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Black History 365 | # 135 Audre Lorde

July 19, 2024

Audre Lorde (1934–1992) was a poet, essayist, librarian, feminist, and equal rights activist. Lorde is self described as "black, lesbian, mother, warrior, poet" and daughter of Caribbean immigrants. Lorde was a major contributor to the early American LGBT culture fostered in the bars of NYC. Her work deals with the topics of love, betrayal, childbirth and her life as a lesbian and is politically focused around gay and lesbian rights as well as feminism. Lorde shocked even other feminists of her time with her progressive theories that racism, sexism, and homophobia were all linked in that they all come from an inability to respect difference.

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Black History 365 | # 134 DJ Tameil

July 18, 2024

DJ Tameil is known as the pioneer of Jersey Club Music. Getting inspiration and building friendships with DJ’s from Baltimore he took those fundamentals to New Jersey and essentially created the sound we know and love today from New Jersey. Shoutout to Slink, Montana, Lilman, & of course Uniiqu3 to name a few.

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Black History 365 | # 133 The History of the police

July 18, 2024

The origins of modern-day policing can be traced back to the "Slave Patrol." The earliest formal slave patrol was created in the Carolinas in the early 1700s with one mission: to establish a system of terror and squash slave uprisings with the capacity to pursue, apprehend, and return runaway slaves to their owners. Tactics included the use of excessive force to control and produce desired slave behavior. Slave Patrols continued until the end of the Civil War and the passage of the 13th Amendment. Following the Civil War, during Reconstruction, slave patrols were replaced by militia-style groups who were empowered to control and deny access to equal rights to freed slaves. They relentlessly and systematically enforced Black Codes, strict local and state laws that regulated and restricted access to labor, wages, voting rights, and general freedoms for formerly enslaved people. In 1868, ratification of the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution technically granted equal protections to African Americans — essentially abolishing Black Codes. Jim Crow laws and state and local statutes that legalized racial segregation swiftly took their place. By the 1900s, local municipalities began to establish police departments to enforce local laws in the East and Midwest, including Jim Crow laws. Local municipalities leaned on police to enforce and exert excessive brutality on African Americans who violated any Jim Crow law. Jim Crow Laws continued through the end of the 1960s.

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Black History 365 | # 132 Betty Shabazz

July 18, 2024

Betty Shabazz is an American educator and activist who is the widowed wife of El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz (Malcolm X). In 1976 Shabazz began working at Medgar Evers College in Brooklyn, first as a professor, then as the director of its department of communications and public relations. She also lectured occasionally, addressing such topics as civil rights and racial tolerance. Shabazz died in 1997 from severe burns suffered in a fire set by her 12-year-old grandson.

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Black History 365 | # 131 Coretta Scott King

July 18, 2024

Coretta Scott King became a forceful public figure and important leader in the Civil Rights movement in her own right. She made numerous contributions to the struggle for social justice and human rights throughout her life. Coretta Scott and Martin Luther King Jr. married on June 18, 1953.  The following year they moved to Montgomery, Alabama where Martin Luther King Jr. began his work as a minister at the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church. When Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated in Memphis in 1968, Coretta King was thrust into the national spotlight.  She calmed local and national racial tensions by exuding quiet dignity and courage at his public funeral in Atlanta.  Then just four days after his death, Coretta Scott King led a march of fifty thousand people through the streets of Memphis.

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