Rare audio of enslaved people connects history to the present

2024 ж. 28 Ақп.
924 732 Рет қаралды

ABC News’ Alex Presha examines rare audio of formerly enslaved people to preserve their stories, and interviews one of their descendants, in partnership with the 10 Million Names project.
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Пікірлер
  • America should not ban teaching this history this is incredible

    @mosimosi630@mosimosi6302 ай бұрын
    • I agree

      @YasukeNakamoto@YasukeNakamoto2 ай бұрын
    • ​@@matcampbell3552😂😂 What good reason? To perpetuate the lies of the self proclaimed white race that does not exist?? There is no white identity in America, they made it all up and clearly you are going along with it.

      @OneAfricanRace@OneAfricanRace2 ай бұрын
    • @@matcampbell3552florida governor has and is pushing the agenda

      @SLIMRISKY@SLIMRISKY2 ай бұрын
    • Agree! People can’t be blind about history because that will make the history repeat it

      @marinasantiago24@marinasantiago242 ай бұрын
    • @@matcampbell3552 florida did

      @thanos34362@thanos343622 ай бұрын
  • I felt a pang of real discomfort when I heard him say "he owned my grandfather and he owned my father". Those words should never have to be spoken.

    @rob-time@rob-time2 ай бұрын
    • I was also struck by that statement, something unfathomable about hearing that said out loud so nonchalantly

      @user-vx9fu3nx2i@user-vx9fu3nx2i2 ай бұрын
    • Was literally going to write this. It broke my heart, I'm holding back tears.

      @RosieSkinLab@RosieSkinLab2 ай бұрын
    • You idiots are still owned. Its just funny not to say it, so that you idiots don't get mad.

      @joestalin5303@joestalin53032 ай бұрын
    • Blacks weren’t the first people enslaved. And they were sold to us by their own people, we didn’t just round them up. And 94% of the slave ships were owned by Jews.

      @tactik5903@tactik59032 ай бұрын
    • I cringed when he said he was treated reasonable.

      @americanbaki@americanbaki2 ай бұрын
  • I am 24 years old…born in 1999. My grandfather’s grandparents were slaves. This was not that long ago! We will not forget!!

    @paigehitchens@paigehitchens2 ай бұрын
    • “grandfather’s grandparents were slaves.” This! This should make people’s perspective change instantly in my opinion because you’re right! It really wasn’t long ago, racism is still rampant today and it breaks my heart.

      @baddiebrit177@baddiebrit177Ай бұрын
    • And they didn't return home after they were released?

      @mediocreman2@mediocreman2Ай бұрын
    • @@mediocreman2I think you need to learn about slavery in the USA bc there’s no way you just wrote this

      @cierraaaaaaaas@cierraaaaaaaasАй бұрын
    • @@mediocreman2and you think they went on and lived happily ever after? Generations of severe trauma but they just merrily skipped along after abolition?

      @evelien135@evelien135Ай бұрын
    • @@mediocreman2 You need to look into this topic a bit more. No, they didn’t just “return home.” it’s not a “party” or a “sleepover” or a “gathering” you don’t just return home after being traumatized for so long and held against your will. shame on you :/

      @baddiebrit177@baddiebrit177Ай бұрын
  • It was heartbreaking the most when he said they were treated “reasonably” and going on to describe a boy being whipped. 😭😭😭

    @tarajanique@tarajanique2 ай бұрын
    • Of course it was heartbreaking for him to be honest and it just broke your heart to know that a boy got whipped, MESSAGE! I got my @$$ whipped when I was a child and so did a million other n!66@$, your heart get broken to dam easy. Do the right thing.

      @CentralParkBoogie@CentralParkBoogie2 ай бұрын
    • And notice how fast he just choose the clearly more positive answer because at the time it was probably still WASN’T SAFE TO SAY IT WAS TERRIBLE for backlash of what some who previously agreed with the practice may do to him. Boot licking was safer option.

      @itzmaddymoney@itzmaddymoneyАй бұрын
    • Exactly!! I don’t think enough people picked up on that part 😢

      @rachelleblanc-hodge9543@rachelleblanc-hodge9543Ай бұрын
    • @@itzmaddymoney You think quite poorly of your ancestors. Out of all the men in your family, I'm sure none are bootlickers and are probably bout that action, why wouldn't your ancestors also be bout that action? Do the right thing.

      @CentralParkBoogie@CentralParkBoogieАй бұрын
    • @@CentralParkBoogie you keep going on about "doing the right thing" what is the "right thing" you're referring to? they're correct, how is that thinking poorly? if a slave were to admit they're being mistreated or complained back then they'd get treated even WORSE and probably killed off. whipping another living being is a horrible, horrible action. it's abuse.

      @yaoimessiah@yaoimessiahАй бұрын
  • This is why the history of slavery matters: “If we are going to understand freedom, then we should understand the people who were denied freedom.”

    @brittdompaul@brittdompaul2 ай бұрын
    • @@misslovelyy7277your mother should've stopped yapping and swallowed you instead

      @BurnaBwoi@BurnaBwoi2 ай бұрын
    • ⁠@@misslovelyy7277crack A crack AA crack aaaaaa

      @Grim-dq9ol@Grim-dq9ol2 ай бұрын
    • @@misslovelyy7277Don’t like history? Enjoy slavery?

      @michellem6826@michellem68262 ай бұрын
    • @@misslovelyy7277 get help

      @LAESA1@LAESA12 ай бұрын
    • Amen 🙏🏽

      @raquelr8775@raquelr87752 ай бұрын
  • Imagine surviving brutal chattel slavery and then dealing with 100+ years of Jim Crow right after. . .

    @YasukeNakamoto@YasukeNakamoto2 ай бұрын
    • Imagine people try to cover up this part of history, so their kids won't feel bad about being white.

      @ddrebrne3336@ddrebrne33362 ай бұрын
    • And it continues today with the prison industrial complex

      @ashleyhunter2156@ashleyhunter21562 ай бұрын
    • And so much more 😭😭😭

      @rachaeldelvaille3886@rachaeldelvaille38862 ай бұрын
    • Is there a volume discount?

      @345mrse@345mrse2 ай бұрын
    • And reconstruction. I had no idea there were black senators back then. I hadn't heard of it until my 20's. Then I watch a documentary on historical events that occurred during The Reconstruction and realized people wanting to turn back time when progress becomes too uncomfortable isn't new. It happened before.

      @ninaj.4885@ninaj.48852 ай бұрын
  • Appreciate them calling them enslaved Americans/ people instead of “slaves.” It always irked me when a human being’s description began and ended at “slave” as of that was all they were

    @StrawberryFeildsforNever@StrawberryFeildsforNever2 ай бұрын
    • A slave is by definition a person But in this case these people were not slaves anymore. So they were enslaved, but they were not slaves (at the time of recording)

      @amazinggrapes3045@amazinggrapes3045Ай бұрын
    • What's ur jobs then? And pickin cotton & share cropping was a business,EVERYBODY DID IT.U can go find evidence of EUROPEANS AND BRITS coming here on ships, holding signs begging 4 work,PICKING COTTON....u gotta go LOOOOOOK!!! BUT NOBODY BREATHING OR DEAD COULD SHOW!!! SHOW U a slaveship, the captain, the crew,a statue,NOTHING!!! BUT drawings....no proof! No handful of white guys stole 12m africans people and can 6-8 weeks LIKE 2DAY to come here from africa,go back & return until 12m africans were just stolen without a fist fight let alone a war!🤣🤣🤣🤣!!!! 😤

      @Gorealaracer38@Gorealaracer38Ай бұрын
    • These people weren’t slaves. The first guy is a child of a man who was enslaved and a grandson of a man who was a slave but not a slave and the lady was a sharecropper. The recording was made a hundred years after slavery ended. Don’t understand why they dishonestly represented these interviews

      @CSAcrazy@CSAcrazy12 күн бұрын
    • @@CSAcrazy Read the title. Some of these people were Actually Enslaved. The rest live with the Legacy. Stop looking for “loopholes” to negate their agency.

      @joiisler8986@joiisler898612 күн бұрын
    • @@joiisler8986 the title literally says “rare audio of enslaved people”…

      @CSAcrazy@CSAcrazy12 күн бұрын
  • Cried when I heard Celia’s voice. She sounds just like my great grandmother 😢

    @Succiarchives@Succiarchives2 ай бұрын
    • I got chills

      @genevieveponder9672@genevieveponder9672Ай бұрын
    • yeah it hit me like that too 😭

      @j.scottofficial@j.scottofficialАй бұрын
    • 🫂

      @MISNM0@MISNM0Ай бұрын
    • ❤️

      @JBeezyJesusFreak@JBeezyJesusFreakАй бұрын
    • sounds like they had fun

      @supernotnatural@supernotnaturalАй бұрын
  • The worst about people who say things like “we need to move on” and “remembering this does no good for the future” is that those same people won’t tell racists to stop being racist lol.

    @Shamunt@Shamunt2 ай бұрын
    • Exactly

      @colt45jb@colt45jb2 ай бұрын
    • Yep

      @tslavens3092@tslavens30922 ай бұрын
    • Until white people of today agree to pay reparations to the descendants of slavery, they will always be seen as slave masters themselves worthy of all the pain and poverty that the slaves endured!

