OPHR central demands:
- restore Muhammad Ali’s heavyweight boxing title;
- remove Avery Brundage as head of the International Olympic Committee;
- hire more African American coaches; and
- disinvite South Africa and Rhodesia from Olympics. #tdih 1968 ⬇️ zinnedproject.org/if-we-knew-our…
To introduce young people to the history of the Olympic Project for Human Rights and the protest in 1968, we recommend "The John Carlos Story" by John Carlos and Dave Zirin @EdgeofSports via @haymarketbooks -- a gripping read for grades 7+. See ⬇️ zinnedproject.org/materials/john…
Join us Nov. 8 to hear Dave Zirin talk with @JessedHagopian about his newest book about protest in sports. How high school & college athletes around U.S. took a knee during national anthem in protest of racism and police brutality, "The Kaepernick Effect." zinnedproject.org/news/the-kaepe…
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#tdih 1792, U.S. White House cornerstone was laid. Federal gov't used enslaved labor for "all aspects of construction, including carpentry, masonry, carting, plastering, glazing, painting and the grueling work of sawing logs and stones.” #theft Read ⬇️ zinnedproject.org/news/tdih/whit…
“When you sing that this country was founded on freedom, don’t forget the duet of shackles dragging against the ground my entire life.” -- @ClintSmithIII in powerful 3 min. reading of letter to U.S. presidents who were enslavers via @pbsnewshour
Slavery "was not peripheral to our founding; it was central to it. It is not irrelevant to our contemporary society; it created it. This history is in our soil, it is in our policies, & it must, too, be in our memories." -- @ClintSmithIII
See lessons ⬇️ zinnedproject.org/news/lessons-h…
"If this is a Great Society, I'd hate to see a bad one." -- Mrs. Fannie Lou Hamer, born #tdih 1917 in Montgomery Cty, Miss. Hamer and thousands more Mississippians took one of boldest moves in U.S. history to fight for real democracy in nat'l elections. zinnedproject.org/news/tdih/fann…
"Black people know what white people mean when they say 'law and order.'" -- Mrs. Fannie Lou Hamer, born #tdih 1917.
“You can pray until you faint, but if you don’t get up and try to do something, God is not going to put it in your lap.” -- Fannie Lou Hamer, born #tdih 1917
In new YA book, @brandycolbert tells history of Oklahoma incl. Trail of Tears, Reconstruction, Black towns, Red Summer, Jim Crow, Black and white newspapers, lynchings, Tulsa Massacre, policing, ongoing fight for reparations and historical memory, & more. zinnedproject.org/materials/blac…
Throughout Colbert provides context. e.g., when noting inflammatory headlines, she offers history of white AND Black press in Tulsa, rather than just saying "the press" as is too often norm, which standardizes whiteness & censors vital role of Black press. zinnedproject.org/materials/sold…
Colbert begins with her K-12 education in Missouri. "The fact that there was no separate, detailed lesson about Trail of Tears, which ran through our hometown, was particularly egregious."
Her Afterword powerfully connects history in book to current events.
Art by Max Standley
#tdih 1868 Camilla Massacre, Albany, GA. After being expelled from elected office, African Americans & a few whites marched to speak out at a political rally.
"The year 1868 comes up in textbooks as significant only because of the election of Ulysses S. Grant. This focus on those at the top, misses the groundswell of activity that made the year so explosive." -- Read below about advances and repression in 1868. zinnedproject.org/if-we-knew-our…
The Camilla Massacre of 1868 is a key story in Reconstruction & voting rights history.
Yet, we've not seen it in other major, national "this day in history" timelines.
Students can advocate for greater recognition of this history. #TeachReconstruction
"Teaching about the March on Washington presents a series of challenges precisely because it involves counteracting sanitized textbooks & demythologizing not only the march, but also the Black Freedom Struggle." -- @BillFletcherJr
#tdih 1955, while visiting family in Mississippi, 14-yr-old Emmett Till was lynched.
Till was vilified by mainstream (white) press, including @washingtonpost. (Important to also teach about Black reporters, like Simeon Booker.) #BlackLivesMatter
When you sign up to host a Pledge to #TeachTruth event during the Days of Action (Aug. 27 - 29) or anytime -- we send you LOTS of cool images that you can use as is or customize. Here are a few.
Sign up to host a Pledge to #TeachTruth event during the Days of Action (Aug. 27 - 29) or anytime. We'll send you LOTS of cool images that you can use as is or customize. (Sign up here: teachtruthpledge.org)