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Louise had an emotional breakdown several years after the death of her husband and was committed to a mental institution. Her children were split up amongst various foster homes and orphanages.\n\nMalcolm was a smart, focused student and graduated from junior high at the top of his class. However, when a favorite teacher told Malcolm his dream of becoming a lawyer was no realistic goal for a nigger, Malcolm lost interest in school. He dropped out, spent some time in Boston, Massachusetts working various odd jobs, and then traveled to Harlem, New York where he committed petty crimes. By 1942 Malcolm was coordinating various narcotic, prostitution and gambling rings. \n\nEventually Malcolm and his buddy, Malcolm Shorty Jarvis, moved back to Boston, where they were arrested and convicted on burglary charges in 1946. Malcolm placated himself by using the seven-year prison sentence to further his education. It was during this period of self-enlightenment that Malcolms brother Reginald visited and discussed his recent conversion to the Muslim religious organization the Nation of Islam. Intrigued, Malcolm studied the teachings of Nation of Islam leader Elijah Muhammad. Muhammad taught that white society actively worked to keep African-Americans from","MaxDetailCharacters":0,"ImageUrl":"https://cdn.blackfacts.com/uploads/blackfacts/facts/2019/05/94978872-1d06-497c-aa86-e8aee199f8cc1.png","ImageHeight":570,"ImageWidth":1140,"ImageOrientation":"landscape","HasImage":true,"CssClass":"","Layout":"","Rowspan":1,"Colspan":1,"Likes":0,"Shares":0,"ContentSourceId":"00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000","SourceName":"Blackfacts.com","ContentSourceRootUrl":"https://blackfacts.com","IsSponsored":false,"HasSmallSponsorLogo":false,"EffectiveDate":"1925-05-19T00:00:00","HasEffectiveDate":true,"Year":1925,"Month":5,"Day":19,"LastUpdatedDate":"2023-11-25T05:14:39.027","IsEditable":false,"InsertAd":false,"Id":1256,"FactUId":"85c18995-6886-4007-893c-04d340222656","Slug":"malcolm-x-born-in-omaha-nebraska","FactType":"Event","Title":"Malcolm X born in Omaha, Nebraska","LocalFactUrl":"/fact/malcolm-x-born-in-omaha-nebraska","ResultCount":-1,"SearchType":"Today"},{"FadeSummary":false,"SummaryText":"On May 19, 2017, New Orleans, Louisiana Mayor Mitch Landrieu addressed an audience in his city as a backdrop and explanation of the city\u2019s recent decision to remove statutes of General Robert E. Lee and other Confederate military and political leaders from public squares in New Orleans.\u00A0 His speech appears below.\nThank you for coming.\nThe soul of our beloved City is deeply rooted in a history that has evolved over thousands of years; rooted in a diverse people who have been here together every step of the way \u2013 for both good and for ill.\nIt is a history that holds in its heart the stories of Native Americans: the Choctaw, Houma Nation, the Chitimacha.\u00A0Of Hernando de Soto, Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, the Acadians, the Islenos, the enslaved people from Senegambia, Free People of Color, the Haitians, the Germans, both the empires of France and Spain. The Italians, the Irish, the Cubans, the south and central Americans, the Vietnamese and so many more.\nYou see: New Orleans is truly a city of many nations, a melting pot, a bubbling cauldron of many cultures.\nThere is no other place quite like it in the world that so eloquently exemplifies the uniquely American motto: e pluribus unum\u2014out of many we are one.\nBut there are also other truths about our city that we must confront.\u00A0New Orleans was America\u2019s largest slave market: a port where hundreds of thousands of souls were brought, sold and shipped up the Mississippi River to lives of forced labor of misery of rape, of torture.\nAmerica was the place where nearly 4,000 of our fellow citizens were lynched, 540 alone in Louisiana; where the courts enshrined \u2018separate but equal\u2019; where Freedom riders coming to New Orleans were beaten to a bloody pulp.\nSo when people say to me that the monuments in question are history, well what I just described is real history as well, and it is the searing truth.