      @BishopEddie5443@BishopEddie54432 ай бұрын
    • Very true

      @soyicasweet99@soyicasweet992 ай бұрын
    • You must be referring to the people that had all the statues and monuments removed. I encounter racists from all ethnicities. Don't assume skin color excludes a person from being racist.

      @Randy-jz9ox@Randy-jz9ox2 ай бұрын
  • 114 & she still has her memory 🧬💪🏽

    @rodrigolerenagutierrez3708@rodrigolerenagutierrez37082 ай бұрын
    • And sass!

      @cherylmillard2067@cherylmillard20672 ай бұрын
    • In an age when there was safe water and food to consume.

      @kelila_1688@kelila_16882 ай бұрын
    • That and people ate half a pound of bacon per day, smoked unfiltered cigarettes and lived until their late 90's. @@kelila_1688

      @cherylmillard2067@cherylmillard20672 ай бұрын
    • Amazing 💪🏾

      @drehardin@drehardin2 ай бұрын
    • Thanks God for allowing Celia Black to live up to 114 year.

      @OmalySamory@OmalySamory2 ай бұрын
  • To hear a slave speaking about remembering the time when Abraham Lincoln was around . Just blew my mind. God bless all their soul.

    @troywilliams4640@troywilliams46402 ай бұрын
    • U mean to hear a enslaved person wtf

      @okcflamez7309@okcflamez7309Ай бұрын
    • @@okcflamez7309 you know exactly what I’m saying smh. Get a life .

      @troywilliams4640@troywilliams4640Ай бұрын
    • Nah that's y'all's problem u lack understand of a human being. U just say the slaves like they aren't the ancestors of black Americans. This is why we don't like y'all and never will

      @okcflamez7309@okcflamez7309Ай бұрын
    • How about former enslaved person… she was no longer a slave or enslaved. I think it’s important to say it correctly. It matters.

      @LadyLeoASMR@LadyLeoASMRАй бұрын
    • @@troywilliams4640enslaved persons like they stated

      @teahgurl@teahgurlАй бұрын
  • My great great grandfather was a slave and bought the land he worked on when became free in his later years, my great grandmother is alive and lived through all the Jim crow era, and my grandmother through the civil rights era, this history is still very recent

    @Prod.Xin2@Prod.Xin2Ай бұрын
    • He was a worker if he was able to save money to buy land

      @Junior-yt6cx@Junior-yt6cx11 күн бұрын
    • @@Junior-yt6cx yea after becoming free, my great grandfather had a lot more wealth though, it was lost by the time the crack epidemic hit in the 80’s, that kinda changed everything though we still have the land and the house

      @Prod.Xin2@Prod.Xin211 күн бұрын
  • They’ll label this network “woke” for discussing slavery as if it never happened 🤡😂😭

    @lobsterblacc9478@lobsterblacc94782 ай бұрын
    • Nobody is doing that, stop falling for this nonsense. The "woke" part is them keeping context out of it, them selecting what not to report. Slavery was a worldwide, unanimously accepted part of life for thousands of years. Muslim empires were even enslaving Americans and Europeans into the 1800s. You are not comprehending how this is being taught in schools and what the misinformation being presented to kids is doing to them.

      @user-tm8jt2py3d@user-tm8jt2py3d2 ай бұрын
    • Ikr

      @David-vq6qg@David-vq6qg2 ай бұрын
    • Some of them in the maga church are actually saying Jesus was too weak for accepting immigrants, the poor, and gay people, and for turning the other cheek. It’s wild. I’ve seen them say Biden isn’t actually president, trump is still president, while blaming biden for only the bad things in the country in the same breath. Conspiracy brains rotting away

      @Tortilla.Reform@Tortilla.Reform2 ай бұрын
    • @@Tortilla.Reformlol

      @upendo.3570@upendo.35702 ай бұрын
    • @@Tortilla.Reformleave those delusional people

      @upendo.3570@upendo.35702 ай бұрын
  • My Great Grandmother was a Slave…Her husband was a free man. She lived to be about 114 yrs old. She use to babysit us as a child and would tell us the stories of her child hood when I was a Teenager. She refused to talk about slavery only would say it was “Very Pain Very Pain” (meaning a painful time)….she would cry. 😢😢

    @mjerome1457@mjerome14572 ай бұрын
    • God Bless Her❤🙏

      @suvettagreen9547@suvettagreen95472 ай бұрын
    • Aww... bless her heart. 😢

      @KD1ME@KD1ME2 ай бұрын
    • This choked me up. Wow! Thank you for sharing this. ❤

      @JSCDR@JSCDR2 ай бұрын
    • Damn, that is sad.

      @waynecarter8143@waynecarter81432 ай бұрын
    • It must be such an honor to be descendant of such a strong woman ❤bless her heart

      @moona_rue@moona_rue2 ай бұрын
  • I think a similar project needs to be done for NATIVE AMERICANS too. What was done to them, was heinous, and still is. Their land was STOLEN, and they were lied to, tricked into a giving up land, etc. BUT WE HEAR NOTHING ABOUT THEM, THEIR PRESENT PLIGHT.

    @maggiepatterson7949@maggiepatterson7949Ай бұрын
    • Definitely

      @user-dnf83n0s8sg9u@user-dnf83n0s8sg9uАй бұрын
    • Most if the Naitives were killed.. The tribes today helped take out other tribes.

      @ieshjust16@ieshjust16Ай бұрын
    • Why side track this conversation requesting information about Native Americans? Did you not know that Native Americans were slave holders of African Americans ???

      @lesliebenson4715@lesliebenson4715Ай бұрын
    • @@ieshjust16 That's a LIE promoted by oppressors of today; repeated by trolls and bots.

      @djoy4ly317@djoy4ly31724 күн бұрын
    • What was done to the Native Americans ..makes what Hitler and the Nazis party did look like child’s play.

      @alirott2271@alirott227113 күн бұрын
  • His voice and speech patterns remind me of the elders in my family born in the 40s and 50s. I’m overwhelmed with emotion

    @Ky-yd9bi@Ky-yd9bi2 ай бұрын
  • Definitely not ancient history. Remember that Harriet Tubman walked the Earth at the same time as Abraham Lincoln *and* Ronald Reagan. (She died 2 years after Reagan was born.)

    @roccoz2231@roccoz22312 ай бұрын
    • This is deep

      @pierer5559@pierer55592 ай бұрын
    • Wow ! I’m soo embarrassed that I didn’t know this fact . That’s amazing.

      @86Kera@86Kera2 ай бұрын
    • This gave me shivers to read.

      @twistedtheaos@twistedtheaos2 ай бұрын
    • Thank you!!

      @TheTierraJ@TheTierraJ2 ай бұрын
    • Damn, timelines can get so weird when you think about it.

      @NovikNikolovic@NovikNikolovic2 ай бұрын
  • "he owned my grandfather and he owned my father" Never in my life my heart crushed with that kind of statement

    @KaleidoSTARPH@KaleidoSTARPH2 ай бұрын
    • 😢😢😢😢

      @modoucamara6571@modoucamara65712 ай бұрын
    • Grow up. Stop being such a snowflake.

      @benthread@benthread2 ай бұрын
    • Your boss owns you right? If you get fired and get another job then your new boss owns you right? They control whether or not you eat, yes? Do you have your own water source, no, you purchase life sustaining water, which is more that 70% of the earth, do you make your own clothes, no, do you use fire for light and heat, no, do you grow your own food, no, so here's the million dollar question, who owns you? Do the right thing.

      @CentralParkBoogie@CentralParkBoogie2 ай бұрын
    • If it wouldn't be for that she would be in Africa talking to flies😂😂😂

      @Somebum@Somebum2 ай бұрын
    • @@CentralParkBoogieyour boss does not own you. It might feel like it if your job offers certain things you aren’t willing to give up, but you can always quit. Your boss can’t beat you or lock you up or r*pe you or sell you to another “owner.” You aren’t forced to do the same job for the rest of your life with no escape, no bank account, no vacation time or sick leave. Most jobs even offer legal protection for mandatory breaks, so no most of them don’t control if you’re allowed to eat either. You’re trying so hard to force a narrative that just doesn’t work. What the working class goes through now has its problems, and they’re valid and need to be addressed, but it’s not comparable to the slavery of African Americans.

      @gothicxromantic@gothicxromantic2 ай бұрын
  • This hurts....

    @jowga@jowga2 ай бұрын
    • I’m actually enraged and want to seek vengeance for my ancestors. I know it’s not right but it’s an innate feeling.

      @GametimeSlime@GametimeSlimeАй бұрын
    • They are going to keep chattel slave history as a reminder but we have to dig dig and dig to learn about the Black Royals in Europe 😒

      @teahgurl@teahgurlАй бұрын
    • ​@GametimeSlime your feelings are very valid 🩷

      @madisonlong4897@madisonlong48977 күн бұрын
  • To even think to record these interviews is amazing. That’s such a valuable resource!

    @asafeatherstoneiv371@asafeatherstoneiv3712 ай бұрын
  • It’s amazing how sharp her mind was at 114 years old.

