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Black History for White People

Black Midwives: Celebrating Legacy and Advancing Maternal Care with Cessilye Smith

Black History for White People

Black History for White People

Education, History, Religion & Spirituality, Christianity, Society & Culture

3.6719 Ratings

🗓️ 10 April 2024

⏱️ 71 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In light of Black Maternal Health Week, this episode revisits key issues in black maternal health with Cessilye Smith, exploring the historical and ongoing role of black midwives through her personal story and discussing the work of entities like Abide Women's Services to better black mothers and infants' health outcomes.

Cessilye R. Smith, an inspiring maternal justice advocate, joins this episode with rich stories and insightful reflections on her work. She is the driving force behind Abide Women's Services, an organization dedicated to reducing disparities in black infant and maternal health outcomes. As a liberator, justice seeker, and mother, Cessilye is deeply connected to her heritage, tracing her roots to the resistance-driven Kru tribe of Liberia. Through Abide, she works tirelessly to ensure black women and their babies receive adequate and culturally respectful care during one of the most critical times of their lives.

Key Takeaways:

  • Black midwives have played a crucial and often uncredited role in birthing not only black but also white babies throughout history, birthing the nation as a whole.
  • There's a sacred legacy in the resistance of colonization evident in black maternal lineage, vital to understanding the depth of black women's reproductive experiences.
  • The celebration and amplification of the black midwifery tradition are crucial for advancing maternal care and combating disparities in black maternal health.
  • Abide Women's Services is an exemplar of empowering and quality maternal care, focusing on community health and honoring the black maternal experience from pre-pregnancy to postpartum.
  • Mental health for black women can be supported through culturally sensitive community gatherings, celebrating their life, and offering spaces for rest and collective healing.

Notable Quotes:

  • "Black women were catching everybody's babies, black, white, you know, and they brought their cultures, you know, their ancestral wisdom and knowledge." - Cessilye Smith
  • "It's in my blood. So, yeah, that's how it ties into the work I do today." - Cessilye Smith, on her connection to the Kru tribe and its influence on her advocacy work.
  • "Reparations begin with birth because it begins with life and transitioning the next life forward." - Katina
  • "We're saying no, we're going back to our roots and where we are going to heal from the beginning. From birth." - Cessilye Smith
  • "Events like this address mental health. Being able to gather in a space curated specifically for black women is part of our mental health journey." - Cessilye Smith

Resources:


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Transcript

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0:00.0

I don't know what most white people in this country feel.

0:05.0

I can only include what they feel from the state of their institution.

0:10.0

Now, this is the evidence.

0:14.0

You want me to make an act of faith, risking myself, my wife, my woman, my sister, my children,

0:20.0

on some idealism which you assure me exists in America, which I have never seen.

0:28.4

So we have a return guest who is one of my dear friends, and she is my she wrote, an amazing woman doing astounding work in Sunny South Dallas.

0:43.3

Cecily Smith with Abide Women's Services.

0:46.9

Welcome back, Cecily.

0:49.2

I am so happy to be back, Katina.

0:52.4

We are so happy to have you back. Yeah, we have

0:56.7

Black Maternal Health Week coming up next month, and this is the perfect time to check

1:04.5

in with you and see what's going on with you and with Abide. There have been so many

1:10.4

advancements and new things happening in the

1:12.7

past couple of years. But first, we got to know for the guests who, for the, for the listeners

1:18.9

who haven't met you before through our podcast, tell us who is Cecily Smith.

1:26.1

Who is Cecily Smith?

1:45.0

I am a black woman, a liberator, a mother, a wife, a justice seeker, and a member of the crew tribe that would be in, that would originally be in modern day Liberia.

1:57.1

I, yeah, that's who I am. I started abide because I was absolutely blown away by the devastating statistics amongst black women and our babies. And that's what I do. Like I lead an

2:02.8

organization here in Sunny South D that is a maternal justice organization. And we are dedicated to

2:10.6

reducing the disparities in black infant and maternal health outcomes. And so that's who I am right now today.

2:19.3

Phenomenal. So you said you're a member of the crew tribe before we get deeper into the

2:25.5

episode. What does that connection mean to you? Tell us a little bit about that tribe in Liberia.

...

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