
Many women in history have contributed their success and many achievements to the power of prayer. Although African slaves worked the cotton fields picking cotton, many times they could be heard singing hymns of praise and prayer despite the hardship from working “sun up until sun down” on different slave plantations. Regardless of their sufferings, trials and tribulations they believed in the power of prayer.
Historically, African-American people have been known to be very spiritual. From the old Negro spirituals sung during slavery, to using prayer as a catalyst for divine intervention during the civil rights movement.
Do you believe prayer is divine intervention? How has prayer sustained your well being or those women from your generation?
Join me tonight at 6:30 p.m. EST on “Conversations Of A Sistah” via blog talk radio as we continue to celebrate Women’s History month, where my special guest on this topic is the awesome Ms. Karen B. Tucker (pictured right), writer, activist and author of the children’s book “Brown Little Me” a poem designed to celebrate and appreciate the blessing of having brown skin.
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See you on the air!
Presidential frontrunner Donald Trump continues his divisive and dangerous campaign rhetoric.
Sex is most often controlled by the compatibility of two people in a relationship. But what if that sex is so mind blowing that you lose all reason, logic and basic common sense? What happens once you relinquish all control and inabilities between the sheets? You find yourself vulnerable and submissive based upon the act alone. I believe the term used nowadays is “whipped!”
Join me tonight at 6:30 p.m. EST on “
You may know her best as the shrewd and witty lawyer
They called their malicious outings “Jafrica” when these Mississippi teenagers from predominantly white Rankin County piled into their cars and drove into predominantly African American Jackson, Mississippi to “kill a nigga“. These trips were named for a portmanteau of “Jackson” and “Africa,” a nod to their specific and evil mission: to terrorize strangers for no other reason than that they were black. An evil act and racist behavior passed down from the Jim Crow era of their ancestors.
The four men (one of them pictured left), all of whom are white, were previously found guilty of committing a racially motivated act that resulted in Anderson’s death, and they are each serving between seven and fifty (50) years in prison.