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America Mourns the Passing of Toni Morrison, a ‘National Treasure’

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“We die. That may be the meaning of life. But we do language. That may be the measure of our lives.” Toni Morrison

For almost half a century, Toni Morrison has been known for wielding words like a weapon to awaken the sleeping conscience, sowing them as seeds to help the stunted grow and skillfully mixing them as a balm to help the wounded heal.

And though she may be gone, because of the words she left behind, she will never be silent.

Morrison, 88, died Monday night at Montefiore Medical Center in New York, publisher Alfred A. Knopf said.

Her family released this statement to the media: In a statement released by Princeton University, where she taught, the author’s family said that after a short illness, “our adored mother and grandmother, Toni Morrison, passed away peacefully last night surrounded by family and friends. She was an extremely devoted mother, grandmother, and aunt who reveled in being with her family and friends,” the statement said. “The consummate writer who treasured the written word, whether her own, her students or others, she read voraciously and was most at home when writing. Although her passing represents a tremendous loss, we are grateful she had a long, well lived life.”

On Tuesday, authors and artists, editors and historians as well as other luminaries pay tribute to the American author. They were joined by thousands of her readers on Facebook and Twitter who spoke of her lasting impact on their lives.

“In the beginning was the Word. Toni Morrison took the word and turned it into a Song of Solomon, Sula, Beloved, Mercy, Paradise, Love and more,” Oprah Winfrey tweeted. “She was a magician with language, who understood the Power of words. She used them to roil us, to wake us, to educate us and help us grapple with our deepest wounds and try to comprehend them. She was Empress-Supreme among writers. Long may her WORDS reign!”

Morrison, who was best known for her bestselling and Pulitzer Prize winning novel Beloved, has been a guide to others said Historian Henry Louis Gates Jr.

“For nearly half a century, we have been looking to Toni Morrison for guidance — to help us think, through literature, as we find our way through the world. With grace and wisdom, she respected, represented and rendered the beauty and complexity of the black experience,” Gates said, according to The New York Times.

Born Chloe Ardelia Wofford on February 18, 1931 in Lorain, Ohio. She became a Catholic when she was 12 years-old and was baptized as Anthony. She then gained the nickname, Toni. An avid reader, Morrison was a fan of Jane Austen and Leo Tolstoy. She grew up listening to her parents telling traditional African American folktales and ghost stories.

Before she wrote her first novel, Morrison was an editor who sought and found new voices, diverse voices – bringing black literature into the mainstream. She became Random House’s first black woman senior editor in the fiction department.

Among the books she worked on was Contemporary African Literature, a compilation of works that included contributions from Nigerian writer Chinua Achebe and South African playwright Athol Fugard. She also fostered a new generation of African American authors before taking her place among them.

Still, one of her best sellers was “The Black Book,” an anthology of artifacts that documents black life in America from the time of slavery to the 1970s. It included slave auction notices, lynching photos, blackface advertisements and a clipping from an 1856 newspaper, according to the Los Angeles Times.

It told the story of Margaret Garner, a runaway. As she was about to be captured, Garner killed her three children, believing death was preferable to captivity.

Morrison wondered what could lead a mother to commit such a crime. She answered that question with her bestselling novel about the legacy of slavery, Beloved, according to the LA Times.

But it wasn’t her first work.

“Toni was already 39 when she published her first novel, and she knew what she was doing,” Robert Gottlieb at Knopf said, according to The New York Times. “One of the remarkable qualities of “The Bluest Eye” is its calm confidence, “Sula” was perfect in structure and tone — like a superb sonnet. “Song of Solomon” was an explosion of energy and daring. “Beloved” was simply a masterpiece. And so, it went.”

Gottlieb would go on to edit most of Morrison’s novels. She also wrote Tar Baby, Jazz, A Mercy, Home and God Help the Child.

She also wrote children’s literature with the younger of her two sons, Slade Morrison, who died of pancreatic cancer in 2010 when he was 45. They include: The Big Box, The Book of Mean People, Peeny Butter Fudge and Please, Louise.

Morrison obtained her Bachelors of Arts from Howard University in 1953 and Masters of Arts degree from Cornell University two years later. She taught English at Texas Southern University in Houston and then at Howard, inspiring others.

She became the first black woman of any nationality to be awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature, which she obtained in 1993. And when Morrison was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, then-President Barack Obama said, “Toni Morrison’s prose brings us that kind of moral and emotional intensity that few writers ever attempt.”

After learning of her death, he shared a picture of her sitting in a chair in the White House, smiling as she looked up at him.

