This month the word is Curiosity. It means a strong desire to know or learn something. This is the thing that keeps us fresh, fun and alive. This month I will explore all of these things.

If courageous was a person, Sojourner Truth would be it. She was born enslaved but spent her life fighting for freedom and truth. She faced hard situations but met them with a type of courage that doesn’t happen often.
She freed herself and young child. She went to court to fight for her son’s freedom. After slavery was over, she fought for equal rights for former slaves and women. She was not deterred by the danger or the pain.

February was a busy month!
I did three Road Scholar presentations this month. Elmhurst Publoc Library. Galesburg Public Library. Rock Springs Nature Center.
I attended the Humanties Breakfast where I met National Endowment for the Humanties Chair Shelly Lowe.
I attended the Bill Johnson Black Film Festival with cast and crew of the short film, The Invitation.
I am tired now.
It was a good Black History Month.







You find out what you love when you are put to the test. If you love it, it stays. If you don’t love it, you allow it to go.
Phyllis Wheatley Peters wrote from the intersection of childhood, womanhood, slave, former slave, married woman, Christian and human being.
Phyllis loved writing. She wrote her entire life. But as a young girl she found herself in the room with some of the most powerful men in the country who thought she was incapable of writing so well.
She showed them who she was and that she was very capable.

I have a passion for telling the stories of African Americans.
We have lived lives that need to be recited and passed on to encourage those coming along. Some of the stories I love because my people overcame evil, while others I do not because they did not.
As the passion grows for the storytelling, the love will grow for the stories.
We will all love African American history.
