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Saw a discussion on this earlier and thought it sounded good!

[media=https://youtu.be/7LfDYEm7bgU]

They were discussing this morning about how a black version of anything they were excluded from came to be as a form of resisting oppression. I grew up far removed from people who didn’t look like me and really still live in a white majority area, so it was pretty fascinating for me to learn about these things that never came up where I was at. It engenders complex feelings - it’s a sad sort of nonsense that made it necessary to my thinking, but it’s impressive and joyful in its conception and what it offered. A safe harbor of freedom and humanity against a storm. I get what the woman is saying in this trailer about how that closeness and strength can be lost with integration, but it puts me in mind of what I’ve observed when I have been places that were more diverse - integration really only seems to go so far. I think regardless of what a divide is, be it the color of skin, the culture, religion, class, sometimes even gender, humans are always most comfortable with those they share their experience with aside from those times magic happens and we just find a soul we recognize underneath all that other stuff. So I can see maybe a dilution of sorts when a completely parallel society is no longer required, but I don’t think that community, the safe harbor of that shared experience can ever be truly stamped out. I dunno. I just like what makes me think about things. 🤷‍♀️
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Thank you so much for posting about this. I can hardly wait to watch this series, both because I adore the host and because it’s great information that everyone should learn.

Sadly, there are now generations of black people who don’t know about anything involving black people that isn’t about “the hood” or other stereotypes. There was and is a middle class with various community institutions, social groups and even colleges available to blacks from the days when doors of the mainstream equivalents were legally closed to us.
JustNik · 51-55, F
@bijouxbroussard You’re welcome! 😄 I wonder if that’s what the woman is referring to about things being lost with integration. Young people not knowing this history. He did say in the interview this morning that so much of what was done was started essentially anonymously, though, just someone seeing a need and sowing the seed basically, so it might have been a harder chapter to keep alive from that perspective regardless. I just love these things where they take one piece of the pie and really discuss it. Fills in holes a bit at a time. I watched that US and Holocaust documentary too which really covers WWII from the Jewish perspective and there was so much there I’d had no idea about.