Black History Fun Fact Friday – The Inspiration Behind “Renaissance”

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Since this is our last Black History Fun Fact of the year (There won’t be one next week. I will be on vacation), I decided to share my inspiration for the first book in my soon-to-be released novel series Renaissance: The Nora White Story.


renaissance-ebookDespite the wealth of information online, in books, and in movies, there’s still a misconception about what it meant to be black in the south and black in the north in the early 1900s. One recycled piece of information that no doubt holds some truth, is the mass movement of blacks who packed up and carried their southern roots north to escape Jim Crow and to acquire better financial opportunities. But not only were blacks escaping Jim Crow, but the north had a reputation of being prosperous and successful. This image largely shaped by the south’s brutal history.

Slavery is so much the outstanding feature of the South, in the unthinking view of it, that people often forget there had been slaves all over the U.S. Slaves were auctioned openly in the Market House of Philadelphia; in the shadow of Congregational churches in Rhode Island; in Boston taverns and warehouses; In Chicago and weekly, sometimes daily, in Merchant’s Coffee House of New York. The north has been painted as the picture of staunch abolitionism when in truth Northerners bought, sold, and owned slaves.

In the presence of such information, many blacks came to look at northern cities as a saving grace. Not only did it represent freedom from bondage, but discrimination in the north has always been so well organized that it did not have the same up close and the personal effect that the south had. The south was more brutal, more abusive, and more personal whereas the racism in the northern cities was sugar coated (I should use the present tense here).

Blacks then looked up to Harlem and Chicago and many in their hearts scorned their brothers and sisters in Mississippi and Alabama and Louisiana who picked cotton instead of sleep on the floor. Blacks opted to tread north to share rooms with rats and roaches in overcrowding apartment buildings while leaving an impression among their southern brethren that they were in the lands of milk and honey. And even when we returned, many of us maintained this air of superiority and this created a silent fuel between blacks in the south and blacks in the north.

Deep down southern blacks knew that northern blacks thought themselves too proud because they were in New York trying to live like white men but being black men without a pot to piss in, and a window to throw it out of. This was my inspiration behind The Nora White Story.

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Shaped by such views, Nora is not as appreciative of the sacrifices that her parents made as she should be. She’s naïve, pampered, and sees the North through the same eyes as many who came before her. Before and during The Harlem Renaissance, many black women tried to mimic the traditional image and role of white women. Many of them saw themselves as  elite and often tried to appear “white”. (Many black women lightened their skin or passed as white as portrayed in Book Two of The Stella Trilogy “Beyond The Colored Line” which you can read free HERE). Since the days of chattel slavery blacks have been faced with a constant reminder of America’s sweetheart.

Her blonde hair and blue eyes graced the workplace, newspapers, women’s magazines, and everywhere in their daily lives’. When the end of slavery happened and blacks were given the opportunity to escape the south, a symbol of their captivity, many adapted the model of the white world and white standards of beauty and not only beauty but the concept of success itself, that is to exude whiteness.

Nora is a descendant of freemen, not just slaves. Her family does not sharecrop but they own land, and Nora does not live in a shabby home in the middle of corn fields. This story, Nora’s story, is not of your stereotypical black southern family. Nora’s lineage is a prestigious one. The only question is, will she realize how good she’s got it before it’s gone?


book-and-e-reader-nora-wRenaissance: The Nora White Story Coming July 15-16, 2017

Meanwhile, The Road to Freedom is $0.99! Don’t miss out. Get your copy at this super low price now HERE.

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“Deeply concerned about the state of Black America, a fight with his brother compels a young Joseph to leave his mother’s house and join his friends for a trip to Atlanta for SNCC’s (Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee) second conference. Excited to live life on their own, Jo and his friends have left school and the lives they were living for a chance to become part of the movement. With no money and essentially no plan the seven friends, three black and four white, set out for the road when they are stopped by a racist cop who makes them exit the car. The teens are unaware that a mob of Klansmen also await them at the New Orleans bus terminal.”

Published by

Yecheilyah

Writing to restore Black historical truth through fiction, nonfiction, and poetry.

11 thoughts on “Black History Fun Fact Friday – The Inspiration Behind “Renaissance””

  1. Thank you for this post.
    It’s never too late to your eyes opened even wider.
    (I can’t recall where but I remember reading of some of the Freedom Riders of the 50s/60s taking part in a march through Chicago and reporting they have never encountered such visceral hatred from white residents)

    Liked by 1 person

      1. Racism…I just don’t get it
        Of course it’s here in the UK. We have the standard ‘knuckle-draggers’..’Uuuh they different colour in’they? I throw a brick don’t I?’
        But we all have a far more ‘respectable’ type which comes from my own political landscape of the Left. This is directed at ‘americans’ as being stupid, over weight and of course prone to religion and apparently it’s all of you who are to blame for Donald Trump. It’s masked as being politically astute, radical, and witty, but when it comes down to it….’I throw a brick’
        Humans eh?
        Wishing you Yecheilyah and all yours a Happy Christmas.
        Roger

        Liked by 1 person

        1. Yup. Racism, politics, blah blah. Lol

          If mankind could understand that he was divided by nationhood and not color he’ll realize race, and thus racism, was created not by the Almighty Yah but by men. And if he could realize the basic principles established from the beginning by Yah, he’ll also see the basics needed to run a government that works, a government ran according to the laws and commandments instead of lies. For if each man simply loved his neighbor as himself, the world would be a much different place. There is a natural government that exists and has existed for all of mankind regardless of “race” or country but it has been ignored so that each man can do as he wishes and whatever he deems fit, is law.

          Thanks Roger for leaving a detailed comment on the table as always. I don’t celebrate Holidays but you have a great day!

          Liked by 1 person

          1. Thanks so much for your greeting Yecheilyah.
            I agree so much ‘nationhood’ and phony selective memory heritages cause so much pain (One of my projects is a part satire on this sort of thing masking as a ‘True’ history of the Isles- Ireland, England, Scotland & Wales that is).
            Take care, best wishes, and more power to your writing for 2017.
            Roger

            Liked by 1 person

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