37 min listen
Strange Fruit #158: Happy Black History Month!
FromStrange Fruit
ratings:
Length:
30 minutes
Released:
Feb 5, 2016
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
It's Black History Month, and we're kicking things off with a show about some of our favorite figures in black history - especially those in the LGBT community. Our guests this week are making space right here in Louisville for teaching and learning about Black History (among other things). Director Talesha Wilson and assistant director Tamika Dozier founded and operate a group called Diversity at the Table, that seeks to bridge the gap between formal, academic learning, and community knowledge. College classrooms provide a forum for young people to explore new and challenging ideas, and Wilson wanted to give that same experience to people who aren't pursuing a formal education. "Instead, you can learn through interactive activities," she explains. "So I started Diversity at the Table to have those conversations about intersectionality, gender, race, class, and sexuality... things that we go through on a regular basis." And she's seen the program's popularity grow. "After a while, I started realizing that this was a space for people to actually heal." Wilson and Dozier joined us to talk about Diversity at the Table, and stuck around to talk about the folks they admire in Black History. Wilson says she admires Claudette Colvin, who refused to give up her bus seat to a white person. Her act of civil disobedience was months before Rosa Parks did the same thing, but Colvin wasn't seen as a suitable "face" of the movement because she was a teenage mother. We also sing the praises of beauty entrepreneur Annie Turnbo Malone, Marsha P. Johnson of the Stonewall uprising, Bayard Rustin, Audre Lord, James Baldwin, and current newsmaker Jaden Smith. "I love how he does not let society's idea of what masculinity is supposed to be define how he carries and behaves himself," Dozier says. She also says her school taught students about notable Black people who are related to struggles - abolitionists, Civil Rights leaders - but not necessarily those who just accomplished or invented great things. Wilson agrees. "I learned about Harriet Tubman, I learned about Malcolm X, and I learned about Martin Luther King," she says, but a message seemed clear: "Be more like Martin and less like Malcolm." Stay with us throughout February for more heroes from Black History, and let us know which figures you look up to.
Released:
Feb 5, 2016
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
Strange Fruit #54: 'Eenie Meanie' Examines Baby Boomer Racism & Louisville Busing Riots: "These buses came back from the West End with these little kids on them, and they were crying, there were windows knocked out. They had been beaten with baseball bats, they had been called every horrible racial name you can expect, right here in this town." It sounds like a scene we'd expect to see in the deep South, but this happened in Louisville in the middle of the 1970s, when public schools implemented the busing system. That's how performing artist Teresa Willis remembers it, and it makes up part of her one-woman show, [Eenie Meanie](http://eeniemeanie.com/). Because Louisville itself was so segregated, neighborhood schools were largely either black or white. Busing was designed to achieve greater diversity within school, but was met with resistance. "Racism really came out of the closet in my community," Teresa remembers. "There's crosses burning at the football field. Literally, we're at a by Strange Fruit