lpetrich
Contributor
There's a picture that's been going around on social media:
Ferguson Friday | Creative Resistance
Ferguson Friday | PopularResistance.Org
Photo by lelav89
Nicole Bonnet on Twitter: "Powerful statement in #Ferguson 1814, 1914 & 2014 . http://t.co/VUIbWOHvgE"
and other places, like Tumblr.
From right to left, it shows:
A black woman in a patterned shirt and a white ankle-length skirt wearing a chain, holding a placard saying "1814".
A black man wearing jeans and being bare-chested with a noose around his neck, holding a placard saying "1914".
A black woman waring an orange jumpsuit, holding a placard saying "2014".
All three had duct tape over their mouths. I quickly figured out what all three of them were representing, though I couldn't figure out the tape.
From the CreativeResistance page,
Ferguson Friday | Creative Resistance
Ferguson Friday | PopularResistance.Org
Photo by lelav89
Nicole Bonnet on Twitter: "Powerful statement in #Ferguson 1814, 1914 & 2014 . http://t.co/VUIbWOHvgE"
and other places, like Tumblr.
From right to left, it shows:
A black woman in a patterned shirt and a white ankle-length skirt wearing a chain, holding a placard saying "1814".
A black man wearing jeans and being bare-chested with a noose around his neck, holding a placard saying "1914".
A black woman waring an orange jumpsuit, holding a placard saying "2014".
All three had duct tape over their mouths. I quickly figured out what all three of them were representing, though I couldn't figure out the tape.
From the CreativeResistance page,
Genocide? That's Godwin territory. But overall, I think that it's a good capsule summary of the sort of indignities that US black people have suffered through over the centuries.Students Organizing for Unity and Liberation (SOUL) at University of Pennsylvania is engaging in a series of creative actions, held weekly on Fridays. ...
Police brutality is modern day lynching, state sanctioned murder. There are more Black men in prison today or under the watch of the criminal justice system than were enslaved in 1850. On October 24th, Gina Marie, Jamal Taylor and Breanna Moore portrayed slavery in 1814, lynching in 1914, and mass incarceration/prison industrial complex in 2014 to represent persistent acts of genocide against Black people. They wore tape over their mouths, symbolic of the silencing of African ancestors and brethren behind bars. “We will not be silent about our oppression.”
