Brittany Talissa King: Black American is an ethnicity, a triumph story

Brittany Talissa King

By Brittany Talissa King
Guest Columnist

As Black History Month is commemorated, the question, “Why Should We Celebrate Black History Month?” seems less and less rhetorical as our cultural conversations become more divided.

Currently, there’s a public debate on whether this holiday is celebratory or “segregationist.” And the parley seems to start with our opposing opinions regarding the term “Black.” And funny enough, each position has utilized the exact historical figure to vindicate their argument against the other — Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

So, who better to clarify the term “Black” than King himself. Let’s go back to the 1950s, from a pulpit in the South, when Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. made an enthusiastic address to the Black American community.

Martin explained, “If the (Black American) is to be free, (you) must move down into the inner resources of (your) own soul and sign with a pen and ink,” expounding that “no document can do this for us.” Here, King illustrates personal freedom from racial identity. But before I elaborate on that point, let me share his concluding statement. “Be proud of our heritage,” he said, “I’m Black, and I’m proud of it. I’m Black and beautiful!” King didn’t double-speak here. He is very clear. Lay down your racial identity, be proud of your ethnicity.

There’s a difference between these identities. As someone can be “white” and “Scottish” or “white” and “Swedish,” or “Black” and “Nigerian,” the same goes for “Black” and “Black American.” Our race is what marked us without our consent after African people were stolen from their original homes and enslaved as property in America. They were not a homologous group. They were grouped together with no legal identity and orphaned from their native ethnicities.

But legally succeeding the Emancipation Proclamation, a new community cultivated a new heritage, despite the country’s original plans. In 1926, historian Carter G. Woodson pioneered this holiday, originally as Negro History Week, as homage to the struggles and accomplishments of Black Americans. To honor our impossible trajectory from property for this nation to citizens of it. Black History Month doesn’t memorialize race. It celebrates the impossible that transpired despite it.

Who wouldn’t want to celebrate that?

Brittany Talissa King is a Columbus native, a writer, essayist and journalist who explores race and social issues through history and pop culture. She is a featured writer on Medium.com and hosts “American Shade with Brittany King” on YouTube. Her work has appeared in The Republic, The Daily Beast, NBC and elsewhere. She holds a master’s degree in journalism from New York University and a bachelor’s degree from Indiana University. Send comments to [email protected]