top of page
Latest Stories
Search


Freedmen, Black History Month, and the Question America Doesn’t Want to Ask
Black History Month did not begin as a celebration of identity. It began as a corrective - an intervention into a national lie. When historian Carter G. Woodson launched Negro History Week in 1926 through the Association for the Study of African American Life and History , his purpose was explicit: Black people had been systematically erased from the American historical record, and that erasure carried psychological and political consequences. Woodson understood history as p
aknight4147
Jan 304 min read


THE GOLDEN THIRTEEN
In 1944, the Navy gave 16 Black men 8 weeks to complete 16 weeks of training. All 16 passed with some of the highest scores recorded in Navy training. The Navy commissioned only 13. Three men who passed were denied commissions—no reason given. This is their story. In 1944, as World War II raged across the globe, the United States Navy remained strictly segregated. Black sailors were largely confined to menial roles, cooks, stewards, and laborers, regardless of their intellig
aknight4147
Jan 242 min read


The Invisible Scars Veterans Carry
When veterans return home, the injuries people notice most are often the ones they can see. A missing limb. A brace or prosthetic. A limp. A scar across the skin. These wounds invite empathy. They are concrete. They make sense to people. They fit into familiar narratives of sacrifice and survival. But for many veterans, the most enduring injuries are not visible at all. They live in the nervous system. They reside in the body’s responses to sound, light, stress, and memory. T
aknight4147
Jan 93 min read


Creative Visual Art as a Healing Pathway for Veterans Living with PTSD
For many veterans living with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), healing does not happen all at once, and it does not always happen through words. Trauma is often stored beyond language, embedded in memory, sensation, and the nervous system. For this reason, creative visual art has emerged as a powerful and accessible healing modality for veterans navigating the complex journey of recovery after service. Creative visual art - painting, drawing, sculpture, mixed media, and
aknight4147
Jan 93 min read


Freedmen Soldiers and the Unfinished Promise of America
As the United States approaches its 250th anniversary, the country is preparing to celebrate its founding ideals—freedom, liberty, and justice. But any honest commemoration must also confront a difficult truth: Black* soldiers have defended those ideals since the nation’s birth, even when America denied them full rights, protection, and belonging in return. From the earliest days of the American Revolutionary War , Black men, enslaved and free, fought for independence in hope
aknight4147
Jan 93 min read
We Need Your Support Today!
bottom of page