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Black History Year

She Risked It All To Radically Transform Education

Black History Year

PushBlack

History

4.62.2K Ratings

🗓️ 13 March 2023

⏱️ 3 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

How can our oppressors be our teachers? Malcolm X knew that white-washed history books have always lied to us, so he fought for us to control our education – by any means necessary.





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2-Minute Black History is produced by PushBlack, the nation's largest non-profit Black media company. PushBlack exists to amplify the stories of Black history you didn't learn in school. You make PushBlack happen with your contributions at BlackHistoryYear.com — most people donate $10 a month, but every dollar makes a difference. If this episode moved you, share it with your people! Thanks for supporting the work.




The production team for this podcast includes Cydney Smith, Len Webb, and Lilly Workneh. Our editors are Lance John and Avery Phillips from Gifted Sounds Network. Julian Walker serves as executive producer."

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

She'd finally earned a teaching position, but now her days were limited to overcrowded

0:08.8

classrooms, low pay, and racism.

0:13.0

When she finally decided to push back against a broken system, would she learn her place,

0:18.9

or teach an old system something new?

0:22.7

This is Two Minute Black History, what you didn't learn in school.

0:31.0

Septima Clark was an amazing innovative teacher.

0:35.9

Despite the intense segregation in South Carolina, she used her creativity to teach hundreds

0:42.2

of black children and adults to read and write.

0:45.6

But still, something was bothering her.

0:48.5

What was it?

0:55.5

Clark knew there were countless good black teachers, but they couldn't get hired in public

1:00.6

schools to teach black children, and the rural schools that did hire black teachers often

1:06.6

paid far less to teach higher numbers of children.

1:11.5

So Clark made a decision that would change the course of her life and countless others.

1:17.2

She decided to work with the NAACP to get jobs and better pay for black teachers.

1:24.6

Eventually, some black teachers did get hired in public schools, but Clark was about

1:30.0

to pay a heavy price for her activism.

1:34.7

Clark had to give up her racial justice work or lose her job, effective immediately.

1:42.0

The choice was easy.

1:43.9

She quit her job, but her incredible story doesn't end there.

1:48.7

Clark helped create over 800 citizenship schools where adults learned reading, writing,

1:55.1

and state government election procedures.

...

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