Mondays 'IN' The Undergroundrailroad January 26, 2004
Good Monday everybody and welcome to
Mondays 'IN' The Undergroundrailroad. Yes, I'm back from a one week vacation and I missed everybody.
This is such an exciting time at DU! We're watching the political process unfold right before our eyes and it was very refreshing to watch the IOWA Caucuses on C-Span. I hope this marks the beginning of an open process that is good for democracy. With that victory, let's celebrate democracy, open democracy!!
So let's decorate
Monday's IN The Undergroundrailroad today!Let me see what I can find! Well, first, as always, we have a dessert of the day. So how about a
Strawberry Harvest sheet cake, enough to feed all of the regulars and newcomers (and don't forget, I will bring out the
red carpetfor newcomers) in the Undergroundrailroad!
Also some popcorn for us to munch on!
And we need
color down here:
So, everyone, have a seat and welcome to
Mondays 'IN' The Undergroundrailroad.
Shoshana JohnsonOne soldier carried on a stretcher
She stood and waved flags of her countries
The world watched, waited
To once again see,
Smiling now,
The face of Shoshana Marlie Makynen ___________________________________________________ Shoshana Johnson, looking good. Girlfriend is OUTTA. Shoshana Johnson, a former POW, has become something of a celebrity. Now retired from the Army with an injury to both ankles, she's pondering her future and it looks exciting and prosperous. Prior to her retirement from the Army, Shoshana was awarded the Bronze Star, Purple Heart and the Prisoner of War Medal for her service in Iraq. Also, there was controversy about her disability award. While her colleague, Jessica Lynch, was scheduled to receive 80-percent disability for her injuries, Shoshana was only scheduled to get 30 percent. She felt that she deserved more and her family suggested race might be a factor. The Army has since changed its mind and has increased her disability to 50 percent. Not what she expected, but better, much better.
Now it seems like the public wants
MORE Shoshana. She is considering a book and movie deal. Shoshana was invited by New York's Mayor, Michael Bloomberg, to join him in Times Square to bring down the ball that marks the New Year. The Philadelphia Flyers presented her with a jersey with her name on the back and
BET.com named her as PERSON OF THE YEAR! Wow!
Shoshana, YOU GO!
Robert Parris MosesI want you to travel back to a time in 1964 in the deep deep south. There were no cell phones, or computers, or public telephones or taxies, or buses or public bathrooms, or Holiday Inn's, or Burger King drive-thru restaurants for blacks. In a clandestine operation, I would travel to Mississippi with my parents, civil rights activists to participate in Freedom Summer. The person that would coordinate our efforts in Mississippi was
Robert Parris Moses who was nicknamed "God". He was the head of
The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and organized voter registration campaigns in the heavily black, rural counties of Mississippi, Alabama, and Georgia. But Bob Moses made things happen and his life is truly a remarkable one.
Robert Moses was born in 1935 in Harlem. His family was poor but Robert had strong academic skills and was very motivated. Because of his good grades he was able to attend a private high school. He then attended Hamilton College and went on to earn a master's degree in philosophy from Harvard University. During his studies, Robert traveled abroad and was exposed to the ideas of pacifism. He also became acquainted with the works of the French philosopher Camus, whose ideas were an important influence on what was soon to become an important component of African-American history. Suddenly, Robert had to return home after his mother died and his father became ill. Now back in the United States, Robert was reading about various "sit-ins" that were taking place in the South. In the spring of 1960, while he was visiting his uncle in Hampton, VA, he witnessed a sit-in in progress in Newport News and slipped into the middle of it. When Robert returned to New York, he decided that he would go south that summer to help. He moved to Atlanta, GA and began working with the SNCC. It was from his base in Atlanta that Robert Moses would travel to Mississippi meeting with other civil rights organizations. Together they planned a campaign to begin registering African-Americans in Mississippi to vote. Not only was this a huge endeavor, it was a very dangerous one. Robert Moses spent four years in Mississippi working on voter registration, tutoring share croppers to learn to read so that they could complete the very complicated registration tests that were required of blacks at that time. His other objective was to develop self-reliant organizations and leaders who could continue the struggle after SNCC organizers departed. In 1964 he departed Mississippi.
After a period as a draft resister against the Vietnam War, and as a math teacher in Tanzania in East Africa, Robert Moses began the second phase of his remarkable domestic civil rights career. In 1976 he returned to the United States to attend Harvard University to pursue Doctoral Studies in the Philosophy Department. He became the recipient of the prestigious Mac Arthur Fellowship in 1982. He utilized the grant to lay the foundation for the
The Algebra Project, a national program employing constructivist methods to reinforce mathematical literacy as a means of enhancing college preparation and participation. In his view, proficiency in algebra was the key to participating in the evolving information society of the 21 st century, and to first-class citizenship. In many instances, African Americans continue to be steered away from the mathematics classes that lead to college, math, science, and engineering careers; to high-level employment; and to civic participation.
How I love this! An award winning civil rights worker whose life led him to education reform that required communities to become involved and active in support of their children's education. Very similar to the dream Robert Moses had for communities in Mississippi. To become self-sufficient and PROACTIVE in your community as an activist!
By its tenth year,
The Algebra Project was reaching more than 9,000 youth across the nation, winning accolades from the National Science Foundation. In 1992, Robert Moses and his former SNCC colleague, David J. Dennis, Sr. initiated the
Delta Algebra Project of Mississippi, eventually expanding the program to Louisiana, Arkansas, and Kentucky. His accomplishments are chronicled in numerous
books, articles and films.
The Boondocks by Aaron McGruder
Questions Of The Day1. If you had the ability to project yourself anywhere in the world, right now, where would you go?
2. What was the happiest year of your life?
3. What are your plans for
Super Bowl Sunday ?
OK, I'm OUTTA. See you next Monday 'IN' The Undergroundrailroad