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Munirah Chronicle <[log in to unmask]>
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Fri, 26 Dec 2003 09:53:18 -0500
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*                Today in Black History - December 26                 *

***********************************************************************
* The Nguzo Saba - The seven principles of Kwanzaa - Principle for    *
* Day #1 - Umoja (oo-MOE-jah) Unity: To strive for and maintain unity *
* in the family, community, nation and race.                          *
* http://www.endarkenment.com/kwanzaa/
*
***********************************************************************

1848 - William & Ellen Craft escape from slavery in Georgia.  Mrs. Craft
        impersonates a slave holder and her husband, William, assumes
        the role of her servant, in one of the most dramatic of the slave
        escapes.

1849 - David Ruggles joins the ancestors in Northampton, Massachusetts.
        Often called the first African American bookseller (for his
        bookstore established in 1834), Ruggles was an early abolitionist,
        speaker, and writer as well as a "conductor" on the Underground
        Railroad. He published the first African American magazine, the
        "Mirror of Liberty in August of 1838.  He was a noted hydropathist,
        erecting the first building constructed for hydropathic treatments
        in the United States and was known as the "water cure doctor."

1894 - Jean Toomer is born in Washington, DC.  The grandson of P.B.S.
        Pinchback, Toomer will become the author of the influential
        "Cane."

1908 - Jack Johnson wins the heavyweight title in Australia, defeating
        Tommy Burns.  After avoiding fighting Johnson for over a year,
        Burns will say of his loss, "Race prejudice was rampant in my
        mind.  The idea of a black man challenging me was beyond enduring.
        Hatred made me tense."

1924 - DeFord Bailey, Sr., a harmonica player, becomes the first African
        American to perform on the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville, Tennessee.

1931 - Lonnie Elder is born in Americus, Georgia.  He will be known as
        an author, playwright ("Ceremonies in Dark Old Men"), and
        screenwriter ("Sounder," "A Woman Called Moses").

1937 - La Julia Rhea becomes the first African American to sing with the
        Chicago Civic Opera Company during the regular season.  She opens
        in the title role of Verdi's "Aida."

1956 - African Americans in Birmingham, Alabama begin mass defiance of
        Jim Crow bus laws.

1966 - Kwanzaa, originated by Dr. Maulana Karenga, is first celebrated
        by a small number of African American families in Los Angeles,
        California, to "restore and reaffirm our African heritage and
        culture."  Kwanzaa, a Kiswahili word meaning first or first
        fruit, will celebrate over the next seven days the Nguzo Saba,
        or seven principles, of Umoja(Unity), Kujichagulia(self-
        determination), Ujima(Collective Work and Responsibility),
        Ujamaa(Cooperative Economics), Nia (Purpose), Kuumba(Creativity),
        and Imani(Faith).

1999 - Prolific singer, songwriter & producer Curtis Mayfield joins
        the ancestors at the age of 57 in North Fulton Regional Hospital
        near Atlanta, Georgia.  Mayfield introduced social conscienceness
        into African American music and continued to record for a decade
        after an accident left him paralyzed.  His many hits included
        "People Get Ready," "I’m So Proud," and "Keep On Pushing." His
        soundtrack for the 1972 movie "Superfly" sold over 4 million
        copies and produced two classic hit singles, the title track and
        "Freddie's Dead." In addition to his wife, he leaves behind his
        mother, 10 children, a brother, two sisters and seven
        grandchildren to celebrate his life.

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