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18 Feb 2008 04:33:25 | Susan Dunn, MA, The EQ Coach
Black History month in February is an opportunity to broaden
your understanding of the role of African-Americans in history.
Here are some resources to help you and your family learn more
and take part in the celebration. 1. Start by taking the Black
past quiz on familyeducation.com (
http://www.familyeducation.com/quiz/0,1399,1-4888,00.html?relinks
). 2. Another great resource is www.blackhistory.com . There
you can purchase videos such as “The Black West” or “Abubakari:
The Explorer Kind of Mali.” These are winners of the Gold Apple
from the national Educational media Association, Telly Award.
They also have activity books, books, candy, foodand holders,
celebration items, clothing andaccessories, drinkware and
tableware, keychains and magnets, posters, printed handouts,
programs, ribbons, pins and buttons, school and stationery
supplies and writing instruments. You can add your stories,
articles and researchpapers to their online collection. Be sure
and check out the Multicultural sectionwhere you’ll find
American cultures for childrenvideos, American history, holidays
for children(Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, Chinese New
year,Cinco de Mayo), multicultural peoples of North America and
more. 3. On this site (
http://www.euronet.nl/users/jubo/february.html ), you’ll find
multigenerational ways of celebrating, and a great list of
stories, poems, song and art by Afro-Americans. 4. The
African-American Mosaic (
http://lcweb.loc.gov/exhibits/african/intro.html ), A Library of
Congress Resource Guide for the study of Black history &
culture, includes many resources, including ex-slave narratives.
5. The list of inventions by Blacks is truly amazing. Go here to
read about them: http://www.everythingpreschool.com
hemes/blackhistory/list.htm . You’re probably familiar with
George Washington Carver, but did you know Alfred Benjamin
invented stainless steel pads; John A .Burr invented the lawn
mower; George Carruthers invented the image converter radiation
detector; L.F. Brown invented the horse bridle bit; and Sarah
Boone invented the ironing board? 6. The Harlem Renaissance was
an important event in the history of literature, knowledge and
arts in the US. You can read about it here:
http://www.liunet.edu/cwis/cwp/library/aavaahp.htm#harlem . Dr.
Alain Leroy Locke, a native of Philadelphia and magna cum laude
graduate of Harvard in 1907, is considered the driving force
behind the artists of this era. A Phi Beta Kappa, he was also
the first African-American Rhodes Scholar. He studied Greek and
Philosophy at Oxford and received his Ph.D. from Harvard in
1918. He was the author of “The New Negro,” and “The Negro in
Art,” celebrating African-Americans in the arts. 7. African
Americans have figured prominently in the arts, and here you can
see a library of works:
http://www.liunet.edu/cwis/cwp/library/aavaahp.htm . Take a look
at the art of Thomas Blackshear (
http://www.blackshearonline.com ), the prolific works of Edward
Mitchell Banniester (
http://nmaa-ryder.si.edu/cgi-bin/search/isearch.pl?
DB=pcdb_images&FORMAT=one&FPASS=N&
FHIT=1&ESET=RECORD&QUERY=LAST/ Bannister+and+FIRST/Edward ),
“Shot Gun Third Ward #1, by John Biggers (
http://nmaa-ryder.si.edu/images/1987/1987.56.1_1b.jpg ),
Elizabeth Catlett’s “Singing Head” (
http://nmaa-ryder.si.edu/images/1989/1989.52_1b.jpg ), “Southern
Gate” by Eldzier Cortor (
http://nmaa-ryder.si.edu/cgi-bin/search/isearch.pl?
DB=pcdb_images&FPASS=N&FORMAT=one&
FHIT=1&ESET=RECORD&QUERY=LAST/CORTOR ++and+FIRST/ELDZIER+ ), and
start here for the many paintings of Jacob Lawrence (
http://nmaa-ryder.si.edu/cgi-bin/search/isearch.pl?
DB=pcdb_images&FPASS=N&FORMAT=one&FHIT=
1&ESET=RECORD&QUERY=LAST/Lawrence+and+ FIRST/Jacob+ ). 9. On
www.who2.com, you can read the profiles of prominent Blacks.
Included are civil rights leader, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.,
Internet pioneer, Phillip Ameagwali, Contralto Marian Anderson,
Abolitionist Frederick Douglass, Physician and plasma innovator,
Charles Drew, M.D., Baseball pioneer, Jackie Robinson, Home run
champ, Hank Aaron, Olympic sprinters, Jesse Owens and Wilma
Rudolph, blues legend, Robert Johnson, Oscar-winning actor,
Sidney Poitier, jazz composer Duke Ellington, bandleader, Count
Basie, author and poet, Maya Angelou, blues singer Big Mama
Thornton, scientist, George Washington Carver, arctic explorer,
Matthew Henson, and gospel singer, Mahalia Jackson. 10. Why not
schedule the African-American Drama Company to come to your town
for a celebration? (
http://www.african-american-drama-company.org/pages/1/index.htm
). With their play comes a full day of classes and workshops
FREE, allowing people of all races to see their personal
connection to African American culture. They offer an enjoyable
way to become more familiar with African American
accomplishment. Producable in any space large enough to
accommodate the anticipated audience. Low technical
requirements, exceedingly high performance, they say. 11. Read
the ten most dramatic events in African-American history here -
http://www.black-history.biz/black-history/ .
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