
'This is my history:' Students join 14-day \
WASHINGTON ‒ Samaria Helton had learned about Thomas Jefferson in school, but didn't know the former president had hundreds and hundreds of enslaved people until she recently visited his Monticello plantation in Virginia.
The visit was important in her quest to know more about Black history, she said.
'This is my history,'' said Helton, a 16-year-old high school junior from Sanford, North Carolina. 'I need to learn my history.'
Monticello was one of several stops on a 14-day journey North for Helton and eight other middle and high schoolers in Leadership LINKS Inc., a mentoring program for Black girls and young women. They are learning first-hand about Black history as they visit historic Black churches, former plantations, the national African American museum and other sites that tell that story.
The trip, 'The Journey to Freedom,'' also takes participants through states where abolitionist Harriet Tubman led enslaved people, including herself, on the Underground Railroad to freedom.
Organizers said the trip is particularly important now with the stripping of Black historic figures, including Tubman, from websites, the banning of books, the dismantling of education programs and the attacks on diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives.
'Knowledge is a core value for us,'' said Natasha Sistrunk Robinson, a co-founder of Leadership LINKS. 'We're passing on this history across generations.'
'Representation matters'
While the early part of the trip includes stops with Black history connections, it's at the Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad Visitor Center in Maryland June 25 where the girls began tracing her path.
More: Who gets to write America's history? Activists aim to protect Harriet Tubman, other sites
The program aims to introduce the girls to Black women leaders, both historic and present-day. 'So they can see what they can become,'' said Robinson, a graduate of the Naval Academy.
The girls had already studied abolitionist Sojourner Truth, so it made sense to focus next on Tubman, Sistrunk Robinson said.
'Not just the mythical figure of Harriet Tubman, but for them to know the full history of her life,' she said, noting that Tubman faced many barriers escaping to freedom. 'That didn't stop her from liberating herself, liberating her family and fighting for liberation for others.'
Helton, the high school junior, appreciated the focus on Tubman
'There's a lot to learn from her, to follow her path and fight for our people like she did,'' she said.
Juneteenth kicks off trip
The trip began on Juneteenth in North Carolina where the girls celebrated with soul food dinner and a documentary, 'Juneteenth: Faith and Freedom Documentary.''
'It was a fun way to kick off our trip,'' said Capria Daniels, 16, a high school junior from Clinton, Maryland.
Daniels said she couldn't pass up the opportunity to join the two-week trip.
The girls, who range from sixth graders to seniors in high school, came from Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina, Texas and Virginia. The trip is funded by grants and donations.
Stops include the University of Virgina, the National Museum of African American History and Culture and Howard University, a historic Black school in Washington, D.C. There's also a visit to the Museum of the American Revolution in Philadelphia and Tubman's home in upstate New York. The journey ends in Toronto, where many enslaved Black people fled.
There are also lighter outings, including the musical 'Hamilton' on Broadway. At some stops, guest speakers discuss the importance of leadership.
Daniels said the stops provide a 'better understanding of where I came from so I can teach the next generation.''
'Most of it is sugar coated'
Beyond site visits and reading assignments, the girls have a passport book to collect stamps at each stop and jot down reflections.
They are also equipped with a songbook to learn classic protest songs, such as ''Eyes on the Prize'' and contemporary gospel songs like ''Goodness of God.''
Still at the heart of the trip is visiting sites with connections to Black history.
'That makes what we read about real for them in a very different way,'' said Robinson.
Helton and Daniels said history lessons in school often don't tell the whole story, including the brutality of slavery.
'We learn the basics and most of it is sugar coated,' Helton said.
During a visit earlier this week to the National Museum of African American History and Culture, which has come under attack by the Trump administration, Helton said she learned more about the horrid conditions of millions of Africans packed into slave ships.
'It was sad just to know they had to go through that,'' she said.
Destiny Davis, 20, a summer intern for the program, said even colleges have fallen short in teaching the truth about Black history.
'They leave out a lot of graphic information,'' said Davis, a junior at the University of North Carolina, at Greensboro. 'They're teaching you the history they want you to know.''
For Daniels, each stop meant learning something new.
