Jump to content

Movement for Black Lives

Ɛfi Wikipedia

Wɔatwerɛ nsɛm wei wɔ Asante Twi mu

The Movement for Black Lives (M4BL) yɛ kuo bi a ɛborɔ akuo aduonum a ɛgyina hɔ ma abibifoɔ a wɔwɔ United States a wɔhyehyɛɛ no wɔ Ɔpɛnimaa mpem-abien-na-du-anan mu[1]. N'afo no bi ne Abibifo asetena ho hia nɛtwɛke, ɔman nhyiam a abibifo mmaranimfo yɛ, ne Ella Baker beae a wɔhwɛ nnipa hokwan ahorow so[2]. Akuwo bi te sɛ kɔla a ɛsakra, Race Forward, Brooklyn Movement Center, PolicyLink, mmea ɔpepem pii nantew Cleveland, ne ONE DC, na wɔtaa wɔn akyi[3], na ahyehyɛdeɛ bi a wɔfrɛ no anomaa tuntum nso taa wɔn akyi[4].

Wɔ Kutawonsa aduonu-nnan, mpem-abien-na-du-anum mu no, nnipakuw no hyiae wɔ Cleveland State University, faako a nnipa bɛyɛ apem-na-aha-anum ne mpem-abien boaboaa wɔn ho ano wɔ hɔ yɛɛ baguam nkɔmmɔbɔ. Nhyiam no dii kan bɔɔ mmɔden sɛ "wɔbɛhyehyɛ akwan a wɔbɛfa so ama Black Lives Movement no de ato mmara a wɔde di dwuma no so wɔ ɔman no mu"[5][6][7]. Nanso, nhyiamu no maa wonyaa fekuw bi a emu yɛ duru koraa. Wɔ nhyiam a ɛkɔɔ so nnansa no awiei, wɔ Kutawonsa aduonu-nsia, Movement for abibifo nkoa fii ase yɛɛ "ɔkwan a wɔbɛfa so ato nsa afrɛ amantam ne ɔmanfo akuw ahorow ma wɔayɛ United Front"[5]. Saa afe no mu no, wɔhyehyɛɛ nhyiamu bi a wɔde botae ahodoɔ, ahwehwɛde, ne nhyehyɛe ahorow a Kankabi a wɔde hwehwɛ abibifo nkwa ho hia taa akyi no, na ama wɔatumi "agye" abibifo a wɔwɔ Amerika nyinaa[8].

George Floyd awudi akyi no, M4BL yii BREATHE Act adi, a ɛhwehwɛ sɛ wɔyɛ mmara mu nsakrae a ɛfa polisi adwuma ho. Nhyehyɛe no mu no, na wɔhwehwɛ sɛ wɔtwe wɔn ho fi polisi adwuma no ho na wɔde sika no kɔdi dwuma foforo wɔ ɔman no mu[9]. Wɔ afe mpem-abien-na-aduonu mu no, Movement for Black Lives yii amanyɔsɛm a ɛhwehwɛ sɛ wɔde di dwuma wɔ COVID-19 yare no ho dwuma[10].

Ɛkuo ahodoɔ

[sesa]

Deva Woodly, a ɔyɛ amanyɔsɛm ho ɔbenfo wɔ SUKUU FOFORO no kaa Black Lives Movement ho asɛm wɔ George Floyd ne n'akyinnyegye no mu sɛ "nhyehyɛe bi a ɛbom yɛ nnwumakuw ahorow a wɔabɔ wɔn ho ban wɔ ɔman no mu" a ɛmaa nnipa tumi "hyiaa nsɛnkyerɛne a ɛwɔ ɔhaw a ɛrekɔ so nnɛ no ne nea ɛde ba no"[11].

Sika a wɔde ma ne nnwumakuo mmoa a wɔde ma

[sesa]

Berɛ a nnipakuo no tintim wɔn nhyehyɛeɛ wɔ afe mpem-abien-na-du-asia mu akyi berɛ tiaa bi no, na ahyehyɛdeɛ ahodoɔ aduonum atwerɛ wɔn din sɛ wɔreboa wɔn. Adwuma titiriw biako a wɔyɛe ne adɔe kuw Borealis Philanthropy a wɔde too gua a wɔfrɛ no Black-Led Movement Fund (BLMF). BLMF no yɛ ntoboa a wɔde boa M4BL adwuma no, na ne botae ne sɛ wɔde $100 million bɛboa M4BL, na ɛno nso yɛ nhyehyɛe a wɔde boa M4BL ma wonya ahyehyɛde no mu ahoɔden[12].

Baabi menyaa mmoa firiiɛ

[sesa]
  1. Patrice D. Rankine (2020-01-16), "Classics for All?", Classicisms in the Black Atlantic, Oxford University Press, pp. 267–290, ISBN 978-0-19-881412-2, retrieved 2025-06-18
  2. Matthew J. Cressler (2021-08-15), "A Secular Civil Rights Movement?:", Race, Religion, and Black Lives Matter, Vanderbilt University Press, pp. 17–38, retrieved 2025-06-18
  3. "Telling History on the Landscape", Challenges to Equality: Poverty and Race in America, Routledge, pp. 45–50, 2016-09-16, ISBN 978-1-315-29157-4, retrieved 2025-06-18
  4. "Black Lives Matter Times", Change Agent Church in Black Lives Matter Times, pp. 63–132, 2020, doi:10.5040/9781978720541.ch-001, retrieved 2025-06-18
  5. 1 2 Matthew J. Cressler (2021-08-15), "A Secular Civil Rights Movement?:", Race, Religion, and Black Lives Matter, Vanderbilt University Press, pp. 17–38, retrieved 2025-06-18
  6. Clara Mary Jane Clairmont to Jane Johnson [née Cleveland], Friday, 14 March 1828 [claiclJH0010248a1c], 2025-03, retrieved 2025-06-18 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  7. "THE MARCH ON WASHINGTON FOR JOBS AND FREEDOM", Nothing but Love in God’s Water, Penn State University Press, pp. 91–102, 2017-04-28, retrieved 2025-06-18
  8. Matthew J. Cressler (2021-08-15), "A Secular Civil Rights Movement?:", Race, Religion, and Black Lives Matter, Vanderbilt University Press, pp. 17–38, retrieved 2025-06-18
  9. Lexie Byrd (2020-07-01), Nuclear Fuel Cycle and Supply Chain (NFCSC) Technical Monthly July FY-20, retrieved 2025-06-18
  10. "COVID-19 updates: 18 March 2020 – 3 April 2020", The Pharmaceutical Journal, 2020, doi:10.1211/pj.2020.20207894, ISSN 2053-6186, retrieved 2025-06-18
  11. Deva R. Woodly (2023-07-06), "Progressive and Reform Prosecutors", Reckoning, Oxford University PressNew York, pp. 237–242, ISBN 0-19-760394-7, retrieved 2025-06-18
  12. Abimbola A. Adelakun (2019-04-14), "Black Lives Matter! Nigerian Lives Matter!: Language and Why Black Performance Matters", Genealogy, vol. 3, no. 2, p. 19, doi:10.3390/genealogy3020019, ISSN 2313-5778, retrieved 2025-06-18