    @staciebrooks2583@staciebrooks25832 ай бұрын
    • YES! She still sounded so happy riding that oxen ☺️

      @Prestelle@Prestelle2 ай бұрын
    • @@Prestelle my heart melted when she’d start to talk and say “ohhhh” 😂 she sounded so cheery

      @staciebrooks2583@staciebrooks25832 ай бұрын
    • @@staciebrooks2583 YESSSSS!!!! 😃😊

      @Prestelle@Prestelle2 ай бұрын
    • Yes that’s my great granny

      @chrisharablack2944@chrisharablack2944Ай бұрын
    • Yessssss

      @jillianbaker8442@jillianbaker844221 күн бұрын
  • I'm 71 I had a great grandfather that had been a slave, He remembered the day the slaves were freed. I was a little girl when he told us the story about the day the union soldiers road up on horseback and told them they were free. He had a button from a union soldier's uniform that he had kept.

    @ladyree7575@ladyree75752 ай бұрын
    • Did you record them? We would to hear them. They are valuable.

      @EMChantalG@EMChantalG2 ай бұрын
    • Please write down everything you can remember. The names you remember, how you are all related. Your grand kids won't remember anything you tell them. They just take you for granted like I took my grandma for granted. My other grandmother died when I was very young - and I don't even know if she had sisters or brothers and where they ended up or if they were wiped out in Germany.

      @zbagz01@zbagz01Ай бұрын
    • @zbagz01 0:08 You made me pump my own brakes, to tell you to pump yours...! If my grandfather had not began telling me his family stories and stories of the economic and racial disparities of his lifetime, I would have never fallen in love with genealogy and become the keeper of my family's history that includes almost 1,500 persons, to-date. It is total bs that grandkids "won't remember..." I REMEMBERED, and can trace my familial lines beyond the brick walls of the Civil War/1870 census -- to a 5th Great- GrandFather born in Africa. I now have a GrandDaughter who is continuing to search and preserve our family's history. Our passed down stories (and DNA testing) go a long way with helping descendants of slavery connect to their true history. The truth matters and will always be revealed.

      @shereecamel@shereecamelАй бұрын
    • Thank you! If my grandfather had not began telling me his family stories and stories of the economic and racial disparities of his lifetime, I would have never fallen in love with genealogy and become the keeper of my family's history that includes almost 1,500 persons, to-date. It is total bs that grandkids "won't remember..." I REMEMBERED, and can trace my familial lines beyond the brick walls of the Civil War/1870 census -- to a 5th Great- GrandFather born in Africa. I now have a GrandDaughter who is continuing to search and preserve our family's history. Our passed down stories (and DNA testing) go a long way with helping descendants of slavery connect to their true history. The truth matters and will always be revealed.

      @shereecamel@shereecamelАй бұрын
    • @@shereecamel so very True 💯

      @ladyree7575@ladyree7575Ай бұрын
  • Great work the 10 Million Names project is doing. Our ancestors should be remembered and loved for their resiliency.

    @truthseeker1009@truthseeker1009Ай бұрын
  • I know this is dramatic but I honestly started crying. So many suffered all because of something dumb like a difference in skin tone. if the afterlife is real I hope they are at peace.

    @shockwavekisser@shockwavekisser2 ай бұрын
    • Skin tone didn’t start slavery. Our ancestors were sold off by people that looked just like them. That’s important to understand. Slaves in the USA then had a different skin tone than their owners but it wasn’t based on race to begin with, it was an identifying feature after the fact. So slave became synonymous with black but only in the USA. Not understanding the origins will have you believing skin tone dictates everything, no.

      @BizQAC@BizQACАй бұрын
    • ​@@BizQACthat's true but they used physical differences like that to justify slavery after people started to become uncomfortable with it. They would argue that they're not really people and used pseudoscience to justify it, that's even where the modern idea of race comes from (past conceptions of race were different)

      @amazinggrapes3045@amazinggrapes3045Ай бұрын
    • Honestly this is absolutely something to cry about

      @amazinggrapes3045@amazinggrapes3045Ай бұрын
    • I find it seriously disturbing being part of the human race and I’m not even fucking kidding.

      @alirott2271@alirott227113 күн бұрын
    • I agree, 100%. I Love you and I pray you have a wonderful day.

      @alirott2271@alirott227113 күн бұрын
  • I'm 66, my father born in 1923 was raised by his grandmother, Caroline Ross Walker of Charlotte NC who was born enslaved in the 1860s. Slavery was not long ago... ❤I'm calling her name this morning in gratitude and love!❤

    @calvinewr@calvinewr2 ай бұрын
    • Right on ✊🏾 say her name 🙏🏾

      @Carryon22865@Carryon228652 ай бұрын
    • you should be my mamee

      @PatrickS.Tomlinson@PatrickS.Tomlinson2 ай бұрын
    • Until white people of today agree to pay reparations to the descendants of slavery, they will always be seen as slave masters themselves worthy of all the pain and poverty that the slaves endured!

      @BishopEddie5443@BishopEddie54432 ай бұрын
    • "reparations would belong to the actual people that were enslaved and survived during that time." There are laws against receiving stolen property. The wealth created by the stolen people of Africa still exists! Slave masters died and slaves died but the wealth was passed down to racist offspring that began lynching and burning Black people alive! God remembers and will judge the wicked Europeans for their sins. Please don't go against God now or in the day of judgement!

      @BishopEddie5443@BishopEddie54432 ай бұрын
    • I recently found out my grandfather was born in 1895😳 he must've been in his 60s when my father was born. I just wish I could know more about him and my grandmother, but apparently, people in my family never talked about anything 😕

      @MySingleLifeADollShow@MySingleLifeADollShow2 ай бұрын
  • Our ancestors are amazing.

    @user-zs6qf7ob6h@user-zs6qf7ob6h2 ай бұрын
    • Yes they were and I don't know how they survived, because I would've lost my mind, especially if my husband and children were sold off, never to be seen again 😢😭😭😭

      @Carryon22865@Carryon228652 ай бұрын
    • Unfortunately we started turning on ourselves and embarrassing 😢

      @potatosalad6699@potatosalad66992 ай бұрын
    • @@potatosalad6699 Stockholm Syndrome and PTSD with Anxiety..... Untreated used pushed aside, the former Slaves were instantly made homeless, they were hunted down, stalked, brutalized, and deleted by the Klan, with no protection and no protection from the law, so out of the fire and into the frying pan, on top of suffering unthinkable cruel atrocities, for four hundred years, so they were pretty messed up 🤔

      @Carryon22865@Carryon228652 ай бұрын
    • Yes they were!! That's why we're still here. We are a resilient people!

      @Charles-tt3dr@Charles-tt3dr2 ай бұрын
    • @@potatosalad6699white people caused a lot of us to turn on each other. It ensures their position of power and security. The sick part is they act like they have no hand in our current conditions and a large percentage believes them. Not blaming all white people but if you think their ancestors didn’t set up safety nets after we got free you would be delusional. These tactics are not just in blatant racism but also in the constitution, banking, criminal law, housing, social security, education, etc. Unless we wake up and stop falling for traps that were set up for us these conditions will remain intact.

      @fdotflames8507@fdotflames85072 ай бұрын
  • Yes, we are still here.

    @jonniemae818@jonniemae8182 ай бұрын
    • They just added extra steps

      @unyieldingrage1389@unyieldingrage13892 ай бұрын
    • Yes we are❤

      @jillianbaker8442@jillianbaker844221 күн бұрын
  • Why does this make me cry so much ?! 😭😭 his voice resonates as the voice of many peoples ancestors .

    @tatianabenitez2835@tatianabenitez2835Ай бұрын
  • The fact that he said they were worked reasonably but a young boy was whooped because he couldn't keep up with the gang.. 💔 Just let that sink in..

    @TheTierraJ@TheTierraJ2 ай бұрын
    • You can tell the anxiety in telling that story (sudden fast pace and word slurring/ stuttering.) It makes me wonder what "reasonable" really is.

      @annieburley2068@annieburley20682 ай бұрын
    • That fear of telling his truth was still there. 💔💔

      @dawnw.6559@dawnw.65592 ай бұрын
    • Brings to mind the interview with a slave owner where he states that “his slaves are happy and never run off” 🙄

      @lemonlemon7186@lemonlemon71862 ай бұрын
    • @@annieburley2068what do you mean

      @crishnaholmes7730@crishnaholmes77302 ай бұрын
    • @@annieburley2068what do you mean

      @crishnaholmes7730@crishnaholmes77302 ай бұрын
  • this reminds me of a friend who came to visit, I offered something to eat but she refused because her grandma had cooked something earlier, but then I asked her what was that her grandmother cook. my friend didn't want to answer which caught my sister's and my curiosity. We finally got her to tells us what is was, basically pork tripes with chili, in other words, chitlins. me and my sister said that it sounded delicious. She was then surprised that we didn't find it weird because ever since she was a child many of her non-african-american friends found it gross. We told her "girl, we are mexicans, we eat all of the pig, from the feet all the way to the head". that's when she told us that her grandmother got many (including the chitlins) recipes from her grandma who was a slave. The master gave slave the "scrap" or "bad" meat to eat, and that's why many of her grandma recipes included things like feet, ears, tripes, nose, ect. of the pork. I was so surprised that someone currently alive knew and was family of someone who was a slave and how it affected their recipes and cooking.

