Willie O’Ree is a hockey legend, trailblazer, ice breaker, hero & activist whose powerful story is unknown to far too many.
We changed that today when the House passed our Willie O’Ree Congressional Gold Medal Act—the highest honor Congress can give a civilian. 🧵
Willie O’Ree is a descendent of enslaved people who made history with the @NHLBruins 64 years ago when he became the first Black player to play in the @NHL.
He played 45 games in the NHL & spent over 20 years in pro hockey—all while hiding the fact that he was blind in one eye.
Willie was a speedy left winger—but even he couldn't out-skate racism as the sole Black player in the NHL.
He faced fierce discrimination & even violence from fans & players alike.
Despite it all, Willie embodied resilience, grace, dignity & never gave up on his dream.
After retiring, Willie spent time paying it forward to the next generation.
He was @NHL's Director of Youth Development & Diversity Ambassador, and worked to increase opportunities for young Black and brown players & help them take their rightful place in the big league too.
Willie’s story reminds us to not only take up space, but to create it—and pave the way for others to do the same.
With this honor, he joins Jackie Robinson, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Coretta Scott King, the Tuskegee Airmen & more.🏅
And to the grassroots movement pushing for years to ensure Willie takes his rightful place in history—none of this would be possible without you. Thank you.
Black history is American history, and today we honored an American hero.
Congratulations, Willie O’Ree! Today, we give you your flowers.
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History isn't made on one Election Day, or even one election cycle.
History is made by the candidates, the organizers, the advocates, the volunteers who have worked for years - for generations - to build our communities. To build movements. To build power. 🧵
In 2009, when I won my first race for Boston City Council, I was the first woman of color elected in the Council's 100+ year history, and one of only two women on the Council that term - alongside eleven men. (2/x)
Today, the Council is more diverse than at any point in our City's history - majority women, majority people of color - and we have a historically diverse field of candidates for both City Council and Mayor, including many of my partners in good from City Hall. (3/x)
Out of love for Black community, culture/arts & wellness, visionary community builder @Sifublack in partnership w @juliaforboston est. Black Joy Day, which was officially celebrated in Boston today. In this thread are tools, images, gifts that inform my joy. Share some of yours.
New Edition always makes my playlist. Today's list also included Jonathan McReynolds, Chloe, H.E.R., Jazmine Sullivan, Nina Simone, Brandy, The Temptations, Remy Ma, Mary J. Blige & John Coltrane.
Rockin' my baldie, a black turtleneck, hoop earrings & my nose ring always brings me joy. Those last 3 words remind me, Anita Baker was on my playlist too y'all!
Today, when I phoned him, I called him Dad. For years, I called him by his first name & celebrated my Mom on Mother's and Father's Day. Grace, his sobriety & time have allowed us to heal. When he was absent & unhealthy, I both missed & resented him.
But he never stopped trying to reach me, writing me, sending me books, informing my love of literature, poetry & my Black consciousnes. He made sure I knew that I was loved & missed.
7 yrs ago, he walked me down the aisle at my wedding. Today, he & his son in law, (also a Cancerian) laugh often & deeply with one another, so do we. To those in estranged relationships, know that, healing & forgiveness are possible... and glorious, too!
George Floyd’s murder has everything to do with white supremacy, the disparate criminalization of substance abuse disorders and America’s inability to see Black people's humanity.
He didn’t give his life to become a martyr. His life was violently stolen.
Today, I’m sharing photos that capture joyful moments in George Floyd’s life.
Images of Black death flood our timelines daily. This is your reminder to celebrate and hold close moments of Black joy. Our skin is not a crime. It is the robe of nation builders.
George Floyd’s murder a year ago wasn’t the first time America saw a modern lynching.
Maybe it was the highly visible, consecutive lynchings. Maybe it was the fact that, in the midst of a pandemic, many were besieged by these images and, for the first time, couldn’t look away.
End qualified immunity. Pass anti lynching law. Voting rights. Reparations. Cancel student debt. Baby bonds. A race conscious, modernized CRA to stop redlining. A healing state instead of a carceral one. An end to Black maternal mortality & the push out of Black girls in schools.
This is only some of what must happen. Undoing centuries of precise *legislated* hurt and harm done to Black Americans, it won't be undone by any one law change. It's going to take multiple bills, political will and courage at every level of govt.
The work for equal and full citizenship rights for Black folks, the work of Black liberation is daunting, especially in the face of unrelenting trauma, but I/we don't have the luxury of not doing it. It is simply a matter of life and death.