'It definitely taught me a lot more about my history,' she said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Boston Globe
an hour ago
- Boston Globe
Pressley calls Trump's federal takeover in D.C. ‘racist and rogue,' compares it to Boston's Stuart murder case
Pressley compared Trump's federal operation in Washington to the Stuart case, the 1989 killing of Carol Stuart, a pregnant white woman whose husband, Charles Stuart, falsely told police that a Black man had attacked them while they were driving in Mission Hill. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up During the search for the suspect, police carried out aggressive raids in Mission Hill, breaking down doors without warning and putting residents to stop-and-frisk searches. Advertisement 'And what is happening here in D.C. and, then the targeting of Black men and Black youth, in particular, which to me is very reminiscent of Boston after the Charles Stuart case, is very reminiscent of New York under [former Mayor Rudolph] Giuliani with stop-and-frisk,' Pressley said. In November of that year, after Charles' brother Matthew told police he was responsible for Carol's death, Charles leapt from Boston's Tobin Bridge and died. Pressley described the heightened tensions in the D.C. community, saying, 'You know, my God children who live in the city, they're young Black boys. And they're afraid to go to their summer jobs. They're fearful of what it's going to be like, their walk [to] school.' Advertisement 'And again, don't think that anything Donald Trump has done, whether it's his targeting of sanctuary cities or the militarization of D.C., this has nothing to do with public safety, [it] has nothing to do with law and order,' she added. Pressley then referred to the arrest of Tufts PhD student 'When you are disappearing people from the streets of Somerville, when you are targeting people in this way, it's terrorism,' Pressley said. 'And that terror, that fear that you're stoking, makes us all less safe.' Alyssa Vega can be reached at


Axios
an hour ago
- Axios
Texas Democrat abruptly leaves call with DNC chair, citing felony warning
Texas Democratic state Rep. Nicole Collier on a call with DNC Chair Ken Martin and other senior party leaders told them she had to abruptly leave the call after being warned it was a felony offense. The big picture: Collier was among the Texas Democrats who left the state in a two-week protest over a new congressional map before returning on Monday, when the state House reached a quorum. She slept in the state Capitol on Monday and accused the state's House speaker of illegally confining her and threatening her with arrest. Driving the news: Martin was speaking when Collier suddenly said, "Sorry, I have to leave. They said it's a felony for me to do this. Apparently I can't be on the floor or in the bathroom." Sen. Cory Booker (DN.J.) and California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D), who were also on the call, looked shocked at what happened. "That is outrageous," Booker said. "What they're trying to do right there, is silence an American leader, silence a Black woman and that is outrageous."


UPI
2 hours ago
- UPI
More than half of U.S. thinks racism is widespread, according to Gallup
A protestor stands in the street in front of Akron City Justice Center in Akron, Ohio, in July 2022 after Akron police fatally shot Jayland Walker, 25, after a short chase amid public unrest with law enforcement. Washington-based Gallup polling results suggest 64% of Americans believe racism is widespread in the United States. File Photo by Aaron Josefczyk/UPI | License Photo Aug. 20 (UPI) -- New data released Wednesday by Gallup suggests more than half the country believes that racism against Black people is not only alive and well but widespread in the United States. Gallup's newly-released results of 64% nearly tied with its last reading in its 2021 periodic measurements as its highest recorded by the Washington-based firm since 2008, the year Barack Obama was elected to the White House as the nation's first Black president. It's suggesting that 83% of Black adults and 61% of White adults say that racism is widespread. The question was first posed by Gallup experts in 2008, in which results said at the time that only 56% of U.S. adults thought racism was a widespread issues. It saw a reported dip to 51% by the following year. By 2015, its 60% reading came at a time of several high-profile killings of Black civilians at the hands of law enforcement officers and has since remained in that range. According to Gallup, police interactions stood out as the "top" area of unfair treatment toward Black people, with a perceptions of bias in healthcare, shopping, restaurants and workplaces at or near record high returns. Gallup said that non-Hispanic Black adults continue to be "most likely" to say such racism is prevalent in the country, with 83% expressing that view. Results found that smaller majorities of Hispanic respondents at 64% and 61% of non-Hispanic White adults agreed. The findings come from Gallup's survey from June 2-26 and included an oversample to allow for better estimates. "Conversely, Americans' (29%) belief that racism against White people is widespread is the lowest of five readings since 2008," according to Gallup. It added that 68% in its poll say U.S. adults think civil rights "have improved" in their lifetime. "The overall sample was weighted so all racial/ethnic groups are represented in their proper proportions of the U.S. population," according to Gallup officials. But the survey noted how in six of its interactions that dealing with police was seen largely as racially "inequitable." Gallup's results suggests a trend of at least 57% of Americans who believe Black people are treated less fairly than White people in various situations, particularly during traffic incidents that in recent years have been known to turn deadly in multiple states.