    @firelightning5018@firelightning50182 ай бұрын
    • It's how soul food came about.

      @missam3404@missam34042 ай бұрын
    • @missam3404 I know, which to me (a mexican, whose country banned slavery since its creation), it's insane that not only a whole group of cuisine came from slavery, but that also there are people who are ashamed of it because they were picked on by the same group who forced them to create food from these "scraps".

      @firelightning5018@firelightning50182 ай бұрын
    • And the black people love that stuff! So was it “bad” meat? You eat it too!!

      @benthread@benthread2 ай бұрын
    • @benthread there's a reason why is in quotation marks. Some people consider parts of the animal undesirable and won't eat it, but it depends on the culture.

      @firelightning5018@firelightning50182 ай бұрын
    • You're right, my grandparents used it all, remember the saying " everything but the squeal " was eaten & used? I can still hear them saying that! I'm an old white woman at 73 & we learned not to waste. Everybody loves to eat & has to! Be blessed 🙌

      @sandraking9650@sandraking96502 ай бұрын
  • Chills, nostalgia, so many emotions..... stuff like this makes me miss my grandparents so much and so thankful for their lives and sacrifices.

    @alonzalbrown1883@alonzalbrown18832 ай бұрын
  • This is really special, and important. Thanks for this.

    @petehalupka1@petehalupka12 ай бұрын
  • Ms. Celia was a full queen, she had her witts about her until the end. I'm SO glad I was born in this time, i wouldn't have survived back then but I appreciate my grandparents who got me here so much.

    @dakotac180@dakotac1802 ай бұрын
    • Dakota, Baby you would have survived. the thing is the mind was broken at birth and its the reason suffering could go on for centuries, this horror is haunting and her voice hits different . this needs to be played in every school . school aged kids from the er.. 1921 masscre in Tulsa are still very much alive . 5 of them spoke on the senate floor. look it. those ladies, their parents were born into slavery .

      @PHlophe@PHlophe2 ай бұрын
    • @@PHlophethey just lynched someone feb 21 in georgia yall.. aint nothin changed there, they aint scared of yall

      @Gathead36@Gathead362 ай бұрын
    • You dk what you wouldn’t survived until you lived it. Weren’t blessed to not have been born in that time tho.

      @jessicab331@jessicab3312 ай бұрын
    • Did you also know that most slaves went back after being freed cuz they didntk ie what else to do

      @MrSmokeTHC420@MrSmokeTHC4202 ай бұрын
    • Why is it always "they were kings/queens" when talking about this? Kings and queens were the reason all this existed in the first place. The ones who sold millions of their fellow Africans after conquering them.

      @user-tm8jt2py3d@user-tm8jt2py3d2 ай бұрын
  • We are not far from slavery. I was born 1973. I am 50 years old. My mothers mother is still alive. Her father was born 1897. He was born to the first generation after slavery. It's always exciting to me to hear the stories of older people. It's amazing. My ex-wife grandparents are white. I would love to visit her grandparents. Her grandfather would tell stories from his time in the military during ww2. My grandmother is now 87 years old. She would have more stories. I am planning to go see her and conduct an interview. I want to record it for my whole family. We don't know how much longer she will be here.

    @madboyreadynow28@madboyreadynow282 ай бұрын
    • My grandpa was born in 1921 and is still with us 💜 and still sharp! He was flying a plane over the Himalayas in the USAF when it was announced that WWII was over, and we’d “won”. No joke, he remembers every street he lived on in his youth and his neighbor’s names too. Saying so kinda to brag on my gpa, but also to show how recent this “storied” history really was. It’s mind boggling.

      @rabblerousin8981@rabblerousin89812 ай бұрын
    • @rabblerousin8981 That is such a blessing that your grandfather is still with us. It's such an amazing blessing. I don't know if I want to live that long to have my children's grandchildren coming to me asking a bunch of questions about when rap came out. Did I see Michael Jackson and Michael Jordan. You know every crazy thing they would ask in the next 45 years if I am allowed to live that long.

      @madboyreadynow28@madboyreadynow282 ай бұрын
    • You're not supposed to say that. They want us to pretend that slavery happened thousands of years ago. But you can look up audio and photographs of people that were slaves in this country.

      @kgkg4118@kgkg41182 ай бұрын
    • Do for all of us please! 🙏🏾❤️

      @ZombiemanOhhellnaw@ZombiemanOhhellnaw2 ай бұрын
    • I try to tell people this all the time. I’m 36, my great grandmother is 88. Her great grandparents were born during the slave era.

      @freethinkinmelanin6795@freethinkinmelanin67952 ай бұрын
  • These stories are so important to keep alive. Thank you for this video. It was well done.

    @TanyaQueen182@TanyaQueen182Ай бұрын
  • Beautiful testimony! Thank you for doing this!

    @traceyf4842@traceyf48422 ай бұрын
  • People keep trying to say how long ago it was to downplay how horrible it was but slavery really isn’t as far back as it seems and the impact remains. Edit: I just want to add that “dwelling on it” changes minds and educates people that might not otherwise know why it’s still an issue that needs to be talked about and remembered. It’s about instilling empathy in those that haven’t experienced the repercussions because they come from a different background. It’s about seeing history from a different perspective than your own to determine the way to move forward. Ignorance and erasure isn’t going to change anything and there are a lot of things that still need to change.

    @Blisscent@Blisscent2 ай бұрын
    • Agree. But there's a time to move on and it's long overdue.

      @anonymoususer4376@anonymoususer43762 ай бұрын
    • ​@@anonymoususer4376move on? Bro, you dont "move on" from history. You learn from it. And dont forget it.

      @caseycat@caseycat2 ай бұрын
    • They make it black and white to make seem so long ago.. that they took thee Original people stuff

      @ashash6509@ashash65092 ай бұрын
    • ​@@anonymoususer4376Why are black people the only ones that need to move on? With the jews it's never forget and the haulocost is continuously brought up. But black people need to let it go??? The double standards need to stop!! The racism is still strong and will never cease!!!

      @GiGi52020@GiGi520202 ай бұрын
    • @@anonymoususer4376 you clearly don’t agree.

      @spacebar9733@spacebar97332 ай бұрын
  • It makes me cry when I hear them talk. Life was so unfair for them to go through this! 😭 their story needs to be heard but it’s so sad 😭

    @doggiesfishies3764@doggiesfishies37642 ай бұрын
    • @ doggiesfishies3764: There are so many racist idiots standing in the way in America, like Ron DeSatan who doesn’t want white kids to feel bad. That and he is just evil and doesn’t want to accept the facts of the history of America.

      @waynecarter8143@waynecarter81432 ай бұрын
    • amerika "claims" that this did not happen - or if it did, then they "enjoyed" it...

      @keyfield8967@keyfield89672 ай бұрын
    • Stop crying and realize that you're creating a make-believe story in your head. What did the brother and sister say on the audio? Listen to the actual words coming out of their mouths and not the make-believe that clutters your mind. I think you like gettin' outcho body. Stop letting your need for emotional imbalance supersede the actual words that are coming out of their mouths. Do the right thing.

      @CentralParkBoogie@CentralParkBoogie2 ай бұрын
    • @@CentralParkBoogie Something's wrong with you. Seriously, the lack of empathy is very strange. Get that checked by a psychologist. They're saying what they're saying because they never knew freedom. Imagine being oppressed from birth, made to believe you're worthless, made to believe you are an object, property, NOT human. Imagine the things you'd say if you'd been brainwashed since birth into a role of subjugation.

      @hannahwatkins7992@hannahwatkins79922 ай бұрын
    • The WSWD fear all the history coming out, slavery was a lot worst and gruesome than they allow to depict on the big screen, imagine knowing you’re descended from such evil, I almost feel bad for them…….almost lol

      @unyieldingrage1389@unyieldingrage13892 ай бұрын
  • So moving and powerful…. I am so grateful for the preservation efforts … this is needed

    @audreychatman1591@audreychatman15912 ай бұрын
  • There's no one stronger and wiser than a survivor. My respect to the journalist who reported this on this story.

    @BruderAdrian@BruderAdrianАй бұрын
  • The giggles when she told about the oxes put a smile on my face. I'm glad she still had good memories from difficult times.

    @black4pienus@black4pienus2 ай бұрын
    • The thing is Mayans where slaves but get called white boy black ppl so I cNr help but fking laugh he Owen my daddy lmao Mayans fought back they weren't weak like the blacks

      @user-li8yc9qh2r@user-li8yc9qh2rАй бұрын
    • At least the gentle work animals provided some semblance of happy memory. Also the loving trust of her father. It’s such a sweet memory. What an incredible treasure that memory and recording are to her family and to us all really.

      @Groundedsquirrel@GroundedsquirrelАй бұрын
    • She said one's name was "Corley" and the others name was "Let." I thought it was funny that ABC spelled "Let" as L-E-T. "Lait" is Creole for Milk.

      @kendrapaula@kendrapaulaАй бұрын
  • I wish they’d use a regular format when captioning this man’s words. It was really hard to follow with the words jump in all over the screen out of order. I understand it was probably artistic to the creator, but it was not functional. The purpose is to see what they were saying, not to look fancy

    @jamie9238@jamie92382 ай бұрын
    • Exactly. It’s ridiculous and shameful in my opinion. So I gave up after a couple minutes.