\nAnd it immediately begs the questions: why there are no slave ship monuments, no prominent markers on public land to remember the lynchings or the slave blocks; nothing","MaxDetailCharacters":0,"ImageUrl":"https://cdn.blackfacts.com/uploads/blackfacts/facts/www.blackpast.org/files/new_orleans_mayor_mitch_landrieu_with_unidentified_child_in_a_city_sponsored_swim_program_for_youth__2016.jpg","ImageHeight":572,"ImageWidth":500,"ImageOrientation":"portrait","HasImage":true,"CssClass":"","Layout":"","Rowspan":1,"Colspan":1,"Likes":0,"Shares":0,"ContentSourceId":"de2ecbf0-5aa4-45ce-bbf9-9a6ac45f6ac8","SourceName":"Black Past","ContentSourceRootUrl":"https://www.blackpast.org/","IsSponsored":false,"HasSmallSponsorLogo":false,"EffectiveDate":"2017-05-19T00:00:00","HasEffectiveDate":true,"Year":2017,"Month":5,"Day":19,"LastUpdatedDate":"2023-11-25T05:14:39.027","LastUpdatedBy":"ExtractionBotHub","IsEditable":false,"InsertAd":false,"Id":6749,"FactUId":"ad5c999f-a9ef-47a2-8971-bfccf82746fe","Slug":"2017-new-orleans-mayor-mitch-landrieus-address-on-the-removal-of-confederate-monuments-in-new-orleans","FactType":"Event","Title":"(2017) New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu\u0027s Address on the Removal of Confederate Monuments in New Orleans","LocalFactUrl":"/fact/2017-new-orleans-mayor-mitch-landrieus-address-on-the-removal-of-confederate-monuments-in-new-orleans","ResultCount":-1,"SearchType":"Today"},{"FadeSummary":false,"SummaryText":"The granddaughter of a freed slave, Lorraine Vivian Hansberry was born on May 19, 1930, to a successful real estate broker and a school teacher who resided in Chicago, Illinois. In 1938, the family moved to a white neighborhood and was violently attacked by its inhabitants but the former refused to vacate the area until ordered to do so by the Supreme Court where the case was addressed as Hansberry v. Lee.\nBreaking her family\u2019s tradition of enrolling in Southern Black colleges, Hansberry took admission in the University of Wisconsin in Madison, changing her major from painting to writing. However, Hansberry only attended university for two years before dropping out and moving to New York City where she went to the New School for Social Research.\nWhile working as a part-time waitress and cashier, Hansberry worked as the writer and associate editor of the black newspaper, Freedom, from 1950 to 1953 under Paul Robeson. Three years later, Hansberry devoted all her attention towards writing joining the Daughters of Bilitis the year after. For their magazine, the Ladder, Hansberry contributed articles which talked of feminism and homophobia, revealing her homosexual nature. However, the writer adopted the initials of L.H. in order to avoid discrimination.\nHansberry wrote her first play, The Crystal Stair, during the same period, based on a struggling family in Chicago. The play was later renamed A Raisin in the Sun and was a great success at the Ethel Ballymore Theatre, having a total of 530 performances. The play was the first one to be produced on Broadway by an African-American woman and won an award at the Cannes Film Festival when its motion picture came out. The production also led Hansberry to become the first black playwright and the youngest American to win a New York Critics\u2019 Circle Award.\nLorraine Hansberry became involved in the Civil Rights Movement in 1963 and joined people like Lena Horne and James Baldwin to test Robert Kennedy\u2019s position on civil rights. 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The only poem you will hear will be the spearpoint pivoted in the punctured marrow of the villain....Therefore we are the last poets of the world.","MaxDetailCharacters":0,"ImageHeight":0,"ImageWidth":0,"ImageOrientation":"none","HasImage":false,"CssClass":"","Layout":"","Rowspan":1,"Colspan":1,"Likes":0,"Shares":0,"ContentSourceId":"00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000","SourceName":"Blackfacts.com","ContentSourceRootUrl":"https://blackfacts.com","SponsorId":"13790190-e894-478f-8414-793c9981f511","IsSponsored":true,"SponsorName":"National Black MBA Association (NBMBAA) Boston Professional Chapter","SmallSponsorLogoUrl":"24x24/nmmba-logo.jpg","SponsorUrl":"https://nbmbaa.org/nbmbaa-boston-chapter/","HasSmallSponsorLogo":true,"EffectiveDate":"1968-05-19T00:00:00","HasEffectiveDate":true,"Year":1968,"Month":5,"Day":19,"LastUpdatedDate":"2023-11-25T05:14:39.027","IsEditable":false,"InsertAd":false,"Id":3656,"FactUId":"92a02c4d-76a8-4073-a615-e5763114e61b","Slug":"poets","FactType":"Event","Title":"Poets","LocalFactUrl":"/fact/poets","ResultCount":-1,"SearchType":"Today"},{"FadeSummary":false,"SummaryText":"Willy T. 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