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Black History Month is American History Month


Black History Month is February in the United States.

Africans and African Americans built our country and created a lot of American culture, so Black History Month is also American History Month.

February is also an important time in the African Diaspora. February 2nd is the Feast of Our Lady of Candelaria, the patron saint of Tenerife, Canary Islands, and the African Diaspora.

On the same day. Caribbeans honor Oyá, the orisha of wind and storms, death and rebirth. Oyá is very similar in character to the Taíno supreme God Atabey. The similarities between many African and Indigenous gods is striking. Brazilians honor Yemayá, the great mother orisha of the sea on this day. It’s worth noting that all of these celebrations honor the female aspect of the divine. Women are the guardians of culture, and many African and Indigenous traditions include strong female leaders.

Black History Month in the United States

Black History Month (Karel Noppe/Dreamstime)

February was chosen as Black History Month because since the U.S. Civil War, Black communities in the United States have combined celebrations of Abraham Lincoln’s birthday on February 12 and Frederick Douglass’ birthday on February 14.

The U.S. celebration got started at Kent State University in 1970. It spread to educational institutions across the country until it was officially recognized during the U.S. Bicentennial.

In criticism, actor Morgan Freeman has said, “Black history is American history.” And he is right.

Black history is American history.”

Morgan Freeman, MSNBC, 2005

Without the contributions of African-Americans, our country would be unrecognizable. We also could not have achieved the preeminent status in the world that we have enjoyed until recently.

Black History Month has relevance for Latins too. Regardless of our skin color, Latin culture is very African. In fact, most of the Latin culture that we celebrate in New York Latin Culture Magazine is African or Indigenous.

Black history has special relevance to the Latin community as well. Every community has had to fight their way into acceptance in the United States. When the door of acceptance opens or closes, the changes ripple through the Latin community a few years later. That happened in the 1920s/1930s after the Harlem Renaissance. It happened again in the 1960s/1970s with the Civil Rights and Black Pride movements of the Harlem Renaissance 2.0.

It’s happening again after the George Floyd lynching (and why so many others?). We are now in the Harlem Renaissance 3.0. Artists of color are getting opportunities that were previously denied. It started in the Black community and is now rippling through the Latin community.

The Red, Yellow and Green

We represent Black History Month with the colors of the old Ethiopian flag

We represent Black History Month with the colors of the old flag of Ethiopia from the 1600s until 1914. These colors are respected across Africa and in the diaspora because they represent a people who defended themselves against Colonial domination. Ethiopia was the only African country to successfully resist Colonial imperialism.

The Red obviously represents the blood spilled by our forefathers in self-defense. The Yellow represents peace and religious freedom. The Green represents the richness of Africa and hope.

The colors have been flipped on the flag since the Ethiopian Empire of 1914.

Great Americans

Many notable Americans have birthdays during Black History Month. These are just a few. We regret that we haven’t covered this more deeply, because it’s important but to do so, we would have to be “New York African Culture Magazine” because there are so many stories to tell.

February is also Dominican Heritage Month in New York.

Arturo Alfonso Schomburg

Puerto Rican historian, writer, activist and Harlem Renaissance figure was born in Santurce, San Juan, Puerto Rico on January 24, 1874.

In the fifth grade, a teacher claimed that people of color have no history, no heroes or notable accomplishments. Of course, that is entirely wrong and completely ignorant. Demeaning people is a slaver’s tactic.

The American Negro must rebuild his past in order to make his future.”

Arturo Alfonso Schomburg (Quoted from the first issue of the Civil Rights Journal)

The young Schomburg decided he would document Black history. His collection of African literature and art later became the core of the New York Public Library’s Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in Harlem.

The lesson is to never let anyone else define you. We define ourselves through your character and behavior. What a great New Yorker, a great Puerto Rican, great American, great African and simply a great man.

We met one of his great-granddaughters when she visited Puerto Rico. What a great family!

Langston Hughes

Poet Langston Hughes was born in Joplin, Missouri on February 1, 1902.

I bathed in the Euphrates when dawns were young.
I built my hut near the Congo and it lulled me to sleep.
I looked upon the Nile and raised the pyramids above it.
I heard the singing of the Mississippi when Abe Lincoln went down to New Orleans,
and I’ve seen its muddy bosom turn all golden in the sunset”

From “The Negro Speaks of Rivers,” Langston Hughes, 1921

Rivers represent the passage of time. Hughes references the Euphrates where human civilization began in what is now Iraq. He references two of the great rivers of Africa, the Congo of Central Africa and the Nile of Egypt. The Mississippi is the great river of the United States with New Orleans at its mouth. New Orleans is a Caribbean city.