      @maggiejohnson5891@maggiejohnson58912 ай бұрын
    • That’s what I thought. Very poor design decisions

      @mathseacav@mathseacav2 ай бұрын
    • It’s a video so you can play it back at your own pace.

      @whisper2284@whisper22842 ай бұрын
    • Don’t forget there’s also closed captions ! You can use that to read in a more consolidated way. Cheers

      @rabblerousin8981@rabblerousin89812 ай бұрын
    • what helped me understand what he was saying, I froze each caption and read his testimony

      @whynot8901@whynot89012 ай бұрын
  • This was powerful. This is a reminder to not take one day or opportunity for granted. Thank you for doing this interview.

    @nishman1370@nishman13702 ай бұрын
  • Saddest part is Black Americans still haven’t received any apology/recognition or compensation for hundreds of years of forced labor and inequality.

    @CjsJustChilling@CjsJustChilling2 ай бұрын
    • Why does nobody talk about them constantly derailing our progress EVEN AFTER FREEDOM by killing our leaders, flooding community with drugs, bombing black Wall Street? I just wonder if my people are ignorant or just afraid to point that out

      @unyieldingrage1389@unyieldingrage13892 ай бұрын
    • And there's big companies and banks around today, the funds came from owning slaves..

      @charc1032@charc1032Ай бұрын
    • We won’t, these are the same people who are still actively kidnapping the little ones around the world for their sick games on those islands, they are not the most high’s people 😂

      @unyieldingrage1389@unyieldingrage1389Ай бұрын
    • Whenever I leave a comment about what “them folks” do on those secret islands my comment gets removed 😐😂

      @unyieldingrage1389@unyieldingrage1389Ай бұрын
    • The Scriptures says they will NEVER repent. Revelation 9:21 “Neither repented they of their murders, nor of their sorceries, nor of their fornication, nor of their thefts.”

      @macmen007@macmen007Ай бұрын
  • This isn’t THAT SHOCKING. If people EVER actually took the time to do documentaries in the rural South Carolina, people would be mind blown

    @skylaellis@skylaellis2 ай бұрын
    • For real. I'm from a small town in SC and people have started buying little forested pockets of land near fields. They clear them and find little shacks dotted all over. Can only imagine what those were for 😐 Like yeah, we are not far removed from slavery at all.

      @EatingHotIceCream@EatingHotIceCream2 ай бұрын
    • Until white people of today agree to pay reparations to the descendants of slavery, they will always be seen as slave masters themselves worthy of all the pain and poverty that the slaves endured!

      @BishopEddie5443@BishopEddie54432 ай бұрын
    • Maybe it should start with you. All you need is a cellphone and a KZhead channel for the sake of future generations!

      @chals4174@chals41742 ай бұрын
    • Sharecropping is still a thing today

      @caseycat@caseycat2 ай бұрын
    • ​@@EatingHotIceCreamsame me too, I see those little shacks too and I am like oh I know what that's from

      @muraismybby4617@muraismybby46172 ай бұрын
  • This is a history that must never be lost or hidden .All Americans need to acknowledge this important truth.✨️🙏✨️ Wonderful work

    @carinakaron8068@carinakaron80682 ай бұрын
    • "reparations would belong to the actual people that were enslaved and survived during that time." There are laws against receiving stolen property. The wealth created by the stolen people of Africa still exists! Slave masters died and slaves died but the wealth was passed down to racist offspring that began lynching and burning Black people alive! God remembers and will judge the wicked Europeans for their sins. Please don't go against God now or in the day of judgement!

      @BishopEddie5443@BishopEddie54432 ай бұрын
    • NOT LOST…JUST HIDDEN!!😮

      @0007bonita@0007bonita2 ай бұрын
    • Desantis in Florida is making sure it does not get taught

      @bwanikajohn7002@bwanikajohn70022 ай бұрын
    • True, this is his-story, where the people in this video are trying as hard as they can to make you believe that your ears are deceiving you and you are allowing them to. O.k., now let's dig deep and find out your-story. Do the right thing.

      @CentralParkBoogie@CentralParkBoogie2 ай бұрын
  • Hearing his voice gave me chills😢

    @SachaBeeXO@SachaBeeXO2 ай бұрын
  • This is so beautiful. To hear the beautiful voices of our people tell a small part of their story is so inspiring.

    @kiadavis9012@kiadavis9012Ай бұрын
  • When I realized I missed it by 3 generations I got the chills. My mom had to work in a cotton field as a kid and she told me stories about when she was traveling through Mississippi as a child or a teen there was still slaves there.

    @Improvemypronunciation@Improvemypronunciation2 ай бұрын
    • ​@Indigo_CheRokEE that doesn't mean he was a slave

      @ashash6509@ashash65092 ай бұрын
    • ​@@ashash6509OMG they never stated that.

      @Taniesha_S@Taniesha_S2 ай бұрын
    • #Niiji

      @ashash6509@ashash65092 ай бұрын
    • @@Indigo_CheRokEEgirl they still alive too go get them

      @Chasityolaf@Chasityolaf2 ай бұрын
    • You aint miss sh!+, you gotta go to work in the morning. Do the right thing.

      @CentralParkBoogie@CentralParkBoogie2 ай бұрын
  • First guy must still be scared to say how he truly feels. He said the captor was reasonable, but reluctantly tells us he was whipped as a little boy because he couldn’t keep up with everyone else.

    @smokenojoke8182@smokenojoke81822 ай бұрын
    • That depended on the race of the interviewer, which is why some members of the Harlem Renaissance got involved.

      @andreabrown4541@andreabrown45412 ай бұрын
    • No he wasn't talking about himself he was talking about another little boy. And he said that Master Jeff gave Master Joe the little boy, and the little boy couldn't keep up and was punished physically and the kid found Master Jeff and told him was Master Joe did. And his recount was when he was a free man so he could tell them anything he wanted to tell at that point. Since slaves where treated like livestock, their treatment varied on the owner.

      @Naturefan354@Naturefan3542 ай бұрын
    • @@Naturefan354 These recordings were made during Jim Crow, so no, he could not freely express his feelings to the interviewer.

      @relaxlibrary4249@relaxlibrary42492 ай бұрын
    • @@relaxlibrary4249 Yes he could because who exactly would have a problem with his testimony?? And why would they care? Otherwise why even mention the story of the kid who got physically punished at all? He wouldn't have mentioned it at all if he feared repercussion.

      @Naturefan354@Naturefan3542 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Naturefan354He was guarded with his words because he was talking to a wyt man. That's why they started having blk people interview them. One being Zora Neale Hurston.

      @auntiemeemaw3885@auntiemeemaw38852 ай бұрын
  • Thank you ABC for sharing 💛🌻

    @rubyclark7595@rubyclark75952 ай бұрын
  • “I’m trying my best to serve my master” ugh man that just breaks my heart. I honestly get furious hearing about the atrocities my ancestors faced.

    @ayanna4729@ayanna47292 ай бұрын
  • Here in 2024 my 73 year old wife is the granddaughter of an enslaved man born in 1851. We have visited his grave in Gainesville, FL.

    @millermiller4103@millermiller41032 ай бұрын
    • Until white people of today agree to pay reparations to the descendants of slavery, they will always be seen as slave masters themselves worthy of all the pain and poverty that the slaves endured!

      @BishopEddie5443@BishopEddie54432 ай бұрын
  • A former enslaved American. First time I ever heard that phrase before.

    @MrHollomany@MrHollomany2 ай бұрын
    • Me too especially with American part

      @TrapstarJolene@TrapstarJolene2 ай бұрын
    • Woooooooooooohoooooooo, damn, it is so refreshing to see a comment like this, yes, yes, yes, I'm impressed that you didn't forsake your ears. American. I was thinking how, the people in this video are trying their hardest to make you think you're hearing things that you're not but it's very difficult to hide the truth that seems to leak out the cracks. Slips like this aren't slips at all, it's just that this kunta kinte narrative can't survive much longer with perceptive individuals like you ouchea. I'm impressed by your listening and honoring your ears, real sh!+, thx for the comment. Do the right thing.

      @CentralParkBoogie@CentralParkBoogie2 ай бұрын
    • @@kamelahunion9586 If you say enslaved one moe time Imma vomit right here right now. That's like saying us Americans are walking around with the surnames of our ancestor's masters, like "masters(bosses, managers)" would give a worker, slave, employee their last name insuring them a portion of the inheritance. Why is it so important to ignore the words that come out of people's mouths? An enslaved American is an American that was working for someone. Sometimes an American that was trafficked from somewhere in the Americas, could be men, women and children mostly, just like today. All I've said is impossible to grasp if you believe in your heart and feel like mommy Afreeka is your earth soil portion. Do the right thing.

      @CentralParkBoogie@CentralParkBoogie2 ай бұрын
    • You were a slave?

      @THEBorderJumper69IIII@THEBorderJumper69IIII2 ай бұрын
    • He said what he meant & meant what he said. They know they’re really Indigenous Americans and NEVER came over here on a slave ship. 🪶🪶🪶 the truth won’t be hidden.

