#slave-resistance

[ follow ]
fromThe Atlantic
1 day ago

The Black Daughters of the American Revolution

Karen Batchelor's discovery of her eligibility for the Daughters of the American Revolution was surprising, given the organization's long history of racism and elitism.
Social justice
fromSmithsonian Magazine
4 days ago

This Secret Passageway May Have Been Part of the Underground Railroad. Now, Preservationists Say It's in Danger

To find a previously undiscovered Underground Railroad site is the holy grail of historic preservation, according to attorney Michael Hiller, representing the Merchant's House Museum.
Music
fromSPIN
6 days ago

Harriet Tubman and Georgia Anne Muldrow Free the Soul - SPIN

Harriet Tubman's sixth album, Electrical Field of Love, showcases their unique blend of rock, jazz, and funk with soul singer Georgia Anne Muldrow.
#transgender-rights
#underground-railroad
fromArtnet News
1 week ago
Arts

Hidden Underground Railroad Passage Discovered at New York Museum Faces Development Threat | Artnet News

fromBiography
1 month ago
US news

A 200-Year-Old House Concealed a Historic Secret-a Hidden Passageway on the Underground Railroad

fromArtnet News
1 week ago
Arts

Hidden Underground Railroad Passage Discovered at New York Museum Faces Development Threat | Artnet News

fromBiography
1 month ago
US news

A 200-Year-Old House Concealed a Historic Secret-a Hidden Passageway on the Underground Railroad

#slavery
History
fromSmithsonian Magazine
1 week ago

Nine Black College Students Were Arrested in 1961 for Reading at a Segregated Public Library. Their Contributions to the Civil Rights Movement Have Long Been Overlooked

The Tougaloo Nine staged a sit-in at a segregated library in 1961, significantly impacting the desegregation movement in Mississippi.
Social justice
fromLGBTQ Nation
4 days ago

Freedom of speech can never trump liberation - LGBTQ Nation

Liberation includes the freedom to define oneself while ensuring rights and privileges under law, especially for LGBTQ+ communities.
Social justice
fromwww.dw.com
1 week ago

UN resolution fuels global slavery reparations debate

The UN General Assembly declared the transatlantic slave trade as the gravest crime against humanity and called for reparatory justice discussions.
US Elections
fromThe Nation
3 weeks ago

61 Years After Bloody Sunday, We Are Entering a New Era of Voter Suppression

2026 faces voting rights threats through postal service changes and the SAVE America Act, which would require citizenship documents to register, potentially disenfranchising millions of Americans.
Social justice
fromwww.dw.com
1 week ago

UN classes slave trade as 'gravest crime against humanity'

The UN General Assembly recognized the trafficking of enslaved Africans as the gravest crime against humanity, with 123 countries voting in favor.
UK politics
fromwww.independent.co.uk
4 weeks ago

Princess Eugenie steps down as patron of anti-slavery charity

Princess Eugenie stepped down as patron of Anti-Slavery International following the release of emails revealing details about Prince Andrew's relationship with Jeffrey Epstein.
History
fromThe Atlantic
4 weeks ago

The Fugitive Slave Who Wrote to the President

William Grimes's 1825 autobiography was the first fugitive-slave narrative in American history, exposing slavery's brutality while asserting enslaved people's humanity and intellect against America's founding contradictions.
#civil-rights
fromAxios
4 weeks ago
US news

Civil rights group documents 70 alleged "modern-day lynchings" across 7 Southern states

fromAxios
4 weeks ago
US news

Civil rights group documents 70 alleged "modern-day lynchings" across 7 Southern states

Education
fromTruthout
1 month ago

We Must Defend Black History - It Fuels Freedom Dreams of Students Under Attack

Teachers must transform curricula to eliminate biases and systems of domination while protecting vulnerable students, particularly Black students and students of color, from contemporary educational injustices.
Music production
fromHarvard Gazette
1 month ago

Retelling Frederick Douglass' story, with a soundtrack - Harvard Gazette

A senior student composes an original musical about Frederick Douglass's early life, inspired by the abolitionist's writings on music's power during slavery.
US politics
fromTruthout
1 month ago

Robin D. G. Kelley: It's Not Enough to Abolish ICE - We Have to Abolish the Police

ICE operates with brutal violence and loyalty to Trump, resembling fascist paramilitary forces, while Black Americans recognize this as continuation of historical systemic oppression rather than a new phenomenon.
Social justice
fromwww.amny.com
4 weeks ago

