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Black Lives Matter

Ɛfi Wikipedia
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Wɔatwerɛ nsɛm wei wɔ Asante Twi mu

Black Lives Matter (BLM) yɛ amanyɔkuo[1] a wɔn botaeɛ ne sɛ wɔbɛtwe adwene asi nnipa mu nyiyim ne nnipa mu nyiyim a abibifoɔ hyia no so, na wɔaboa atu nnipa mu nyiyim so sa. Ne haw titire ne polisifoɔ ayakayakadeɛ ne basabasayɛ a ɛgyina nnipa atitire so a wɔyɛ tia abibifoɔ so[2][3][4][5][6]. Akwantuo no firii ase wɔ Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, Eric Garner, ne Rekia Boyd, ne afoforɔ a wokum wɔn no ho. BLM ne n'ahyehyɛde ahorow taa bɔ mmɔden sɛ wɔbɛsesa amammerɛ ahorow a ɛfa abibifoɔ fahodie ho[7] mmaransɛm mu nsakrae ho.

Protesters lying down over rail tracks with a "Black Lives Matter" banner
A Black Lives Matter die-in over rail tracks, protesting alleged police brutality in Saint Paul, Minnesota (September 20, 2015)

Berɛ a ahyehyɛde pɔtee bi a wɔfrɛ wɔn ho "Black Lives Matter", te sɛ Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation, wɔ hɔ no, nnipakuw no nyinaa yɛ nnipakuw a wɔnni tumi biara a wɔhwɛ wɔn so. Wɔ 2021 mu no, na adawurubɔfo bɛyɛ 40 wɔ United States ne Canada[1]. "Black Lives Matter" nkyerɛaseɛ no ankasa nni hɔ a nnipakuw biara agye ato mu[8].

Wɔ afe 2013 mu no, Alicia Garza, Patrisse Cullors, ne Ayọ Tometi bɔɔ hashtag #BlackLivesMatter wɔ social media so, bere a wɔyii George Zimmerman firii asotwe a wɔde bɔɔ Trayvon Martin a na ɔyɛ aberanteɛ a ɔyɛ Afrika-Amerikan no. Black Lives Matter nyaa ne din wɔ ɔman no mu esiane sɛ wɔtoo nnwonto wɔ mmɔnten so wɔ afe 2014 mu bere a Afrika Amerikafoɔ baanu a wɔn din de Michael Brown wui no. Eyi de basabasayɛ baeɛ wɔ Ferguson, Missouri, ne Eric Garner wɔ New York City[9][10]. Ɛfiri Ferguson atuateɛ no akyi no, wɔn a wɔakɔ atuateɛ no mu no ada adi atia Afrika Amerikafo afoforɔ pii a polisifo kunkum wɔn anaa wɔkyeree wɔn no. Wɔ afe 2015 ahohuru bere mu no, Black Lives Matter adwumayɛfo de wɔn ho hyɛɛ 2016 Amerika manpanyin abatoɔ no mu[11][12].

Hwɛ bio

[sesa]
  • Nkrataafa a wɔn din wɔ so a Black Lives Matter wɔ so
  • 2020 Amerika bɔɔlbɔfo atuateɛ
  • Black Panther Party
  • Commission to Study and Develop Reparation Proposals for African-Americans Act
  • Asasewosow § United States
  • The Hate U Give (novel ne sini)
  • Anatoɔ amammerɛ
  • Ɔkasa a wɔkasa tia wɔ United States
  • Wɔ United States no, wɔtaa di nkurɔfo awu
  • Nnipa mu nyiyim wɔ United States
  • Rodney King
  • Asiani Ɔtan
  • Gyae AAPI Ɔtan
  • Meyɛɛ Gyinae wɔ Baton Rouge
  • Woke
  • Decolonisation de l'espace public (fr)
  • Blaxit

Mmeaeɛ a menyaa mmoa firiiɛ

[sesa]
  1. 1.0 1.1 Dana Taylor, The Black Lives Matter movement: Has its moment passed? 5 Things podcast (in American English), retrieved 2025-06-21
  2. Brandon Hogan (2021-11-04), "What "Black Lives Matter" Should Mean", The Movement for Black Lives, Oxford University PressNew York, pp. 15–34, ISBN 0-19-750777-8, retrieved 2025-06-21
  3. Jason Breckenridge (2024), "Shackled Spirits: Historical Origins For Black Lives (Don't) Matter (to white supremacists) & Christianity's Role In Perpetuating Post-Traumatic Slave Syndrome", SSRN Electronic Journal, doi:10.2139/ssrn.4775476, ISSN 1556-5068, retrieved 2025-06-21
  4. Anique Jordan (2020-12-31), "22. Black Lives Matter—Toronto Freedom School", Until We Are Free, University of Regina Press, pp. 308–314, ISBN 978-0-88977-696-8, retrieved 2025-06-21
  5. Chloe Banks (2018-11-02), "Disciplining Black activism: post-racial rhetoric, public memory and decorum in news media framing of the Black Lives Matter movement", Continuum (in English), vol. 32, no. 6, pp. 709–720, doi:10.1080/10304312.2018.1525920, ISSN 1030-4312, retrieved 2025-06-21
  6. Fabio Rojas (2020-06-20), "Moving beyond the rhetoric: a comment on Szetela's critique of the Black Lives Matter movement", Ethnic and Racial Studies (in English), vol. 43, no. 8, pp. 1407–1413, doi:10.1080/01419870.2020.1718725, ISSN 0141-9870, retrieved 2025-06-21
  7. How Black Lives Matter Changed the Way Americans Fight for Freedom, retrieved 2025-06-21
  8. "Essential Questions", What You Need to Know about Diabetes, pp. xv–xviii, 2020, doi:10.5040/9798216034759.0007, retrieved 2025-06-21
  9. Wayne Au, Jesse Hagopian (2019-08-13), "How One Elementary School Sparked a Citywide Movement to Make Black Students' Lives Matter", Teaching When the World Is on Fire, The New Press, pp. 95–107, ISBN 978-1-62097-432-2, retrieved 2025-06-21
  10. Tanika Siscoe (2016-01-01), #BlackLivesMatter: This Generation?s Civil Rights Movement, retrieved 2025-06-21
  11. Smith, Robert (2021). "Black Lives Matter". Encyclopedia of African-American Politics, Third Edition. New York: Facts on File. pp. 122–126. ISBN 978-1-4381-9939-9.
  12. The BLM movement: What if, anything, changed? 5 Things podcast - USA Today