Mis-Education of the Negro by Carter G. Woodson
This book was written in 1933 but I think the message is still relevant. The title speaks for itself. Woodson explains how the education the American Negro receives is what enslaves the negro's mind, and prevents him from competing in the economic sphere and realizing his potential.
"Enslave a negro's mind and you don't have to worry about what he will do". Woodson explains how the negro's sense of inferiority and lack of achievement comes from education. And how his education keeps him in his place. And so negros actually went from one form of slavery into another. The education the negro receives is not really education, but is actually enslavement; the opposite of what its supopsed to be. True education teaches people to think, and teaching negros to think is something their education has not done.
Woodson is a negro who doesn't spend time pitying his race but instead gives out a message of learning to think for yourself and to do for yourself. To not be dependent on outside forces. Outside forces are doing for themselves and are not out to help others succeed. To succeed in making a living and lifting oneself from drudgery to a life of ease and comfort one must do for themselves, beginning with learning to think for oneself.
A great message. Real education originates in thinking for yourself, and by thinking for yourself you can do for yourself and by doing for yourself you exceed previous limitations and can build a real life for yourself and your people.
Kebo
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Mis-Education of the Negro by Carter G. Woodson