Distrust for, as well as the knowledge of racism from white members of society, may still be a trigger, as well as a painful reminder of how their ancestors were treated. The diaspora, from Africa was not by choice. Possible thoughts of what life would have been like, if their ancestor had not been kidnapped and subjected to a history of enslavement and subsequent racism is a possibility.
The history surrounding the cruelty practiced by slaveholders towards Africans is devastating. The experience of slaves in …show more content…
Slavery was for life, and during their life, a slave did not have rights. A fight for equality and fair treatment was not easy.
African American leaders, white visionaries, and groups created to fight for equality; paved the way for change. And while situations have improved, issues pertaining to pay gaps, redlining, as well as glass ceilings, and glass walls, it is easy to see how African Americans may feel treatment is not yet equal.
There is a theory; slaves having been subjected to a slaveholder who was legally able to beat, hang, mutilate, rape, and sell their child; had PTSD. After being freed from slavery, left untreated from the trauma; post traumatic slave syndrome was then passed down generationally. “Black slaves were parenting children under psychological and physical stress. Through social learning, black children learned from their parents to cope with oppression by lowering the respect and expectations they had for themselves.”