This presentation begins with my introduction of a 15 Second video clip in which Denzel Washington, acting a role, says:
“You see the building of a new nation begins with the woman – because the mother is the first teacher of the child. The message that she gives that child, the child gives to the world, so we have to be very careful”
===
This is followed by my commentary after which a video clip about Shahrazad Ali’s bestselling book is played (in which she gives a speech):
Click here to watch the video – see the video description for URLs to learn more…
======
The Blackman’s guide to understanding the Blackwoman Book by Shahrazad Ali
Rating: 4.1/5 [Goodreads.com]
Rating: 4.9/5 [eBay.com]
93% liked this book
Review:
This “bone-chilling conclusion” to the 1990 best seller: The Blackman’s Guide to Understanding the Blackwoman,” is a probing follow-up that studies why black men are endangered & fail as husband, father & son. It details his upbringing through adulthood in a foreign culture & describes the negative behaviors he has adopted. It further examines African-American male leadership over the past 200 years & offers new survival solutions.
1. The Blackman’s Guide To Understanding The Black Woman (1991) | Shahrazad Ali
Shahrazad Ali (born April 27, 1954, in Atlanta, Georgia, US), raised in Cincinnati, Ohio, is an author of several books, including a paperback called The Blackman’s Guide to Understanding the Blackwoman. The book was controversial, bringing “forth community forums, pickets and heated arguments among blacks in many parts” of the US when it was published in 1989. – Wikipedia
Click here to watch the video – see the video description for URLs to learn more…
2. CONTROVERSIAL BOOK SLAMS BLACK WOMEN
he likens the black woman to a “fire-breathing dragon” and a “wild savage boar.”
If the black family is to survive, says Shahrazad Ali, the black woman must be “tamed” by the black man.
Ali is the author of the controversial The Blackman’s Guide to Understanding the Blackwoman and a self-described expert on black females.
“Any black woman who says she doesn’t see herself in my book is a liar,” asserts the 41-year-old Philadelphian, whose sexist statements rank up there with Andrew Dice Clay’s.
https://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/fl-xpm-1990-07-10-9002030101-story.html