Op-Ed | Sojourner Truth didn't have to travel far to find injustice.She started right here | amNewYork

Sojourner Truth became the first Black woman to successfully sue a white man in America, winning her son's freedom from illegal slavery in 1828 Ulster County.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Black History Month was never given' to Black people, thus, it can never be taken from us

If you know anything about the basic origins of Black History Month then you know that we weren't given' anything. The question of who owns and authorizes Black History Month holds particular relevance now, in its centennial year, and at a time when efforts to celebrate, preserve, and acknowledge Black people's past in this country are under attack.
History
#black-history-month
fromwww.amny.com
1 month ago
Social justice

NY Court System celebrates Black History Month by remembering Frederick and Anna Murray Douglass's legacy | amNewYork

Social justice
fromwww.amny.com
1 month ago

NY Court System celebrates Black History Month by remembering Frederick and Anna Murray Douglass's legacy | amNewYork

The state court system honored Frederick Douglass and his wife Anna Murray Douglass during Black History Month, emphasizing the importance of preserving Black history and learning from their advocacy for justice and equality.
fromLGBTQ Nation
1 month ago

These oft-overlooked icons show why Black queer history still matters (now more than ever) - LGBTQ Nation

Black History Month is a time to acknowledge and celebrate the achievements and courageous acts of people of African descent in the United States and around the world. This year, Black History month celebrates its 100th anniversary. And yet, Black History Month has failed to fully acknowledge or celebrate the contributions of Black LGBTQ+ people. Just as Pride Month remains overwhelmingly white in its representation, Black History Month continues to be deeply homophobic in its omissions.
LGBT
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Jesse Jackson was direct connection to great civil rights era', says Diane Abbott

His message is absolutely relevant today, when we are seeing a resurgence of racism in a way that we hoped had been banished, Bell Ribeiro-Addy, the MP for Clapham and Brixton Hill and chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group for Afrikan Reparations, said in tribute to the civil rights leader, whose death, at the age of 84 was announced on Tuesday.
World news
#black-history
fromAxios
1 month ago
US politics

America's 250th anniversary collides with a renewed fight over Black history

fromAxios
1 month ago
US politics

America's 250th anniversary collides with a renewed fight over Black history

fromThe Atlantic
1 month ago

The Trump Administration Can't Kill Black History Month

She remembers walking with her big brothers down a sidewalk fractured by the roots of old oak trees while children played hopscotch on the playground. She remembers going outside and clapping erasers together so that plumes of chalk dust rose above her head. And she remembers being told that she was attending a school that many white parents had taken their children out of just a few years earlier because they didn't want them sitting in class with Negroes.
History
fromAdvocate.com
1 month ago

6 Black activists who changed the HIV/AIDS response in America

By the mid-1980s, the AIDS epidemic had completely gripped the nation. Its victims, primarily queer men, were dying by the thousands. Fear and misinformation reigned supreme, and our government refused to respond to the crisis. Reverend Charles Angel, a community leader and activist who was living with HIV himself, recognized that queer men of color faced additional disparities due to cultural norms and societal inequities.
Public health
NYC LGBT
fromAdvocate.com
1 month ago

They can take down the flag, but they can't take down the history of Stonewall

A newcomer in 1993 navigated New York City as a closeted aspiring actor, drawn to Christopher Street and the modest, historically significant Stonewall Inn.
fromThe American Conservative
2 months ago

Relive The Civil Rights Era. Send in The Troops

In any liberal morality play, Democrats always get to be the shivering, oppressed black people, while Republicans have to play the part of Bull Connor, Birmingham, AL's racist commissioner of public safety. Except the facts are exactly the opposite. I'm sure you're bored of hearing this, but Connor was a Democrat, as were all the politicians promising "massive resistance" to racial integration. Republicans were the ones forcing Democrats to abide by federal law, along with a few John Fetterman- style Democrats.
Right-wing politics
History
fromHarvard Gazette
1 month ago

Tracing Harvard's ties to slavery: Recovering names and histories - Harvard Gazette

Researchers identified over 1,300 formerly enslaved people connected to Harvard and hundreds of living descendants by examining probate records, tax lists, estate inventories, and family histories.
Social justice
fromTruthout
1 month ago

