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Seattle police shot dead Charleena Lyles, 30-year-old pregnant mother with mental health issues, in front of her 3 children.
Charleena Lyles called the police for help because she she heard strange noises and thought there were burglars in her house. She waited in her home with knife in her hands to protect her family in case of emergency. Instead of helping the Black women the police shot her in the abdomen and chest. Children, one of who is with down syndrome, were present in the apartment in the moment of shooting and the police KNEW about it.
“They shot my mom.”- told the 10-year-old boy to the neighbor.
The family of Charleena Lyles said that she was afraid that cops will take her children from her. In her Facebook page, Lyles shared stories about her difficult pregnancy and motivational pictures:
Lyles had mental health issues and a criminal record for harassment and obstructing a police officer. But she didn’t deserve to die like this.
"There’s no reason for her to be shot in front of her babies,“ her cousin, Monika Williams, said.
Black people are killed by the police and the society doesn’t give a shit about that. This time they shot dead BLACK PREGNANT WOMAN. They just MUST take responsibility for the murder. Bottom line.
#SayHerName #BlackLivesMatter #PoliceViolence
“Remember his name: Mr. Philando Castile. He was a school cafeteria supervisor who not only memorized names of the 500 children he served, he remembered all of his students’ allergies.”
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For Refinery29’s celebration of Black History Month we put together a list of Black men and women you ought to know. Their legacy in civil rights, feminism, and LGBTQ equality lives on today.
Bayard Rustin — A leading Black figure in the civil rights movement and advisor to Martin Luther King, he was the architect of the 1963 March on Washington and was heavily involved in the first Freedom Rides. He was also gay and a registered communist who went to jail for his sexual orientation. Although widely heralded, he was attacked even by fellow activists for his faith in nonviolence, unapologetic queerness, and attention to income equality. President Obama honored Rustin posthumously with the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013.
Combaheee River Collective — A seminal Black lesbian feminist group active from 1974-1980. Although officially short lived, its influence has been major. The group is best known for writing the Combaheee River Collective Statement, an important document in promoting the idea that social change must be intersectional — and that Black women’s needs were not being met by mainstream white feminism and therefore must strike out on their own. Members of the collective included Audre Lorde and…Chirlane McCray, now First Lady of New York City and author of the landmark essay “I Am a Lesbian,” published in Essence in 1979.
John Carlos, Tommie Smith, and Peter Norman — The winners of the 1968 Mexico City Olympics 200 Meter Sprint. In one of the proudest and most political moments of sports history, John Carlos and Tommie Smith raised their leather-gloved fists in the Black Power salute. They wore black socks without shoes to represent black poverty and a scarf and necklace to symbolize “those individuals that were lynched, or killed and that no-one said a prayer for, that were hung and tarred. It was for those thrown off the side of the boats in the middle passage.” We also include in our list Peter Norman, the white Australian silver medalist from that ceremony, to commemorate his solidarity with the two Black athletes. White people are more than indebted to black history, and Norman is an excellent example of a white ally. Although he didn’t perform the black power salute, he publicly supported the duo without regard to personal safety or retribution. Norman was penalized for his alliance with Carlos and Smith and was never again allowed to compete in any Olympics despite repeatedly qualifying. Largely forgotten and barred from major sporting events, he became a gym teacher and worked at a butcher shop. At his funeral in 2006, John Carlos and Tommie Smith were his pallbearers.
The Friendship Nine — This group of nine Black students from Friendship Junior College willingly went to jail without bail in 1961 after staging a sit-in at McCrory’s lunch counter in Rock Hill, South Carolina. They pioneered the civil rights strategy “Jail, No Bail,” which placed the financial burden for racist incarceration back on the state. They’re appreciated today for their bravery and strategic ingenuity. In 2015 their conviction was finally overturned and prosecutor Kevin Brackett personally apologized to the eight living members of the group.
Barbara Jordan — A lawyer and politician, Barbara Jordan was the first Black woman elected to the Texas Senate after Reconstruction, the first southern Black woman to be elected as a US Senator, and the first Black woman to deliver a keynote speech at the Democratic National Convention. Her keynote address is widely considered the greatest of all time, aided by her charismatic and eloquent public speaking skills. She is also remembered as one of the leaders of the impeachment of Richard Nixon. We chose the above quote to illustrate her unique punchy sense of humor.
Pauli Murray — This civil rights activist, feminist, and poet was a hugely successful lawyer who is also recognized as the first Black female Episcopal priest. Like many figures on this list, Murray was acutely aware of the complex relationship between race and gender, and referred to sexism as “Jane Crow,” comparing midcentury treatment of women to that of African Americans in the South. Although she graduated from Howard University first in her class, she was barred from enrolling as a postgraduate at Harvard because she was a woman. Instead, in 1965 she became the first African American to receive a JSD from Yale Law. Once armed with a law degree she became a formidable force in advancing feminist and civil rights. She is a cofounder of the National Organization for Women (NOW). She also identified as having an “inverted sex instinct,” which she used instead of “homosexual” to describe her complicated gender identity and lifelong attraction to women.
REST IN PEACE PRINCE!
Prince created a lush landscape of style & sound that gave a voice of authenticity to all artists. His eclectic soul will be fondly missed.
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America would not be what it is without the contributions of Black people.
It’s already February and it’s time to celebrate Black History Month to remember and recognize the role and revolutionary work of Black people in the US.
In 1926 Historian Carter G. Woodson started Negro History Week which only 40 years later evolved into Black History Month. The whole month people educate themselves on the great contributions of African-American leaders, actors, scientists, activists and other famous Black Americans. It’s time to recall all victims of oppression, segregation, racism and hate who refused to give up and finally made history with their own hands!
Happy Black History Month!
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