Showing posts with label United States. Show all posts
Showing posts with label United States. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 20, 2016

In God We Trust: Harriet Tubman To Be Honored As The Face Of The US $20 Bill

Every great dream begins with a dreamer. Always remember,
you have within you the strength, the patience, and the passion 
to reach for the stars to change the world.
~Harriet Tubman

Ladies and Gentlemen! Stop. What. You're doing! The news is so fresh, I can scarcely believe it. The Smithsonian Twitter feed retweeted the announcement that United States Treasury Secretary (TSOUS), Jack Lew, presented changes to US currency that will include honoring Harriet Tubman as the face of the $20 bill. Oh. My. God!
Recently found portrait of Harriet Tubman
at the Smithsonian, Washington, DC.
(via Politico)

So overwhelmingly momentous is this historical commendation, I silently screamed, at a loss for words (and composure). All of the major news media outlets confirmed the announcement.

Official portrait of Jacob Joseph "Jack," Lew
Treasury Secretary of the United States
Via Wikipedia
Among changes presented by TSOUS Lew, first Treasury Secretary of the U.S., Alexander Hamilton, who established the U.S. monetary system, will stay on the $10 bill. Harriet Tubman, Abolitionist and Civil Rights activist of the Underground Railroad fame, will be the new face of the $20 bill, while former POTUS Andrew Jackson, will be moved to the alternate side. Historical figures from the Women's Suffragette, and Civil Rights movement will be featured on the alternate face of the $5 bill.

More than pomp and circumstance, TSOUS Lew's changes will offer both history and financial literacy lessons beyond "dead presidents." How did you react to the news of these currency design changes? What are your thoughts about that?

Friday, July 10, 2015

A New Day Dawns: Poet Nikky Finney Commemorates Historic Vote by South Carolina Legislature to Remove Confederate Flag From State House Grounds

Originally published in The State, July 9, 2015.

South Carolina-born poet Nikky Finney wrote ‘A New Day Dawns’ in the early morning hours of July 9, after House members voted to send Gov. Nikki Haley a bill to remove the Confederate flag from the State House grounds, realizing “I have been writing these 230 words all my life.”

It is the pearl blue peep of day. All night the Palmetto sky was seized with the aurora and alchemy of the remarkable. A blazing canopy of newly minted light fluttered in while we slept. We are not free to go on as if nothing happened yesterday, not free to cheer as if all our prayers have finally been answered today. We are free, only, to search the yonder of each other’s faces, as we pass by, tip our hat, hold a door ajar, asking silently who are we now? Blood spilled in battle is two-headed: horror and sweet revelation. Let us put the cannons of our eyes away forever. Our one and only Civil War is done. Let us tilt, rotate, strut on. If we, the living, do not give our future the same honor as the sacred dead – of then and now – we lose everything. The gardenia air feels lighter on this new day, guided now by iridescent fireflies, those atom-like creatures of our hot summer nights, now begging us to team up and search with them for that which brightens every darkness. It will be just us again, alone, beneath the swirling indigo sky of South Carolina, working on the answer to our great day’s question: Who are we now? What new human cosmos can be made of this tempest of tears, this upland of inconsolable jubilation? In all our lifetimes, finally, this towering undulating moment is here.
Nikky Finney
9 July, 
ABOUT NIKKY FINNEY
The poem on the front page of The State was written by South Carolina poet Nikky Finney.
Finney grew up in the state, “within listening distance of sea,” the daughter of Ernest Finney, the state’s first African-American chief justice who began his public service career as a civil rights attorney.
After working 20 years in Kentucky, Finney returned to South Carolina in 2013 to become the USC’s John H. Bennett, Jr. Chair in Southern Letters and Literature.
Finney has written several books of poetry, including “Rice,” “On Wings Made of Gauze” and “Head Off and Split,” which was awarded the 2011 National Book Award for poetry.
She wrote the poem in the early morning hours of July 9, after House members voted to send Gov. Nikki Haley a bill to remove the Confederate flag from the State House grounds, realizing “I have been writing these 230 words all my life.”

Read more here: http://www.thestate.com/living/article26928424.html#storylink=cpy

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Liberty Enlightening the World (La Liberté éclairant Le Monde)



The iconic Statue of Liberty, symbol of freedom and founding ideals of the United States, was collaboration of art and engineering inspired by French law professor, politician, and abolitionist Édouard René de Laboulaye. Laboulaye proposed "any monument raised to American independence would properly be a joint project of the French and American peoples."  Wikipedia excerpt:


The Statue of Liberty (Liberty Enlightening the World; French: La Liberté éclairant le monde) is a colossal neoclassical sculpture on Liberty Island in New York Harbor in New York City, in the United States. The copper statue, designed by Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi, a French sculptor, built by Gustave Eiffel (French civil engineer of Eiffel Tower fame), and dedicated on October 28, 1886, was a gift to the United States from the people of France. 
The statue is of a robed female figure representing Libertas, the Roman goddess, who bears a torch and a tabula ansata (a tablet evoking the law) upon which is inscribed the date of the American Declaration of Independence, July 4, 1776. A broken chain lies at her feet. The statue is an icon of freedom and of the United States, and was a welcoming sight to immigrants arriving from abroad.(https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statue_of_Liberty#)