Chicken Soup for the African American Woman's Soul is a rich collection of stories that truly celebrate the mountaintops and share the valleys of the African American woman's experience; highlighting her moments of strength, as well as her struggles.
This candid, touching and inspiring collection of stories proves that the spirit of sisterhood extends beyond geography, economics, age and time. Whether we're passing on family traditions, keeping the faith or just keepin' it real, one thing is for sure; we are here because of the shoulders we stand on.
Chicken Soup for the African American Woman's Soul will leave you feeling as if you've just shared a sacred space with some legendary African American women through quotes or stories from Rosa Parks, Coretta Scott King, Mary McLeod Bethune, and modern day heroines like Patti LaBelle, Halle Berry and Queen Latifah.
Experience inspiring moments of ordinary sisters doing extraordinary things in the world like voting in a time when voting could cost you your life to learning the true meaning of self love through the simple gesture of letting your hair down. Allow these stories - exclusively for sisters, from sisters - encourage and inspire you as you feed your soul and soothe your spirit. |
Legacy
And so our mothers and grandmothers have,
more often than not anonymously, handed on
the creative spark, the seed of the flower they
themselves never hoped to see—or like a sealed
letter they could not plainly read.
-
Alice Walker
Somehow, it just didn't feel right. Maybe it was the way
that I was brought up, but it was hard for me to say it.
Although I felt blessed and honored to have the opportunity,
I just had a hard time saying aloud that I was "a
graduate student at Harvard University." After all, I know
good and well that I'm just a country girl from Sweetwater,
Tennessee, who never saw herself as the Ivy League
type, but what impression did that title give people who
didn't know me?
I was not alone in this dilemma. Many of my black and
Latino colleagues in the Graduate School of Education felt
the same way. Several of us had to admit that when we
told people we were going to graduate school and they
asked where, we answered evasively, "Uh, Boston." It
wasn't that we were embarrassed about being smart or
weren't proud to be there; it was just that the perception
people have of "Hah-vahd," conjured up images of privilege
and snobbery. Many of us were first–generation college
graduates from lower to middle-class families, and
most of us were there because we wanted to give back
something of educational value to the underserved students
of color in America's schools. We actually discussed
more than once whether going to Harvard was an asset or
liability when our goal was to return to the neighborhoods
we came from, "keep it real," and be taken seriously by
regular folks. Would we build a "barrier of bourgeoisie" by
having a Harvard degree?
Very quickly it was June and graduation day arrived. An
incredibly rich year of reading, writing and discussing
educational issues had flown by, and I was standing outside
in a processional line with my dorm mates and new
friends-so-close-we-were-almost-family from the Black
Student Union. I sat dazed in my cap and gown on the
same lawn where I'd seen Nelson Mandela receive an
honorary degree back in September. I sat in a row of
brown faces on the lawn with its giant oak trees that had
been there since 1636 and tried to comprehend what in
the world I was doing there. While the platform dignitaries
waxed eloquent, it felt surreal. I snapped back to
reality when it was Hazel's turn to take the platform.
Hazel Trice Edney, graduating from the Kennedy School
of Government, was my friend from the dorm and one of
the sharpest sisters I have ever met. She had won the
speech contest and was believed to be the first African
American woman ever to give the graduate student
address at a Harvard graduation. Hazel from Louisa,
Virginia, who had grown up in a home with no indoor
plumbing and became a single welfare mother at age fifteen,
had managed to earn her college degree and risen
through journalism in the black press, covering politicians
like Governor L. Douglas Wilder. She would soon start a
Congressional fellowship in Washington, D.C., in the office
of Senator Edward Kennedy. Her delivery of the speech
was flawless, and we were all proud to know her.
Suddenly, listening to Hazel, proudly watching her represent
all of us, it hit me. This wasn't about me. I was there
as a representative. I looked up into the branches of the
centuries-old trees and thought about what they would
have looked like back in 1636. I thought about where my
ancestors would have been in 1636 . . . 1736 . . . 1836 . . .
even 1936, and how remote the possibility seemed that
any of their daughters would ever be at Harvard. I
thought about Grandma Mildred, valedictorian of her
Cook High class with her career options so limited. No,
this degree was not about me at all. This was about standing
on the shoulders of my black grandmothers who
scrubbed floors and cared for babies—both theirs and
others'. Black women whose potential went untapped and
whose intelligence was so long ignored. Women whose
great minds could have been idle, except they rerouted
genius, pouring it into rearing the next generation. This
degree was for my grandma, who was a farmer's wife and
a housekeeper, but never just that, like so many black
women seen only as the shadow domestic by the outside
world but who stood out as pillars of dignity in their own
communities. This degree was dedicated to a woman who
had to sacrifice many of her personal dreams as a young
woman, but made sure all eight of her children had a
respect for education and would ascend to the level of
their own potential. It was dedicated to a woman who
passed on heritage to her numerous grandchildren with
old Ebony and Jet magazines, her gardens and recipes,
family stories and photo albums. I was here because she
could not be, but had the self-respect and insight to pass
something significant on to her offspring.
