historians were white, so carefully avoided reference to white oppression/savagery and the role black people played for almost 250 years, in building America without any compensation.

This impression was reinforced was recently as I watched a discussion on CNN, in which a college-educated young man from Tulsa Oklahoma, said he knew nothing about the Tulsa Massacre until recently seeing a documentary about it on television. He added that nothing about slavery or the struggles and oppression of black people was ever taught in high school when he attended less than a decade ago.

For the benefit of the unlearned, the Tulsa Massacre was the most infamous of the many direct assaults on progressive black people by envious whites, in recent history.

It took place on May 31 and June 1, 1921, when mobs of white residents, some of whom had been deputized and given weapons by city officials, attacked wealthy black residents, looting/destroying homes and businesses of the Greenwood District in Tulsa, Oklahoma, then known as Black Wall Street.

About 10,000 black people were left homeless, and property damage amounted to more than $1.5 million in real estate and $750,000 in personal property (equivalent to $34.18 million in 2021).

It is not until recently that information about many other wealthy black areas in the USA that were similarly looted by envious whites, has started to emerge!

In fact, I dare say that it was not until black history month started in 1970, that most Americans, both black and white, heard any history about the role of Afro Americans in the country, apart from them having been brought from Africa as slaves!

It took many more decades too for the history text books to start to record and teach snippets of black history in schools. Even so, older white Americans have held on to the myths about blacks being lazy, hangers on who were saved by the white man, which was taught to them when they were at school.

Those white supremacists are mostly the people who see former president Donald Trump as their hero, as for blacks to remain marginalized, the truth about their history cannot become common knowledge.

Prominent among those determined to hide the truth is Trump’s chief disciple, Ron  DeSantis governor of Florida. He has even taken direct interest in censoring what is being reported in text books at the schools in the state.

His motivation, he said, is that nothing should be taught in schools to make one race feel bad about their history or remind others about past oppression.

People like DeSantis and Trump who wish to hide the truth about how America became great at the expense of black slaves and Native Americans, clearly do not understand the depth of  Jean Racine's prophetic words; “There are no secrets that time do not reveal.

So yes, it is taking a long time, but the truth is finally being revealed and soon, the real meaning of holidays like Juneteenth and the achievements of black people in America, will have to be acknowledged and appreciated, by the ignorant and even the most racist whites.

In the meantime, each of us has a responsibility to enlighten everyone with whom we come into contact, as I and two other students in the yoga class had to do recently.