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Black lives matter

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H.E.R. - I Can't Breathe.

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Racism in the us today. Black Lives Matter by achevalier. Today, we're talking a lot about the movement 'Black Lives Matter' : whats does it mean in French ?

Black Lives Matter by achevalier

Les Noirs ont le droit de vivre La vie des Noirs compte Yes ! No We could study this theme for days ! On parle beaucoup du mouvement Black Lives Matter en ce moment suite à la mort de George Floyd, un Américain tué par un policier blanc (Dereck Chauvin) lors de son arrestation le 25 mai dernier. Le mouvement Black Lives Matter existait déjà mais a pris de l'ampleur.

Les gens protestent contre les violences policières mais également contre le racisme plus généralement L'arrestation a été filmée par une jeune fille de 17 ans, les policiers savaient qu'ils étaient filmés. A la fin de toutes les diapos, tu auras un quiz avec 15 questions alors lis toutes les infos, cela fera partie de ta culture générale.C'est de l'histoire mais aussi malheureusement de l'actualité Le mouvement Black Lives Matter a été créé en 2013. Zimmerman avait tué l'adolescent noir Trayvon Martin en Floride. Patrisse Cullors. Strange Fruit By Billie Holiday W/ Lyrics. Nina Simone: Strange Fruit. STRANGE FRUIT. Harriet Tubman. Harriet Tubman. Ida B. Wells. IdaBWells. Malcolm X biography. Rosa Parks. I Am Rosa Parks - Read Along w/ Words on Screen. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

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Systemic racism explained. Learn more about the history of redlining in the United States.

Systemic racism explained

Explore why differences in public school funding is so detrimental to education in America with this piece from The Atlantic, which takes a closer look at the schools in Connecticut and the broader history of education funding, or this analysis from ASCD Educational Leadership, digging into studies of unequal funding. Understand systemic racism with these 9 charts from Vox that highlight longstanding inequalities in every facet of American life. His Life Mattered – Speakeasy News. Widespread protests have again broken out in the U.S.A. after the death of an African-American man in police custody.

His Life Mattered – Speakeasy News

George Floyd, 46, was arrested in Minneapolis, Minnesota on 25 May on suspicion of passing forged money. During his arrest, a police officer knelt on his neck for more than eight minutes, despite Mr Floyd protesting that he couldn’t breathe. Videos of the incident sparked protests across the country. The officer, Derek Chauvin, has been charged with third-degree murder and three other officers dismissed. “I Can’t Breathe” Floyd’s plea that he was being asphyxiated was a grim echo to another case: in 2014, in Staten Island, New York, Eric Garner asphyxiated in a police stranglehold after protesting eleven times that he couldn’t breathe. Protesters about the George Floyd killing have been using the slogan and hashtag “I can’t breathe” in demonstrations. Symbols of Slavery – Speakeasy News. Protests against racism and the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis have re-ignited demands in many places around the world to destroy or revise symbols of those who engaged in slavery, who were often honoured in their lifetimes and whose names and faces often remain in the public eye as statues, buildings or institutions.

Symbols of Slavery – Speakeasy News

In the U.S.A., statues of explorer Christopher Columbus and Confederate generals, who fought against the abolition of slavery in the Civil War, have been attacked and criticised. On 7 June, people in Bristol, England, protesting about George Floyd’s death, physically removed a statue of former slave trader Edward Colston, one of many slave traders who made their fortunes in one of the busiest slave ports in the world. Colston was honoured with a statue not because of his slave trading but his philanthropy: he left his considerable fortune to city charities, but the fortune was of course made literally on the backs of slaves.

The latest New Yorker cover pays tribute to black lives lost – Speakeasy News. The June 22 edition of The New Yorker has been released, and the illustrated cover is devoted to the history of violence inflicted on black people in the United States.

The latest New Yorker cover pays tribute to black lives lost – Speakeasy News

Entitled 'Say Their Names', the powerful illustration features George Floyd, the US citizen recently killed by a police officer in Minneapolis. It shows his body imprinted with images of individual victims, placards, scenes from history and pertinent symbolism. KadirNelson is the artist who has produced this cover, one of the most powerful in The New Yorker's history.

Kadir Nelson's cover art is also interactive and can be explored on the New Yorker's website, which describes the feature as a "closeup examination of the artist’s latest cover, in which the murder of George Floyd embodies the history of violence inflicted upon black people in America". As you click through the page, you find out the individual stories of the 18 black Americans featured. To go further with the artist Copyright(s) :

The Hate u Give

Michelle Obama Recalls How She Experienced Racism When She Was First Lady. Banksy supports black lives matter icebreakers picture description exercises reading 126302. Lelivrescolaire.fr. Séquence 3 : African Americans from Segregation to Black Lives Matter. Kahoot! MATHIEU PERSAN - Illustrations. QuiZinière.