“Time is no match for Toni Morrison,” Obama said Tuesday on Facebook. “She sometimes toyed with it, warping and creasing it, bending it to her masterful will. In her life’s story, too, she treated time nontraditionally.

“Toni Morrison was a national treasure. Her writing was not just beautiful but meaningful – a challenge to our conscience and a call to greater empathy. She was as good a storyteller, as captivating, in person as she was on the page. And so even as Michelle and I mourn her loss and send our warmest sympathies to her family and friends, we know that her stories – that our stories- will always be with us, and with those who come after, and on and on, for all time.”

“What a gift to breathe the same air as her, if only for a while,” he tweeted.

 Author Tayari Jones said Morrison, “is the greatest chronicler of the American experience that we have ever known,” according to The New York Times. “Now that she is gone and we are facing a moral dilemma greater than any that I have seen in my lifetime, her Nobel acceptance speech is as haunting and urgent as ever. In that speech, she tells the story of an old woman who is taunted by a pack of boys who hold a bird. She is blind, but is known to have second sight, and they challenge her to tell her if the bird is alive or dead. The old woman says simply, ‘The bird is in your hands.’ And this in many ways could be her parting message to us now.”

Black History

Formerly All-Black School in Arkansas Works to Restore Campus

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In Arkansas a formerly all-Black school, Ouachita County Training School, has launched a national fundraising effort to restore the campus following its designation as a site on the National Register of Historic Places. One of the first corporate donations to OCTS, located in Bearden, Arkansas, came from the Katherine Anthony Foundation.

Anthony’s nephew, Steve, and CEO of Anthony Timberlands, presented a $10,000 check to the historic committee.

“We are happy to support the work of the Greater Bradley District Association and the Ouachita County Training School committee in their efforts to maintain the infrastructure and grounds of the training school, which is such an important part of the Bearden community,” Anthony said.

The National Park Service listed OCTS on the prestigious register in 2023.

“Since we received the news, we have been excited and motivated to raise the fund necessary to preserve this part of our history!” Virginia Ashley, committee president said. “We recognize the pivotal role OCTS played in educating several generations of young people who started right here and went on to contribute greatly to the Black middle class and the world.”    

The gift of education

For education advocates, December holds a special place in American history. During the Christmas Season in 1952, the Supreme Court first heard arguments to eliminate segregation in the nation’s public schools. But, it took two more years before the Court issued its landmark decision in Brown v. Board of Education, declaring segregation unconstitutional.

During the 1950s, OCTS educated Black students in the small southern town south of Little Rock, which became known internationally for The Little Rock Nine and their efforts to integrate Central High School. In Bearden, several Rosenwald Schools had consolidated to create the larger OCTS campus that educated students from the first through the 12th grades.

“I have such wonderful memories of my days as a student at OCTS,” recalled Pearlie Newton, a retired educator and executive director of the OCTS historic committee. “My dad helped pour concrete at the campus, my husband and I met there and it was in one of the classrooms that my goal to become an educator took shape.”

Despite the Supreme Court’s 1954 decision eliminating “separate but equal” schools, OCTS remained segregated until 1971 when it merged with the white school district in the area. An association of Black Baptist churches known as the Greater Bradley District Association purchased the campus for use as its headquarters.

Pastor and Association Moderator, Verna Thompson, said, “We are excited about the renovation and look forward to holding our church services and meetings in a modernized facility that holds so much historic significance.”

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Black History

America Heads Into the Last Mile of the 2024 Presidential Election

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With only a week until Election Day, Vice-President Kamala Harris and Donald Trump are holding their final campaign rallies and crisscrossing the battleground states. Both candidates know the importance of every vote, and they are rallying their base in the closing days.

Vickie Newton, founder of The Village Celebration and Love Black History, traces the history of Black voters in America on the eve of the historic 2024 presidential election.

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Black History

Coco Gauff Becomes the Youngest Flag Bearer in US Olympic History

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During the Paris Olympics Opening Ceremony, the female American flag bearer will be Coco Gauff, the 20-year-old tennis star. She will be the youngest flag bearer in American Olympic history. Basketball legend LeBron James has been selected as the male flag bearer.

Gauff said, “I was not expecting that.”

Delighted to be selected, Gauff admitted she has “no idea” what her assignment includes, adding, “I don’t know if there’s flag bearer-training I have to go to.”

James has been to the Olympics four times. He was part of U.S. teams that won bronze in 2004, gold at Beijing in 2008 and gold again in London in 2012.

But this will be his first time as the flag bearer.

He said, “It’s an absolute honor. I hope I continue to make my community proud and continue to make my family proud.”

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