The Black Anti-Fascist Tradition Recognized Fascism Didn't Begin in Europe

White supremacist state power and violence manifest as anti-Black fascism, linking prison abolition, historical uprisings like Attica, and enduring systemic bodily and social harm.
US politics
fromwww.mercurynews.com
1 month ago

Mihm: ICE enforcement is echoing the Fugitive Slave Act

Federal overreach can backfire politically, provoking civil disobedience and accelerating the collapse of unpopular institutions and policies.
#claudette-colvin
History
fromSmithsonian Magazine
2 months ago

A Stunning Escape From Slavery Told on Tattered Pages

Thomas White escaped slavery in Maryland before the Civil War, traveled north with abolitionist assistance to Massachusetts, and his detailed, rare testimony survived for study.
US politics
fromLEVEL Man
1 month ago

America Should Also Demand the Release of the Malcolm X Files

FBI, CIA, DOJ, and NYPD withheld and heavily redacted records that could reveal their knowledge and actions surrounding Malcolm X's assassination, obstructing transparency and accountability.
LGBT
fromwww.thepinknews.com
2 months ago

US in the 'early stages' of a trans genocide, experts claim

Escalating political attacks in the US show early warning signs that trans and non-binary people face genocidal treatment and potential mass atrocity.
US politics
fromThe New Yorker
2 months ago

What ICE Should Have Learned from the Fugitive Slave Act

The Compromise of 1850 admitted California as a free state, banned the slave trade in D.C., and enacted the Fugitive Slave Act with federal enforcement.
History
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

The Great Resistance by Carrie Gibson review a panoramic account of the fight to end slavery

Enslaved Africans and their descendants across the Americas mounted the largest, longest-running, and most diverse sustained insurrection for freedom from the 1500s to the 1800s.
Social justice
fromTruthout
1 month ago

Living Under a Concentration Camp Regime - and Fighting Back

Mass detention systems expand through legal 'end runs' and normalization; rapid U.S. detention infrastructure growth signals a dangerous escalation requiring organized resistance.
US politics
fromTruthout
2 months ago

We Can Honor Renee Nicole Good's Life by Abolishing Death-Making Institutions

ICE agents have killed civilians, including Renee Nicole Good, revealing systemic violence and prompting grief-driven abolitionist organizing, solidarity, and labor activism.
History
fromSmithsonian Magazine
2 months ago

Samuel Green Freed Himself and Others From Slavery. Then He Was Imprisoned Over Owning a Book

Samuel Green, a free Black Marylander aiding runaways, was arrested for possessing Uncle Tom's Cabin under a law banning 'abolition pamphlets,' becoming an abolition hero.
fromSan Jose Spotlight
1 month ago

Cantrell: Is California's 'justice' system just slavery by another name? - San Jose Spotlight

The next "Dying to Stay Here" podcast will feature a panel discussing what we call our criminal justice system. The panel reflected on a recent election in California, where voters were asked, in plain language, whether they wanted to remove slavery from our constitution, where it's still allowed "as punishment for a crime," and voted to keep it. As we celebrate another Black History Month, I reflect on the disproportionate number of Black people behind bars.
Social justice
History
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

There's this whole other story': inside the fight to end slavery in the Americas

Enslaved people across Spanish-, Portuguese-, and English-speaking Americas led a four-century, interconnected struggle of rebellion and resistance that ultimately produced abolition.
US politics
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

State violence against Black Americans laid the groundwork for fascism | Jason Stanley

Expansion of racially targeted, arbitrary state violence into broader populations exemplifies an imperial boomerang, where colonial tactics return domestically and risk fascist normalization.
#ice
History
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

The New History of Fighting Slavery

José Antonio Aponte compiled illustrated histories of Black resistance and global figures to inspire rebellion and assert the right to freedom.
Social justice
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

This Black History Month, the leaders of the past can teach real resistance | Eric Morrison-Smith

Collective, grassroots organizing and leadership development are necessary to build community and prevent deepening poverty, violence, and repression.
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

How I Traced My Ancestor's Journey From Slavery to Freedom

The librarian sat me in front of a microfilm reader and brought out roll after roll of film. I stayed there for hours, squinting to decipher the archaic handwriting in the Free Negro Book, which was published annually in South Carolina before the Civil War. The names in each year's edition were alphabetized, but only roughly-all of the surnames starting with A came before all of the surnames starting with B, but Agee might come before Anderson, or it might come after.
History
US politics
fromThe Nation
2 months ago

