In February, African Americans were lucky enough to remember and respect the people who fought for the rights and citizenship of the black people. Some African Americans think that all white people should be condemned as they are treated strictly on the way to success. I am satisfied with continuing to stimulate people how African-Americans fight for freedom, but they should discuss these issues during the Black History Month. Many people think white people should suffer and suffer in the black history month due to what ancestors did and did not consider it because they were talking about how to make blacks slaves.
In commemoration of this vast and evolving history, Black History Month was founded in February by a historian Carter G. Woodson 's weekly celebration and is known as Black History Week. However, since the history of blacks has been more than a month old, there are so many events and figures that are often overlooked during this period. The following is a list of "unknown" moments and facts in the history of the black people. A 15 - year - old female student refused to move behind the bus 9 months before the Rosa Parks began boycotting the Montgomery Bus on March 2, 1955. Claude was studying black leaders such as Harriet Tubman at an isolated school and these conversations stimulated the current discussion of Jim Crow law they had experienced. When the bus driver ordered the Claudet to stand up, she refused, "It seems Sojourner Truth is pushing me, and Harriet Tubman seems to push me to the other side.
Six years later, when US President Gerald Ford celebrated the Black History Month in commemoration of the 200th anniversary of the United States, the Black History Month celebrated the big and small at educational institutions, the Black Culture Center and the community center nationwide. He encouraged Americans to "take advantage of opportunities to respect the outcome often overlooked of black Americans in all areas of history." "Black History Month" was first held in the UK in 1987. It was led by Akyaaba Addai-Sebo, a Ghanaian analyst who served as coordinator for the Great London Parliament (GLC) special project and founded a cooperative. in progress. It was celebrated for the first time in London