      @AlluringFire@AlluringFireАй бұрын
  • Wow! This brought tears to my eyes.

    @TrueCrimeTVTime@TrueCrimeTVTime2 ай бұрын
  • The 10 Million Names Project. WOW! ❤ Love this vid 😮‍💨💛

    @Prestelle@Prestelle2 ай бұрын
  • My great grandmother died at 104 and she had two sisters that lived to be 105. She was born in 1896 and died in 2001 she lived in three different centuries ….late 1800s, 1900s and early 2000s)! We lived in South Louisiana. Her name is Alexandrine Mackey Jones and she was a sweet heart! She used to mention how fast cars move because she grew up with horse a buggy 😂😂

    @lh5567@lh55672 ай бұрын
    • Did you record them! We would to hear their stories. They are valuable.

      @EMChantalG@EMChantalG2 ай бұрын
    • You laughed at horse and buggy, meaning they had a horse and a buggy that they built, while you have a car that your didn't build, have no idea how to service, and rely on gas from someone else. If gas is no longer available you're done, if the car has issues that you can't fix or afford to get fixed, you're done, but your granny would be just fine. Do the right thing.

      @CentralParkBoogie@CentralParkBoogie2 ай бұрын
    • @@CentralParkBoogie I do know how to service my automobiles…relax

      @lh5567@lh55672 ай бұрын
    • @@EMChantalG yes we do have them on video and we had a massive family reunion this past summer! Which was awesome 👏🏽

      @lh5567@lh55672 ай бұрын
    • @@lh5567 N!66@ I don't. Do the right thing.

      @CentralParkBoogie@CentralParkBoogie2 ай бұрын
  • I was born in 1990 and my great grandmother was born in 1914. she knew former slaves that were in their 80’s and 90’s that lived up to like 105. People lived a long time back then.

    @Bobbillyjrboy@Bobbillyjrboy2 ай бұрын
    • They were exceptional because the age of life expectancy was 40 years old.

      @zxcccccc1@zxcccccc12 ай бұрын
    • It's the golden age. When medicine started coming alone and they were eating healthy

      @addisonhinson6290@addisonhinson62902 ай бұрын
    • @@addisonhinson6290 that’s true, they knew how to grow their own food and etc. remember they took care of each other

      @Bobbillyjrboy@Bobbillyjrboy2 ай бұрын
    • @@zxcccccc1It was even more incredible for the African American community cause they had a much lower life expectancy on average cause of the racism they got.

      @ranelgallardo7031@ranelgallardo70312 ай бұрын
    • Because the food were real and not poisoned.

      @reemajesty498@reemajesty4982 ай бұрын
  • To think that these people endured so much and lived through so many historical events…I can hardly wrap my head around it. Giving an interview in 1941 about your enslaved childhood…chills.

    @emmareese9458@emmareese94582 ай бұрын
  • This is deeply saddening. Sending love to all my brothers and sisters who have ancestors who went through this. I’m here with you and want nothing but blessings for you and your family!

    @leoncruz6657@leoncruz66572 ай бұрын
  • Wow! This made my eyes water. I remember my great great grandmother talking about picking cotton in Louisiana in her youth when I was six years old. Her hands were hard and calloused. I remember how they would catch my hair when she rubbed my head. Then my grandmother was a sharecropper and was taken out of school to pick cotton in the 3rd grade. She never got a chance to finish school. Don't know how anyone can say this country wasn't racist and people are trying their best to bury this history. This country has always been racist. From the theft of land to the theft of people.. and I wonder what trump means by making it great again. Great for whom? My parents were young people during Jim Crow. Make America great again. Great for who? The good ole boys? From my experience and the experience my family went through it has NEVER been great. A black man was just LYNCHED in Georgia this year on February 21st for dating a white woman. In 2024 black people are still being hung in trees. Because in my opinion this is where this country is headed back to!

    @sareptasweetie1978@sareptasweetie19782 ай бұрын
    • Sweetie, this is the reason why forgiveness should NEVER be a thing. for real.

      @PHlophe@PHlophe2 ай бұрын
    • They need to date and marry their own/our women, there's plenty that need and want a husband, and it's a lot safer too, because it just makes some people's blood boil to see them with their women. I feel that every race should stay pure, because look at what it brings us, different cultures and foods( especially the foods🤭) and we have places to travel, and all kinds of restaurants to enjoy 😁... Peace 😉

      @Carryon22865@Carryon228652 ай бұрын
    • I hear you! The Bible refers to white folk as MENSTEALERS! Until white people of today agree to pay reparations to the descendants of slavery, they will always be seen as slave masters themselves worthy of all the pain and poverty that the slaves endured!

      @BishopEddie5443@BishopEddie54432 ай бұрын
    • @@Carryon22865women nor black people are property

      @megnelli@megnelli2 ай бұрын
    • @@PHlopheyou’re an i-d-lot. . For real.

      @benthread@benthread2 ай бұрын
  • Apparently, Florida state Rep. Alex Andrade wants Florida’s teachers to teach students that these people “were paid” for their forced labor. I wish material such as this video were shown in classrooms nationwide instead.

    @Lstar07@Lstar072 ай бұрын
    • I had never heard of this, or him, so I looked it up. I found that he said that “some” slaves were paid, but he also said, “There is only one way to teach about slavery in Florida, and that is that it was evil.” Evidently some slaves were paid. Booker T. Washington wrote that many ex-slaves worked out deals with their former slave masters to continue to work for them and get paid even after they were freed.

      @donelmore2540@donelmore25402 ай бұрын
    • ⁠@@donelmore2540You’re describing Share Cropping. My grandmother grew up as a child share cropping in Mississippi on the same land her great grandparents had been enslaved on, picking cotton. They were barely paid. Even the kids picked cotton to make more money, up until they started school. She told me about how her and her siblings would received a candy cane and an apple in a paper bag on Christmas. You’re trying to minimize the history and horror of systemic racism in this country, simply on the basis that they were no longer slaves. Stop.

      @taterbug3358@taterbug33582 ай бұрын
    • @@taterbug3358 And you are standing on the shoulders of giants and think you’re flying. Everyone should be judged by the standards of their time not OURS. If you lived in the 18th century, you would have acted just as they did. Don’t pretend you are a moral giant compared to them. Read Dr. Jordan Peterson’s work on the Nazis and you’ll learn something. Read Dennis Prager’s commentary on Genesis. God saved Noah because he was righteous “in his time”! Meaning God was comparing him just to his contemporaries not to people in any other time.

      @donelmore2540@donelmore25402 ай бұрын
    • @taterbug3358 Sharecropping is not slavery, it's another name for tenant farming. Indentured servants were temporary slaves who were given a small stipend or settlement after release. Indentured servatude was a type of prison sentence given to British people for lower level property crimes. Indentured servatude was also a way for poor British people to come to the U.S. (like how people pay Coyotes to cross the border today).

      @larynOneka8080@larynOneka80802 ай бұрын
    • @@larynOneka8080 Where did I say share cropping was slavery? I said what the person above me was trying to describe (former slaves being paid to do the same or similar work) was share cropping.

      @taterbug3358@taterbug33582 ай бұрын
  • Wow! What a powerful story and extraordinary effort. These stories cry out to be heard.

    @judyfargo8162@judyfargo81622 ай бұрын
  • I did not expect to be so emotional when I heard this. I had to pause it because I was about to cry.

    @breezygodiva503@breezygodiva5032 ай бұрын
  • Discovering rare audio of enslaved people is an incredibly powerful and moving experience. It's a poignant reminder of the resilience and strength of the human spirit, even in the face of unimaginable hardships. These voices from the past offer us a direct link to history, allowing us to hear firsthand accounts that textbooks simply can't convey. It's crucial that we listen, learn, and reflect on these stories to understand the full scope of history and to ensure that the lessons learned are carried forward into the present and future. What an invaluable treasure to be able to connect with the past in such a direct and impactful way.

    @redpatriotnews@redpatriotnews2 ай бұрын
    • That’s the difference between societies that thrive and those that stay behind. Learning from the past, and think about a better future.

      @gilberttorres8@gilberttorres82 ай бұрын
  • This is how we make sure history doesn't repeat itself.

    @shutinalley@shutinalley2 ай бұрын
    • What? You gotta whole boss(master) and are a whole slave(worker laborer employee). Your ancestors slaved for themselves and their families just as you do . . . but, oh yeah, they had an earth soil portion(land) and were also self sufficient, unlike you. Every aspect of your life is provided for by someone else. Right? Riiiight? Do the right thing.

      @CentralParkBoogie@CentralParkBoogie2 ай бұрын
    • Bingo!

      @LoveJewelsmusic@LoveJewelsmusic2 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for this touching, informative story.

    @starrcooperagbeko6869@starrcooperagbeko68692 ай бұрын
  • I have chills listening to this. These are the stories you never hear about from the direct source. ❤

    @ItsKeneisha@ItsKeneisha2 ай бұрын
  • This was extremely moving. The gentleman hearing his great grandmother's voice from an earlier time, almost brought me to tears to imagine the images going through his mind. I wish every success to this effort and to the descendents fortunate enough to makes the connections. And the two spokespersons articulating so well the meaningfulness of their program, in particular the equally important story of strength and survival in the culture of slaves as individuals.

