African American History Documentary

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athompson

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African American History Documentary


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  1. Hello Everyone,
    IntroBooks brings to you insightful and educational information in the form of articles, ebooks, audiobooks and videos. We invest a lot of time and effort in creating well-researched products to provide a wealth of information for anyone who yearns for knowledge. You can visit our website https://readintrobooks.com and find various educational resources. You can also press the ‘Join’ button to become a member of our Youtube Channel and support our work. Thank you.

  2. This is Bullshit we not African we from America and we are the first Americans and first people here. I repeat we So called black people in America are not From Africa

  3. DID YOU KNOW THAT THE CITY OF CHICAGO WAS FOUNDED BY A HAITIAN NAMED JEAN BAPTIST. POINT DUSABLE A FREED SLAVE AND THE ORIGINAL NAME OF THE CITY WAS DUSABLE.
    HAITI WAS THE FIRST BLACK NATION TO RECEIVE ITS INDEPENDENCE FROM SLAVERY IN 1804 EVEN BEFORE AMERICA.
    EVANGELIST ROGER MANSOUR
    MISSIONARY TO 🇭🇹 HAITI

  4. I as a Black Australian man of East African Somali descent love the Black American community. I myself have no enslaved and no segregated ancestors because they were East African Somali people who were never captured or kidnapped or sold into slavery because they came from a strong empire. I am the proud son of two East African Somali immigrant parents both my father and my mother plus my paternal uncle which they all successfully immigrated to Australia in the mid 1990s escaping the Somali Civil War which devastated the country. My family and I still live there today. I love Australia because it is so peaceful and so relaxing here plus I enjoy my life here in this incredible country. If I was a descendant of an amazingly tough enslaved and segregated ancestors who went through so much suffering I would always honour them plus remember them. I would never disgrace or forget what they had to experience the painful torment of racism. My heart goes out to all the oppressed Black people in the past that had go through the African Tribal Warfare, the Transatlantic Slave Trade, Chattel Slavery, the Colonial Wars, the Domestic Slave Trade, the American Civil War, the Ku Klux Klan Racial Terror Lynchings, the Race Riots, Convict Leasing, Jim Crow Segregation, the Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment, Redlinings, the Inner City Gang Violence, the War On Drugs, Police Brutality, the Racial Bias in the Criminal Justice System and Private Prison Abuse. In the United States of America today there is still Inner City Gang Violence, Police Brutality, Racial Bias in the Criminal Justice System and Private Prison Abuse so depressing. America needs a huge criminal justice reform, economic reform, educational reform, gun control reform, immigration reform, police reform, political reform and prison reform. I send my love plus support all the way from Lakemba, New South Wales, Australia cheers mate and stay safe.

  5. This "documentary" doesn't quite understand the history of African Americans and it tries too hard to paint a positive outcome of the struggle of African to achieve real equity and citizenship.

  6. I never believe I could get rid of my Diabetes disease not until I came across Dr IGUDIA YouTube channel and after using his herbs medication that was the end of my Diabetes disease

  7. That big lie told at the end of the documentary ruined the whole thing. The descendants of American slavery have not achieved total brotherhood and equality as of yet. Perhaps they need to update this one.

  8. Africa is a continent, America is a continent. Try to understand that being called two continents doesn’t even make sense. “Negro’s” stemmed from Negro De terra , they (the people who did what they did) annotated wether Negro African or Negro de terra; which meant Native to the land.

  9. You guys are all here because of the protests and recent events, where was y’all at two years ago when this vid released? Y’all seem to only comment when recent shi happen. I’m here because I’m interested in the African American history

  10. Whoa, institutional racism is rampant in America.

    Broad star of Blacks gaining freedom and respect is only partly true as inaccuracies is rampant and permeates the fabric if life for all of us.

  11. History Matters

    The statues should not be taken down but the plaque below the monument should be rewritten reflecting the truth. If we cover up the past the truth becomes lost and then the past is often repeated. Take what has been saved from history in Germany and what was done to the Jews. History is the window to our salvation through learning and not repeating the same mistakes.

  12. Wow I can’t believe I just wasted 43:51 of my time listening to this yet again white washed version of black history read by a robot. Lesson learned…listen to end of vid first.

  13. This the story of Hebrew Israelites. Deuteronomy 28:68 tells about the ships. And Deut 28:15 on down, tells what work and suffering's the Hebrew Israelites will endure. No Africans were enslaved.

  14. First I wish to Thank you for remembering us (early pioneers) and for your very enlightening  presentation.

    I am an Artist, Craftsman and Korean war veteran (1950/51)

    DURING THE CULTURAL REVOLUTION of the early 1960’s I became disillusioned with the social and political situation in America and decided to relocate to Africa, and in 1965 I left for Ghana with less than $300 in my pocket and a return ticket, which I later cashed in.

    On arrival in Ghana I was welcomed by Tom Feelings, one of President Kwame Nkrumah's advisors, and introduced to other expatriates living in Ghana at the time. During the 1960s prior to Nkrumah overthrower, the African American expatriates living there included Pan-Africanist, artists like; Tom Feelings, John W. Ray, Herman Bailey, Ted Pontifiet, Leroy Mitchell, & educators like Julian Mayfield, Maya Angelou, Nell I. Painter’s parents, both educators (mother /father), Alice Windom, Dr. Shirley Graham DuBois, and few entrepreneurs and others. Our selected spokesman was Dr. Robert Lee, a dentist.

    After being adopted by an Ashanti-Paramount Chief, Nana kwaku Duah (1966) and given the name “Kojo Acheampong.” I spent the next eleven (11) years living in Ghana, often traveling to Togo and the Ivory Coast to market my jewelry. I earned a living by learning and making jewelry using traditional designs which I carved from cow-horns and ivory and fully immersing myself in the culture. 

    On my return to the United States in 1976, I was able to contribute to the growing interest in African art and culture. 

    I have publishes  several books..    https://www.amazon.com/Curtis-James-Morrow/e/B074TWSKKW…

    It was a BORN AGAIN EXPERIENCE.

    ENJOY & we must continue to SHARE.

    Again, Thank U much.