Tears, Sorrow, blood and suffering is the situation in Eastern Congo. To live and not get killed, people are dwelling among dense shrubs and forests. Millions of people have died and the Congolese genocide is still going on.
There is an ongoing genocide in Congo 🇨🇩
There is an ongoing genocide in Congo 🇨🇩
There is an ongoing genocide in Congo 🇨🇩
There is an ongoing genocide in Congo 🇨🇩
There is an ongoing genocide in Congo 🇨🇩
There is an ongoing genocide in Congo 🇨🇩
There is an ongoing genocide in Congo 🇨🇩
There is an ongoing genocide in Congo 🇨🇩
There is an ongoing genocide in Congo 🇨🇩
There is an ongoing genocide in Congo 🇨🇩
There is an ongoing genocide in Congo 🇨🇩
There is an ongoing genocide in Congo 🇨🇩
Congo is bleeding 🩸
#CongoGenocide
GOD GOT YOU
GOD GOT YOU
GOD GOT YOU
GOD GOT YOU
GOD GOT YOU
GOD GOT YOU
GOD GOT YOU
GOD GOT YOU
GOD GOT YOU
GOD GOT YOU
GOD GOT YOU
GOD GOT YOU
GOD GOT YOU
GOD GOT YOU
GOD GOT YOU
GOD GOT YOU
GOD GOT YOU
GOD GOT YOU
GOD GOT YOU
GOD GOT YOU
GOD GOT YOU
There are now more than 7 million internally displaced people in DR Congo 🇨🇩
Congo is bleeding 🩸 Congo is bleeding 🩸
Congo is bleeding 🩸 Congo is bleeding 🩸
#CongoGenocide
Clara B. Williams college professors did not allow her inside the classroom because she was Black.
But that didn’t stop her. She took notes from the hallway–standing up! She eventually graduated at the age of 51 and lived to 108 years old and saw her 3 sons become doctors.
—Clara Belle Drisdale Williams [1885-1993] was the valedictorian of the graduating class of Prairie New Normal and Independent College, now (Prairie View A & M University) in 1908.
She enrolled at the New Mexico College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts in the fall of 1928, after taking some courses at the University of Chicago. While she worked as a teacher at Booker T. Washington School in Las Cruces, she also took college courses during the summer.
Many of her professors would not allow her inside the classroom, she had to take notes from the hallway; she was also not allowed to walk with her class to get her diploma.
She married Jasper Williams in 1917; their three sons became physicians. She became a great teacher of black students by day, and by night she taught their parents, former slaves, home economics.
In 1961, New Mexico State University named a street on its campus after Williams; in 2005 the building of the English department was renamed Clara Belle Williams Hall.
In 1980 Williams was awarded an honorary doctorate of laws degree by NMSU, which also apologized for the treatment she was subjected to as a student. She died at 108 years old.
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American medicine has been built upon the abuse of black people with no oversight.
I'll revisit a few cases of how Black people were abused in the field of medicine. #blackhistorymonth 
THREAD(s)!
During the Arab slave trade, the male captives were castrated to avoid procreation.
The enslaved male was meant to serve one, singular purpose alone: to work and work till the day he drops dead.
The females were mostly used as concubines, maids and to serve the pleasures of those who had bought them from the slave raiders in the Sudan, iberia and the Slavic regions of Europe.
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The blood of the innocents keep on flowing in Congo. The death toll is increasing every hour same as rape case and torture, the people are still looking for a means to survive. The sound from different Gunshots are now the new sound of entertainment in Congo. Congo is bleeding and the genocide never cease. #CongoIsBleeding
Sister Rosetta Tharpe is credited as the Godmother of Rock ‘N’ Roll. Before Elvis, Johnny Cash or Little Richard, there was Sister Tharpe- A Black woman who forged her own sound in a male dominated industry. She does not get the credit she deserves.