    @RonniesRambles@RonniesRambles2 ай бұрын
    • Especially considering the years of cultural erasure, and erasure of family ties over decades and centuries, I can’t imagine the power and profundity in that moment.

      @rabblerousin8981@rabblerousin89812 ай бұрын
    • My index finger following the course of one tear from my eye to my cheek. Images? Do the right thing.

      @CentralParkBoogie@CentralParkBoogie2 ай бұрын
  • A book called A Slave No More talks about how most of the existing diaries and other such recollections that managed to be created during slavery were searched for and destroyed during the Reconstruction. The book was based on two diaries that managed to survive. Highly recommend checking the book out if you found this interview interesting.

    @njay4361@njay43612 ай бұрын
    • So the destruction of black history continues today with the republicans & descendants of SLAVERS, who want to enslave and control our bodies and our right to vote and our right to freedom of expression through our hair and our right to know and learn our histroy in public education.

      @djoy4ly317@djoy4ly31724 күн бұрын
  • My Daddy lived through the Jim Crow period and told me stories about his life in the South before he moved North. He even picked cotton as a small child. He died years ago at the age of 91. I carry a part of his history in my heart.

    @Doris-ip1dw@Doris-ip1dwАй бұрын
    • I’m so sorry

      @jillianbaker8442@jillianbaker844221 күн бұрын
  • Its crazy how America loves to prop these images and audio of the past up with a sense of honor and pride but runs when it comes to correcting these wrongs in the present. Make it make sense.

    @TervellLive@TervellLive2 ай бұрын
    • All they want is the racial groups fighting so we dont look and see when they steal most our money in taxes and poison our food and kill citizens both foreign and domestic. They dont care about fixing problems. If they did they wouldnt force us all together in this absurd empire known as the US and let us all each live in peace among our own people.

      @johnnoon9999@johnnoon99992 ай бұрын
    • The first correction is to get all of you to learn your own family stories and remember words have meanings, like for instance: Slave means, worker, laborer, employee. Do the right thing.

      @CentralParkBoogie@CentralParkBoogie2 ай бұрын
    • Like reparations? Cause those don’t make much sense tbh, why should someone be compensated for something that happened 150 years ago?

      @onesaucynougat7471@onesaucynougat74712 ай бұрын
    • Preach!

      @jayoh4542@jayoh45422 ай бұрын
    • ​If the person recorded it in 1970s how is that hundred years ago and not at that time and now someone grandmother? Plus the lady lived I Jim c era ​@@onesaucynougat7471

      @MikeJones-ll2qh@MikeJones-ll2qh2 ай бұрын
  • I have a duality in my feelings. One is anger while the other being compassion, and empathy. It is amazing that African Americans have survived and are still on their way in such a beautiful yet hostile place filled brutal bigots. 🇺🇲

    @no1onu2be19@no1onu2be192 ай бұрын
    • What “hostile place filled (with) brutal bigots”? People from Africa and the Caribbean flock to the US and are very successful! If it was a “hostile place filled (with) brutal bigots” why would they come and how did they become so successful? Read or listen to Thomas Sowell the brilliant black economist tell the history of slavery in the world!

      @donelmore2540@donelmore25402 ай бұрын
    • What are you talking about? If the US was filled with bigots so many people of color wouldn’t be successful and flocking to the US

      @itsfrankieg5816@itsfrankieg58162 ай бұрын
    • Until white people of today agree to pay reparations to the descendants of slavery, they will always be seen as slave masters themselves worthy of all the pain and poverty that the slaves endured!

      @BishopEddie5443@BishopEddie54432 ай бұрын
    • @@donelmore2540 your IQ is -5

      @Detroitplayer313@Detroitplayer3132 ай бұрын
    • @@donelmore2540 bad take, why so divisive?

      @CraigTilfordJr@CraigTilfordJr2 ай бұрын
  • This is an important gem and piece of history. Very visceral.

    @tds7078@tds7078Ай бұрын
  • These recording are so important they are priceless. To fully understand ourselves, we need to learn about this, even though it's not pretty and might be uncomfortable for some. To hear these stories is just incredible.

    @brianbeauchaine2597@brianbeauchaine2597Ай бұрын
  • Their voices sound so sweet. ♥ Such kind hearted people ♥

    @Mely365@Mely3652 ай бұрын
  • had no idea audio recordings of former slaves existed but this story highlights some that were discovered and just how rare, insightful, and historic these are. Awesome work!

    @PratikParija@PratikParija2 ай бұрын
    • BLACK AMERICANS JUST GOT CIVIL RIGHTS 60 YEARS AGO AND PAVED THE WAY FOR OTHER IMMIGRANTS TO COME. THEY ARE THE MORAL OF AMERICA.. THE TRUE PATRIOTS OF FREEDOM AND JUSTICE.. NOT THE RACIST LAND STEALING EUROPEAN SO CALLED AMERICAN.. THE BLACK AMERICAN

      @Facts-Over-Feelings@Facts-Over-Feelings2 ай бұрын
    • Yea wasn't so long ago now huh

      @Jay-jb2vr@Jay-jb2vr2 ай бұрын
    • Do a deeper dive on KZhead. We have voices of slaves and former civil war soldier. It’s very interesting to hear how they speak. It’s not the best quality as time has ruined the recordings. But they are interesting.

      @Almighthaze@Almighthaze2 ай бұрын
    • It’s a lot already on KZhead

      @southernphunk@southernphunk2 ай бұрын
    • Also, sadly, how recent slavery was. Being born in 1988 it’s seemed like history like the pyramids are part of history. Now that I’m old enough to see how quickly a decade passes, I realize that this was just moments ago in our cultural history.

      @rabblerousin8981@rabblerousin89812 ай бұрын
  • This is so amazing.

    @kylesanders5999@kylesanders59992 ай бұрын
  • These are amazing! Its one thing to read about slavery but actually to LISTEN, hear a voice makes it so much more real

    @virginialeonor1144@virginialeonor1144Ай бұрын
  • I can't imagine living to be 114 yrs old and still code switching.

    @briggsneal1016@briggsneal10162 ай бұрын
    • Whole life been hell

      @grassfedcharlie@grassfedcharlie2 ай бұрын
    • Stop it AI, I know a AI comment when I see one. "Code Switching" gave it away, stop playing AI. Do the right thing.

      @CentralParkBoogie@CentralParkBoogie2 ай бұрын
    • @@grassfedcharlie Your ancestors are turning in their graves at the thought of their descendants saying they lived a life of hell but created a great family. Do the right thing.

      @CentralParkBoogie@CentralParkBoogie2 ай бұрын
    • @@CentralParkBoogie you got all of that from 4 words? Don’t put words in my mouth. U giving me way too much power. Relax

      @grassfedcharlie@grassfedcharlie2 ай бұрын
    • ​@@CentralParkBoogiei cant believe you dont know what code switching means cuz its been around longer than AI

      @HighAsHeckPriestess@HighAsHeckPriestess2 ай бұрын
  • She was alive when honest Abe was president. Imagine back in the day in her prime if she ever went to DC to the Lincoln memorial and told people she was there when Abe was breathing 🤯

    @realtawandrew@realtawandrew2 ай бұрын
  • Love this. Thanks!

    @mckenleymason1212@mckenleymason1212Ай бұрын
  • I have an audio of my great grandmother being interviewed. We can't make it out. It's about an hr long. She was born in the 1880s

    @Meech1000@Meech10002 ай бұрын
  • The strongest, most resilient, and shrewd people on earth.

    @architecture.w@architecture.w2 ай бұрын
    • Who are those people? Who are your people? Do the right thing.

      @CentralParkBoogie@CentralParkBoogie2 ай бұрын
  • Surreal to hear my ancestors in this way.. disturbing

    @JJ_Magnificent@JJ_Magnificent2 ай бұрын
    • Very much so.

      @SparkleInYourEyes2024@SparkleInYourEyes20242 ай бұрын
    • To hear them in what way? Do the right thing.

      @CentralParkBoogie@CentralParkBoogie2 ай бұрын
  • Wow! This is heartbreaking but truly amazing that he is now free. I will never stop teaching my son about slavery. It’s apart of history that should never be forgotten.

    @rialequay1787@rialequay1787Ай бұрын
  • I’ll definitely be joining this project! I knew my great grandmother she passed away when I was 15. And my great great grandmother passed away a few months after I was born. She had pictures of her parents and said they use to tell her stories about how they were slaves. My great grandmother was a wonderful woman she was there in Alabama with MLK when they were marching across the bridge

    @edwardjones7313@edwardjones73132 ай бұрын
  • Absolutely amazing! The best point is that they survived, so that we could be here. So much power in that!

    @trentonsgamingchannel1671@trentonsgamingchannel16712 ай бұрын
    • For real. When we hear of a library burning, like in Egypt or Iraq, it’s a crime against humanity. This history is precious.

      @rabblerousin8981@rabblerousin89812 ай бұрын
  • They were just like us. Never forget the brutality that went on for centuries right here where we rest our heads at night…

    @MISSMADISONMEDIA@MISSMADISONMEDIA2 ай бұрын
  • Wow. So difficult to listen to, but so important.

