@DAKelley
Denise A. Kelley
@DAKelley · 3:14

Black Her AND His(TORY) by DAKelley (Part 1)

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Will our black history ever be mixed with white history and deemed as relevant facts? Sometimes I wonder will black history ever be given the respect it deserves? Or will it forever be second rate information that often go unheard? Sometimes I wonder will they ever teach it in school as part of the main curriculum? Or will our children have to always select it as an elective? While PE, aka Gem, remains a prerequisite for years, overlooked with cruel intentions, disregarded for our hard work and witty inventions

#BlackHistory

@LadyTPoetry1
Tina Jackson
@LadyTPoetry1 · 1:29
You're, like, the second person that I've listened to, and I only posted one myself, so I really don't know how this works, but I love your your message is so powerful and it is so needed. If our youth knew our history, they wouldn't be out there blowing each other's brains out and taking drugs. They'd be trying to be that next great person. Like how our ancestors were. And they were so oppressed, but they did so many amazing things
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@DAKelley
Denise A. Kelley
@DAKelley · 2:13

@lionessthepoet

I think it exudes when we start speaking of the information that richness and that dominance just comes out. When black history comes up, when you really get into black history and all that what black history is as far as the goodness of it, the richness and the dominance have no choice but to exude from the information. So I think when people start hearing that part of our history, it can make someone feel slightly intimidated. So I understand that, but it needs to be heard
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