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Joelle Avelino NPR
August 28th, 1963 promised to be a warm summer morning in Washington D.C. As the sun began to peek over the horizon, it was quiet on the National Mall. Too quiet for organizers of the historic March On Washington. Nobody knew exactly how many people would come, recalls Norman Hill, a young activist and labor leader at the time.
Organizer and transportation director Rachelle Horowitz estimated 90,000 people would be there based on the number of buses that had been chartered.
By the end of the day, an estimated 250,000 people from across the country had marched on Washington and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr delivered his iconic I Have a Dream speech.
Joelle Avelino
It was middle school, eighth grade, when a sheltered 13-year-old boy suddenly found himself immersed in an unfamiliar world, guided by a girl who wasn t much older, a girl on the verge of leading a religious movement.
At first glance, it might appear as if all they had in common was age, but there was more. They were both growing up in religious households she a Baptist in a walled community outside of Los Angeles, he a Muslim in suburban Maryland. And they shared a burning desire to understand the constantly evolving, confusing world they occupied.
The boy was me. The girl, Lauren Oya Olamina, is, of course, the main character in Octavia Butler s classic science fiction novel Parable of the Sower. We were introduced by an adventurous middle school English teacher who assigned the book to my class.
Vanessa Williams Wants You to Break Color Barriers Too
The actress opens up about winning Miss America, Black beauty, and supporting those in your network. Feb 11, 2021 Joelle Avelino + Getty
For the State of Black Beauty, ELLE.com chatted with six Black icons to hear how they define Black beauty and
how they see themselves in the space in their own words.
When I grew up, there was only one Black doll on the market. Her name was Sasha and she was made in Sweden. I still have my Sasha doll. But that was it for 1969.
When I was growing up, there was one Black actress in a more leading role to watch. Her name was Diahann Carroll, the only person with her own show:
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