Soul Sistas Uplift

Soul Sistas Uplift A group created to allow women BLACK a safe space to connect through a shared love of BLACK CULTURE

Yes.
12/13/2024

Yes.

Truth!

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11/23/2024

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11/23/2024
11/23/2024

Raise a Reader!

11/03/2024

🎉 Breaking Barriers on Sesame Street

Megan Piphus Peace made history in 2020 as the first Black woman puppeteer on Sesame Street. Since 2021, she has brought to life the character of Gabrielle, a spirited 6-year-old Black girl Muppet who helps kids explore the world through joy, empathy, and learning.

Inspired by female performers at a puppetry conference, Megan’s passion for puppeteering began at a young age. Over the years, she has showcased her talent across the country, performing in Cincinnati and making notable appearances on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno and America’s Got Talent.

💬 What do you think about seeing more diverse characters on children’s TV shows? Let’s celebrate the power of representation!

11/03/2024

On this day, November 2nd, in Black Ourstory

In 1900, The Exhibit of American Negroes was shown at the Paris Exposition. This was a sociological display at the Paris Palace of Social Economy at the 1900 World's Fair.

The exhibition's goal was to demonstrate progress and commemorate the lives of African Americans at the turn of the century. The exhibit included a statuette of Frederick Douglass, four bound volumes of nearly 400 official patents by African Americans, photographs from several educational institutions (Fisk University, Howard University, Roger Williams University, Tuskegee Institute, Claflin University, Berea College, North Carolina A&T), an African-American bibliography by the Library of Congress containing 1,400 titles, and two social studies directed by Du Bois: "The Georgia Negro" (comprising 32 handmade graphs and charts), and a set of about 30 statistical graphics on the African American population made by his students at Atlanta University.

Most memorably, the exhibit displayed five hundred photographs of African American men and women, homes, churches, businesses, and landscapes, including photographs from Thomas E. Askew and Mary H. Dickerson. The exhibit was a joint effort between Daniel Murray, the Assistant Librarian of Congress, Thomas J. Calloway, a lawyer and the primary organizer of the exhibit, and W. E. B. Du Bois. Calloway sent a letter to over one hundred Black representatives in various sections of the United States to solicit help in advocating for an exhibit to present at the World's Fair in Paris. The letter insists that "thousands upon thousands will go [to the fair], and a well-selected and prepared exhibit, representing the Negro's development in his churches, his schools, his homes, his farms, his stores, his professions, and pursuits, in general, will attract attention... and do a great and lasting good in convincing thinking people of the possibilities of the Negro."

Washington personally appealed to President William McKinley, and just four months before the opening of the Paris Exposition, Congress allocated $15,000 to fund the exhibit. The exhibit was separate from the United States national building, within the shared space of the Palace of Social Economy and Congresses, with maps detailing U.S. resources, New York City tenement models, and information on labor unions, railroad pensions, and libraries. It was displayed from April to November 1900, and over 50 million people passed through.

Mainstream American newspapers generally ignored the existence of the Negro Exhibit, and the U.S. commissioner-general failed to mention the Negro Exhibit in his comprehensive article published in the North American Review. Still, the Negro Exhibit occupied one-fourth of the total exhibition space allocated to the US in the multinational Palace of Social Economy and Congresses. Black periodicals like The Colored American wrote extensively about the project. Today the Exhibit of American Negroes is housed at the Library of Congress. (African American Registry, 2024)

11/03/2024

When Allyson Felix became pregnant, Nike was prepared to cut the terms of Felix''''s endorsement by as much as 70% due to the pregnancy, and told her to “know your place and just run.” 🤯
Amid all of this, she was forced to have an emergency c-section seven months into her pregnancy because of a potentially life-threatening condition and her baby had to live for more than a month in the NICU. But two years later she’s qualified for her fifth Olympics with her daughter watching.
Felix dropped Nike and created her own brand of running shoes, the Saysh One. She is currently running in the Olympics in Japan wearing them under the banner “I Know My Place”. 😏
With 11 medals now, she passed Carl Lewis this summer for the most track and field medals by an American in history!
"I used my voice and built this company for you. So that you never have to train at 4:30am while you''''re 5 months pregnant to hide your pregnancy from your sponsor.”💯

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