The Trump Administration Arrested Don Lemon Like He Was a Fugitive Slave

The DOJ arrested two Black journalists and two Black activists for a church protest, actions that violate the First Amendment and defied prior court denials.
#british-monarchy
fromAxios
1 month ago

Trump is honoring these Black icons in quest "to restore the Nation"

The park will "honor our greatest Americans, including black icons like Booker T. Washington, Jackie Robinson, Aretha Franklin, Coretta Scott King, Muhammad Ali, and many others," the action reads.
US politics
Social justice
fromTruthout
2 months ago

Minneapolis's 2020 Uprising Laid an Abolitionist Groundwork for ICE Resistance

Minneapolis organizers are building community safety and resistance against an unprecedented ICE deployment, centering care, urgency, grief, and varied organizing approaches.
History
fromFortune
1 month ago

How Trump erased the story of George Washington's slave, Ona Judge, who fled from Philadelphia to freedom | Fortune

Ona Judge escaped slavery from the Washingtons on May 21, 1796, slipping out of the President's House in Philadelphia to live freely in New Hampshire.
#martin-luther-king-jr
Social justice
fromBusiness Insider
2 months ago

Martin Luther King Jr. was talking about a universal basic income before it was cool

Martin Luther King Jr. advocated a guaranteed basic income in 1967 to create economic security, an idea now echoed by tech leaders.
fromThe New Yorker
2 months ago

From Selma to Minneapolis

On March 16, 1965, a thirty-nine-year-old woman named Viola Liuzzo got into a late-model Oldsmobile and drove eight hundred miles from her home in Detroit, Michigan, to Selma, Alabama. Days earlier, following the Bloody Sunday protests, where voting-rights demonstrators had been tear-gassed and beaten, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., had issued an appeal to people of conscience across the country to come to Alabama and participate in what had already become one of the most consequential theatres in the movement for equality.
Social justice
History
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

The Power of Private Museums

Belzoni, Mississippi, known as the 'Catfish Capital', was the site of a civil‑rights‑era lynching of Reverend George Lee after he registered Black voters.
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
2 months ago

From Fort Sumter to Juneteenth: how war remade the United States

The American Civil War (1861-1865) was the pivotal event in United States history and the largest armed conflict in the Western world following the end of the Napoleonic Wars (1815) and prior to the beginning of the First World War (1914). The central cause of the war was the institution of slavery, which had increasingly caused conflict between Southern states, which relied heavily on slave labor for their agrarian economy, and Northern states, which were heavily industrialized and had far less need for slaves.
History
Social justice
fromTruthout
2 months ago

Mamie Till-Mobley Refused to Let Her Son, Emmett Till, Be Forgotten

Open Casket confronts Emmett Till's lynching, centers Mamie Till-Mobley's public grief as Black maternal resistance, and links historical anti-Black violence to present injustice.
History
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Unjust and inhuman': how royal family ignored a Black abolitionist's plea to end the slave trade

Quobna Ottobah Cugoano used his position as a Black domestic servant near royalty to petition the Prince of Wales against the transatlantic slave trade.
fromwww.amny.com
2 months ago

MLK Day: Hundreds march across Brooklyn Bridge demanding end to ICE and rise of tyranny in America amNewYork

If Dr King were alive today, he'd be admonishing us across the nation to stand up and march for Renee Good. If we miss this moment, our children and our grandchildren and our great-grandchildren will be paying the price in a dying planet, in an authoritarian, tyrannical America where women don't have biological autonomy, and Black and Brown people are in chains, and white women are getting gunned down in the streets. That is not Dr. King's America.
Social justice
fromBusline News
2 months ago

Laketran And Geauga Transit To Honor Rosa Parks - Busline News

Laketran and Geauga Transit, both located in northeastern Ohio, will honor the life and legacy of Rosa Parks through a weeklong tribute recognizing her courage and the lasting impact of her actions on civil rights in America. Rosa Parks, born February 4, became a symbol of strength and resistance in 1955 when she refused to give up her seat to a white passenger on a segregated bus in Montgomery, AL. Her decision helped ignite the Montgomery Bus Boycott and propelled the nation forward in the fight for equality. Today, she is remembered as the "Mother of the Modern-Day Civil Rights Movement."
Social justice
[ Load more ]