These rivers also represent great civilizations. In four sentences Hughes manages to connect us with four or five of the world’s great civilizations from the very beginning of human civilization to the present. Those are golden words.

Rosa Parks

Rosa Parks, the mother of the civil rights movement, was born in Tuskegee, Alabama on February 4, 1913. She became famous for refusing to give up her bus seat for a light-skinned person.

I don’t think I should have to stand up.”

Rosa Parks on the bus in Montgomery Alabama, December 1, 1955

She didn’t argue, fight or make a ruckus. That is one noble woman, and those are nine noble words. The nobility of Ms. Parks and her nine simple words sparked a revolution. It’s a lesson for all of us. We shall overcome stupidity with dignity.

Hank Aaron

Major League Baseball Hall of Famer Hank Aaron “Hammer” was born in Mobile, Alabama on February 5, 1934. Aaron broke Babe Ruth’s home run record in 1974. Barry Bonds broke Aaron’s record in 2007.

I’m hoping someday that some kid, black or white, will hit more home runs than myself. Whoever it is, I’d be pulling for him.”

Hank Aaron

Aaron’s statement is important because he said that he will support whoever does better than him. It’s important to encourage achievement and effort. Too often we bring down our own and in doing so, we bring down our entire community. “Whoever it is, I’d be pulling for him.”

Abraham Lincoln

Abraham Lincoln, the American president who held our country together and legally ended slavery, was born in Hodgenville, Kentucky on February 12, 1809.

Those who deny freedom to others, deserve it not for themselves”

Abraham Lincoln, Complete Works – Volume XII

Toni Morrison

American novelist Toni Morrison (“The Bluest Eye” (1970), “Song of Solomon” National Book Critics Circle Award (1977), “Beloved” Pulitzer Prize (1987), Nobel Prize in Literature (1993) was born in Lorain, Ohio on February 18, 1931.

You wanna fly, you got to give up the shit that weighs you down.”

Tony Morrison, “Song of Solomon” (1977)

It’s an important lesson to not lose ourselves in “el lamento Boliviano” the depression that results from never-ending complaints of injustice. Bad stuff happens. We should embrace it and move forward. Let’s not get stuck in the complaint.

Frederick Douglass

The great American abolitionist, writer and statesman was born in February 1818 and died on February 20, 1895.

The soul that is within me no man can degrade.

Frederick Douglass, traveling in Pennsylvania, quoted by Booker T. Washington in 1901

When people came to apologize because he was forced to ride a Pennsylvania train in the baggage car, Douglass made an important observation which is that nobody defines us, but ourselves.

Douglass was one of the great thinkers of the 1800s. We think of Mark Twain as the beginning of American literature. Well Douglass, with the force and logic of his words, is the beginning of our American self-concept as the “good guys.” Our self-concept came from a man who freed himself and spoke out publicly.

The great mistake of racism is that the distribution of genius is equal among all races, places and across time. By keeping people down, we miss out on the benefits of a lot of genius.

W.E.B. DuBois

Writer W.E.B DuBois, one of the founders of the NAACP, was born in Great Barrington, Massachussetts on February 23, 1868.

Either America will destroy ignorance, or ignorance will destroy the United States.”

W.E.B. Du Bois, Niagara Movement Speech, 1905

That sentence bears some serious thinking over today as we seem to accept a moment of ignorance to the extreme.

Fats Domino

Rock and roll pioneer Antoine “Fats” Domino Jr. was born in New Orleans, Louisiana on February 26, 1928.

They call, they call me the fat man
‘Cause I weigh two hundred pounds
All the girls, they love me
‘Cause I know my way around”

Fats Domino, The Fat Man, 1949

Fats was playing around. New Orleans is a Caribbean city and Caribbean culture has this tradition of ribald boasting. A lot of Caribbean food has double meaning too. We’re not sure how to play it in #MeToo time, but in the Caribbean it’s generally just playful.

The blues is the root of all the popular music of the Americas. The blues and the blue note are African. From the blues we get jazz, country music, swing, rock, hip-hop and everything that followed. America got the blues through the Caribbean which gives us Latin jazz, salsa, reggaeton and Latin trap.

So that is just a little of what’s going on with Black History Month.

Anglo culture taught us that White and Black are separate. From Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr, we learned that the Black community is part of the White community and the White community is part of the Black community. That’s a very good starting point. We are One. That realization will expand and enrich your world exponentially.

So yes, Black History Month is American History Month. No doubt.

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