Sometimes I still have a hard time knowing just what to
say when people ask me about graduate school, but right
there in Harvard Yard, I made my peace with it. Grandma
Mildred didn't know it, but when I walked across that
stage, I did not just get my own degree. I held in my hands
her honorary degree in motherwit, holistic medicine,
childhood development, home economics, culinary arts
and botany earned by life experience. That degree was
about stepping up to accept my responsibility to follow in
her footsteps and pass something on. Thank you, Grandma,
for your legacy.
-Jerilyn Upton Sanders
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Jack CanfieldJack Canfield is a best-selling author and one of America's leading experts in the development of human potential. He is both a dynamic and entertaining speaker and a highly sought-after trainer with a wonderful ability to inform and inspire audiences to pen their hearts, love more openly and pursue their dreams. He is the author and narrator of several best-selling audio- and video cassette programs, including Self Esteem and Peak Performance, How to Build High Self-Esteem, Self-Esteem in the Classroom and Chicken Soup for the Soul – Live. He is regularly seen on television shows such as Good Morning America, 20/20 and NBC Nightly News. Jack has co-authored numerous books, including the Chicken Soup for the Soul Series, Dare to Win and The Aladdin Factor (all with Mark Victor Hansen), 100 Ways to Build Self-Concept in the Classroom (with Harold C. Wells) and Heart At Work (with Jacqueline Miller). Jack is a regularly featured speaker for professional associations, school districts, government agencies, churches, hospitals, sales organizations and corporations. Jack conducts an annual eight-day Training of Trainers program in the areas of self esteem and peak performance. It attracts educators, counselors, parenting trainers, corporate trainers, professional speakers, ministers and other interested in developing their speaking and seminar-leading skills. Visit the Chicken Soup for the Soul website, at www.chickensoup.com. [ More]
Mark Victor HansenMark Victor Hansen is a professional speakers who, in the last twenty years, had made over four-thousand presentations to more than 2 million people in 32 countries. His presentations cover sales excellence and strategies; personal empowerment and development; and how to triple your income and double your time off.
Mark has spent a lifetime dedicated to his mission of making a profound and positive difference in people's lives. Throughout his career, he has inspired hundreds of thousands of people to create a more powerful and purposeful future for themselves while stimulating the sale of billions of dollars worth of goods and services.
Marc is a prolific writer and has authored Future Diary, How to Achieve Total Prosperity and The Miracle of Tithing. He is co-author of the Chicken Soup for the Soul Series, Dare to Win and The Aladdin Factor (all with Jack Canfield), and The Master Motivator (with Joe Batten).
Mark has also produced a complete library of personal empowerment audio- and videocassette programs that have enabled his listeners to recognize and use their innate abilities in their business and personal lives. His message has made him a popular television and radio personality, with appearances on ABC, CBS, HBO, PBS, and CNN. He has also appeared on the cover of numerous magazines, including Success, Entrepreneur and Changes.
Mark is a big man with a heart and spirit to match — an inspiration to all who seek to better themselves.
Visit the Chicken Soup for the Soul website, at www.chickensoup.com. [ More]
Lisa NicholsLisa Nichols is a professional speaker and powerful facilitator of personal empowerment. She is the founder of Motivating the Teen Spirit LLC, which provides life-changing transformational workshops for teenagers. She is the recipient of the 2003 Trail Blazers Award, Lego Land Heart of Learning Award, and the Emotional Literacy Award for her dedication in creating and building an emotionally intelligent world through education. She is a native of Los Angeles and currently resides in San Diego, CA. [ More]
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Inventory: Available usually ships within 24–48 hours
ISBN-10: 0757305202
ISBN-13: 9780757305207
HCI-Item: 5202
Book Format: Paperback
Page Count: 384
Publication Date: 8/8/2006
Category: African American/Inspiration
Series:
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