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Plight of African Americans

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Plight of African Americans
African Americans Plight Throughout U.S. History Published by Shirley H. Sanders

African Americans plight throughout U.S. history begin as early in the 1400-s and ending in the 1700-s. In 1863 President Abraham Lincoln freed slaves in the southern states through the Emancipation Proclamation. African Americans endured many hardships such as not having rights to vote, social inequalities of African Americans were violated, equal social status, social classes, and social circles. Examples of these violation are freedom of speech, property rights, access to health care, education, and transportation. Cultural concerns of African Americans currently include not being acknowledged in most educational settings and lack of our cultural experiences in classroom settings denying African American children the right to know the history of where our ancestry evolved. All of these experiences are and some continue to be the journey of African Americans today Groups and organizations promoting racial equality are the National Association of Advancement for Colored People{NAACP}, Southern Christian Leadership Conference{SCLC}, The National Urban League, Rainbow/Push Coalition each helped paved the way for equality of races and continue to do so. Objectives of these groups was to eliminate discrimination along with racial discrimination among citizens of the United States, eliminatin barriers of discrimination through democratic processes, seek enactment and enforcement of federal,



References: 1. Chains, Anderson, L.H.{ 2008} 2. Constitutional Law, Kanovitz, J.R.{2010} 3. Beloved, Morrison, T. {1987} 4. WWW.CIVILRIGHTS.ORG 5. WWW.NAACP.ORG

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