    @lisargiles@lisargilesАй бұрын
  • amazing to hear the voice of someone from so long ago so clearly. i love history.

    @Waya420@Waya42013 күн бұрын
  • That's incredibly powerful. Connecting with history through the voices of those who experienced it firsthand brings a depth and authenticity that written records alone can't achieve. It's a poignant reminder of the resilience and strength found in the human spirit, and how important it is to remember and learn from the past. These audio recordings serve as a bridge, allowing us to hear the reality of their experiences, and ensuring their stories continue to impact and inform future generations. What a valuable resource for deepening our understanding and empathy.

    @redpatriotnews@redpatriotnews2 ай бұрын
  • THANK YOU❤

    @monicanixon5140@monicanixon514016 күн бұрын
  • So amazing to hear this history! I hope my generation can learn more

    @SnickerPack@SnickerPack2 ай бұрын
  • My grandma is 96 and was a daughter of a share cropper, she herself worked In the fields. She has severe arthritis in her hands because of it, she can barley move them. I say this because the effects of slavery are still part of many black peoples lives in this present day.

    @misha2652@misha26522 ай бұрын
    • Yup, my grandparents were sharecroppers.

      @UnfilteredAmerica@UnfilteredAmerica2 ай бұрын
    • They had they own stuff not slaves

      @ashash6509@ashash65092 ай бұрын
    • Same mine too

      @muraismybby4617@muraismybby46172 ай бұрын
    • Not black you mean Isrealites and we're still in the land of our enemies Deuteronomy 28:64-68. The whole chapter of Deuteronomy from verse 15-68 foretold what would happened if our forefathers disobeyed The Most High Yah. Everything was stripped from us we call The Most High Yah, God instead of by HIS name and identity ourselves as a color instead by our tribe/nationality.

      @RicardoSilvas-uq6wn@RicardoSilvas-uq6wn2 ай бұрын
    • She has arthritis from labor, yours will come from hitting keys on a laptop. Do the right thing.

      @CentralParkBoogie@CentralParkBoogie2 ай бұрын
  • ‘To understand freedom, you have to understand what it was like for those deprived of freedom’. So true!

    @SeaTurtle515@SeaTurtle5152 ай бұрын
    • Huh? So you're free? You pay for water, you pay to live on planet earth, you pay someone else for your food, your pay for heat/fire, you pay someone else for your clothes, you get permission to travel on earth that's paved with concrete, you are paid fiat currency for your time/freedom. . . does this sound like freedom? Do the right thing.

      @CentralParkBoogie@CentralParkBoogie2 ай бұрын
    • @@CentralParkBoogie The monetary system and the paying for goods started with pre-historic man. Commodities are not free. I am talking about freedom to pursue an education or a career, to express yourself through art or dress, to be able to go on a road trip, to vote your conscious; the many everyday freedoms, small and big, that we as Americans enjoy and take for granted.

      @SeaTurtle515@SeaTurtle5152 ай бұрын
    • @@SeaTurtle515 Wait, wait, wait, wait, water is a commodity? Haaaaa . . . we all come from the womb of a woman and you think it's ok to pay another man for water, pay another man to live on earth. I'm not sure you're deprogrammed enough for this natural dialogue with me. Do the right thing.

      @CentralParkBoogie@CentralParkBoogie2 ай бұрын
    • @@SeaTurtle515 Yes, yes, yes, trading has always existed, probably, ok, you're trading your time/freedom for fiat currency(70%linen30%cotton), fiat currency is not money, it doesn't have a store of value. So, you, we, sacrifice out time/freedom for fiat currency to use to trade for all manner of things that we no longer produce within our own families, all manner of life necessities, water, shelter, food, etc. And now everyone is soooo exited about not even receiving the fiat currency, everyone would rather be compensated with numbers on a screen: "digital currency" YES! You say, Free to be educated? Educate is synonymous with nurture and nourish, which our parents should do, but they have failed us in this way by sending us to be educated/nurtured/nourished by complete strangers from 3months-3yrs old until 17-21 yrs old. And what do you learn, what kind of education do you get? Do most know how to start a fire? Do most learn horticulture and herbology? Do most learn to hunt and cure hides? Do most learn to make their own clothes? Do most learn to build their own dwellings? Do most learn how to make paper to wipe their own @$$? Express yourself through art and dress, prove your 6th great grandparents didn't do this . . . black/african Americans properly Americans have a rich culture of expression, it's the culture that we live in daily. It's the culture of expression that every foreigner who comes here tries to assimilate into. Free to have a career, more slavery, working, being an employee for what? For what? To live in a way that someone else takes care of your every need and want? Go on a trip? Yeah right now, only after needing a drivers license, or passport, or getting massage searched by tsa, or a little while ago presenting your freedom papers before flying. We, Americans, I, as an American don't take anything for granted and am appalled at being a whole infant, relying on others to take care of my ever need and want. Do the right thing.

      @CentralParkBoogie@CentralParkBoogie2 ай бұрын
    • ​@@SeaTurtle515 none of those things u mentioned is free.

      @IllIlIIllIlIIIll@IllIlIIllIlIIIll2 ай бұрын
  • They have a lot of these recordings online. I even found an interview that my great great grandfathers sister had about them growing up as slaves. It was truly helpful in connecting my family tree.

    @MzCandyApple5683@MzCandyApple5683Ай бұрын
  • Good morning Brian and all weather family. Thanks for your dedicated forecasts. A safe and blessed day everyone. 🫂❤️🫂❤️🫂 🇱🇨🙌🇱🇨🙌🇱🇨

    @andreiaanthony6659@andreiaanthony66592 ай бұрын
  • Context is so important. We need to record the accounts of the descendants and what they were told by their family members who survived slavery. It sounds like they probably got a more complete account than the white interviewers ever could. Also, sharecropping was a form of slavery that lasted a lot longer than slavery did. These survivors still live amongst us.

    @AC-hu5tg@AC-hu5tg2 ай бұрын
    • I'm one of those descendants, I'm 62, I can tell you real stories I learned and heard. my great great grandfather lived til age 106. He was brought into the US from Africa at the age of 8 years old. He remembered his village in Africa, he remembered the people and faces on the ship and how long it took to get to the Mississippi river. He remembered his Owners family and two sons that fought in the civil war. He described in writing how he felt and the anger he held onto when his son died in the civil war. When he was freed in 1865 he took the name of Afrix Afrix, first and last name. He wanted to remember his home, his birth, his family that he never saw again. He described how he was helped at 8 years old by two slave men that protected him until he was sold at 13 years old. My aunt alive today at 92 still talk abouther parents and what they passed down to her.

      @melissadenbo2461@melissadenbo24612 ай бұрын
    • So true

      @AmericaEnd@AmericaEnd2 ай бұрын
    • @@melissadenbo2461 That is an incredible account. Thank you so much for sharing Melissa.

      @AC-hu5tg@AC-hu5tg2 ай бұрын
    • ​@@melissadenbo2461 This is a rare account and i appreciate you sharing. However, most of the so called blacks today were enslaved on their own land which means the majority were already here. Less than 200,000 people were brought here. It wasn't in the millions at all. History has truly been distorted. The real American Autochthon Copper Colored Indians are the so called blacks. Your guv'ment knows this.

      @iamshebeeloloindigenous@iamshebeeloloindigenous2 ай бұрын
    • We were sharecroppers with another family but not slaves and we owned our land until it was stolen by the guv'ment through imminent domain. Our family knows we are the American Indians as most of the so called blacks are. The guv'ment knows who we are. No other people has been reclassified like we have been. Ask yourself why. Were not Africans. Black history is American history and we don't need 1 month out of the year to be recognized. All history has been rewritten including the history of most Caucasians. We all need to wake up to the lies.

      @iamshebeeloloindigenous@iamshebeeloloindigenous2 ай бұрын
  • I’m from the Mississippi delta and my 2nd grandmother was born a slave but later freed but her mom passed away as a slave . Idk why people act like slavery was so long ago. I’m familiar with the mound bayou area as well. Our towns are majority blk .

    @imissy2013@imissy20132 ай бұрын
    • Until white people of today agree to pay reparations to the descendants of slavery, they will always be seen as slave masters themselves worthy of all the pain and poverty that the slaves endured!

      @BishopEddie5443@BishopEddie54432 ай бұрын
    • Yep. My grandmother was a ‘sharecropper’. She had no other means of making money but going back to work the fields. Her parents were slaves. That’s just two generations ago. Jim Crow laws were abolished in 1964 my dad was in his 20s. My mom was in high school when California desegregated their schools. She and several siblings were bused across town and they were not happy about it. I am a descendent of slaves.

      @Jujubean9795@Jujubean97952 ай бұрын
    • My third grandparents were too!!!!

      @CurlMvrck@CurlMvrck2 ай бұрын
    • @@Jujubean9795 yes all of them were sharecroppers. One of my uncles just retired from being a sharecropper since he dropped out of school back then in like 4-5 th grade to work as a sharecropper . It’s not long ago idk why America makes it seem like it is.

      @imissy2013@imissy20132 ай бұрын
    • @@CurlMvrck we must remember them no matter what this country says

      @imissy2013@imissy20132 ай бұрын
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