Karnythia, laying it down with righteousness on Juneteenth — the truth about slavery and its lingering effects on America. (via paradiscacorbasi)
Particularly pertinant to the first half of this commentary is the Missouri case of Celia, a slave woman hanged for murder in 1855. Her “master”, Robert Newsom, bought her at a slave market when she was 14, and he raped her before they even arrived back at his farm. He continued to do so in the years to come, and she gave birth to two children, presumably his.
Celia, pregnant again, begged Newsom’s daughters (he had two by his deceased his white wife) to protect her from their father during her last preganancy, and said that if came to her again she would defend herself and kill him. There is no evidence either ever intervened.
When Newsom attacked her in her cabin on the night of June 23, 1855, she beat him to death with a stick (given that she was pregnant and ill and beating him to death and then dismembering the body would have taken some physical strength, there is a possibility that her lover, a fellow slave called George who had been the one to urge her to seek Newsom’s daughters to intervene, may have been involved).
At her trial, her lawyer argued that she was legally entitled to defend herself. There was an 1845 law on the statue books that stated that any attempt “to take any woman unlawfully against her will and by force, menace or duress, compel her to be defiled” was a felony, and he asked that ‘The words “any woman” in the first clause of the 29th section, of second article of laws of Missouri for 1845, concerning crimes & punishments, embrace slave women, as well as free white women.’
The judge presiding refused the motion, and concluded that a slave woman had no right to resist her master, even in a case of sexual assault.
Celia was hanged.
Executed Today has a write up on her story:
http://www.executedtoday.com/2008/12/21/1855-the-slave-celia-who-had-no-right-to-resist/
(via edwarddespard)
This is why I nearly slapped the shit out of my roommate when she told me that she believed that Sally Hemings was in “love” with Thomas Jefferson.
No.
That’s called Stockholm Syndrome.
That was rape.
100% pure grade RAPE that happened to that woman, along with thousands upon thousands of other Black women and Indigenous women.
All at the hands of whiteness.
It was whiteness that created and perpetuated the horrid sexual stereotypes that Black people deal with today.
(via sourcedumal)
My great-grandmother was a product of slave/master rape; and consequently, though she were a free woman, so was my grandfather, under the same treatment and mentality. My grandpa is still alive, in his late 80’s. This is a very real thing for us. There was no love. Not from my great-grandma’s conception and not from my grandfathers’. It was rape. Dehumanizing, hateful, vicious rape.
(via siddharthasmama)
(Source: skyliting, via theirriandjhiquishow-deactivate)