Topic > soul of the black people - 737

From the beginning to today, a world in search of democracy for a nation divided by racial and capitalist points of view, high and low, where have we gone? Where will this system meet? From the beginning the nation has fought for equality, even though most of my different seek the same outcome, democracy. The soul of black people at that time was full of uncertainty, despair, hopes, dreams and disappointments. They lived behind the veil of knowledge; were they treated differently, realizing that this was precisely the color of their skin? The veil is just a visual glimpse at the color line divide behind which they feel they are nothing more than an equal part of society; where or how they will adapt to the world full of such inequalities for their race, they felt cut off from society and at the same time drew strength from within the race. They looked for ways to give each other hope, they found ways to comfort their souls. After black emancipation truly felt the dawn of freedom, little did they know that it would get much worse before it got better; without realizing that they had yet to receive true freedom. Now they have to face a world very different from what they were used to, from the condition of forced labor to a new condition of voluntary industries, along with which came problems they had never thought about. No education and most were unskilled, where will they live and how will they feed their families? Without help, and who could they find help in a nation that once considered them property. Again, not everyone agreed with how the world was at the time, so there are many people who wanted to help black people and society as a whole. So the government... middle of paper... bitter towards the freedman, the slave system was less strong, there was a national school for Negroes, carefully monitored, and a labor office protected by the regular courts. The expansion of money and brains could have formed a large potential citizenry and in a certain sense solved the problem. While I feel like we've made great strides with the color line issues, I feel like it will never be fully resolved because of how it started. The strong dominated the weak, and when trying to stop the strong from abusing the weak; the weak were intimidated, beaten, raped and massacred. The weakest will always be the blacks, in my opinion they are still bound by laws and customs that keep them in economic slavery and the only way to escape is death or penitentiary, unless they continue to fight for their rights to be treated as equals.