- LACMA Showcases ‘Imagining Black Diasporas: 21st-Century Art and Poetics’ Exhibit
- Sheenway School and Culture Center — Educating Youth to Lead the Future Over 50 Years
- Record-Breaking Hate Crimes Against Black Angelenos on the Rise
- Los Angeles Rams and LAPD Spread Holiday Cheer with Annual Sleigh Ride
- Heather Hutt Sworn-in as Councilwoman for L.A.’s 10th District
- Visit Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza for Holiday Photos with Santa
- Homeless and Their Advocates Speak Out in New Film, ‘WE, the Vulnerable of LA’
- The Congressman Wore Sneakers: An Evening With Hakeem Jeffries
- Brotherhood Crusade Honors SEIU President April Verrett at 2024 Pioneer of African American Achievement Award Dinner
- Chargers Thwart Divisional Foe on Thursday Night
- No. 18 UCLA Men’s Basketball Defeats Prairie View A&M 111-75
- Athletes in $2.8 billion college lawsuit tell judge they want to create a players’ association
- Cal, UNLV Inspire La Tijera Students at Day of Play
Black History January
A Sword Shall Pierce The Earth
Simeon, (who had tarried in the temple waiting and praying for the coming Messiah told Mary, “And a sword shall pierce through your soul also” (Luke2:35.) The prophetess, Anna was also there. She too had been waiting with fasting and prayers. Figuratively, “a sword” is represented in the bible as authority and power and sometimes war. Much of what we believe may not be researched information, nor factual.
Defendants in Ahmaud Arbery Case Say Slavery-Era Law Enabled Them to Arrest, Shoot Black Man
In Georgia, defense attorneys are making the case that the three White men involved in killing Ahmaud Arbery, a Black man, were justified by a Civil War-era law instituted to catch runaway slaves.
November 4: Theo Wright becomes the first Black person to earn Theology Degree, 1836
November 4: Theo Wright becomes the first Black person to earn Theology Degree, 1836
Blacks, Veteran’s Day and Critical Race Theory
Veterans Day was created as “Armistice Day” on November 11, 1919, the first anniversary of the end of World War I. It became a national holiday by an act of Congress in 1938. As we honor the memory of those who served in this great conflict, separately and apart from other occasions honoring our War service members, let us not forget the special struggles of Black Veterans, especially during the years following World War I.
November 3: Congressman Harold Ford was elected into House of Representatives, 1974
November 3: Congressman Harold Ford was elected into House of Representatives , 1974
Michelle Obama to speak with college students nationwide
Michelle Obama’s next promotion for her memoir “Becoming” will center on college students.
November 2: Haile Selassie Becomes Emperor of Ethiopia, 1930
November 2: Haile Selassie Becomes Emperor of Ethiopia, 1930
Wilmington Highlights Black Art with Return of Exhibition
The National Guard had occupied Delaware’s largest city for nine months in the wake of Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination, and the trauma from both of these events left the Black community reeling, marking a moment in Wilmington’s history that city residents still recall today.
November 1: American Journalist, John E. Bruce Speaks on the “Return to the Ancestral Homeland,”1877
November 1: American Journalist, John E. Bruce Speaks on the “Return to the Ancestral Homeland,”1877
October 31: Great American Singer, Ethel Waters was born, 1900
October 31: Great American Singer, Ethel Waters was born, 1900
October 30: Muhammad Ali VS. George Foreman, 1974
October 30: Muhammad Ali VS. George Foreman
October 29: U.S. Supreme Court Act Against School Segregation, 1969
October 29: U.S. Supreme Court Act Against School Segregation, 1969
October 27: Former UN Ambassador, Andrew Young, elected mayor of Atlanta, 1981
October 27: Former UN Ambassador, Andrew Young, elected mayor of Atlanta, 1981
October 26: Inventor T. Marshall Patented the Fire Extinguisher, 1872
October 26: Inventor T. Marshall Patented the Fire Extinguisher, 1872