The Dream - Home Depot Gift Card Giveaway
February is Black History Month. Every year around this time you see images of Black inventors, scholars, theologians, scientists, business owners and entertainers that have made a mark on society. The pre-school television stations that I allow my son to watch have also been highlight great achievements of Black people. And although Mekhi is too young to understand the differences in skin color, I believe that it is wonderful for children to be exposed to greatness in all hues - especially since so often people of color are depicted negatively in the media.
Corporate giants also acknowledge Black History Month. Home Depot has gone a step further and is incorporating philanthropy. Through Feb. 28, The Home Depot is offering a commemorative “Dream” gift card celebrating the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. When customers purchase the collector’s edition “Dream” gift card, The Home Depot will donate five percent of all sales to the Center for Civil and Human Rights, up to $1 million dollars. The donation will assist in the building of a permanent exhibition home for his personal writings and papers.
The collection of original documents by Dr. King includes more than 10,000 items, among them 7,000 handwritten notes spanning from 1946 to 1968. They include drafts of his "I Have a Dream" speech, his "Letter from a Birmingham Jail," other theological writings and his Nobel Peace Prize addresses. The King Papers will be part of the exhibition offering of The Center for Civil and Human Rights. The Dream cards can be purchased at any store, or online at homedepot.com/dream.
Corporate giants also acknowledge Black History Month. Home Depot has gone a step further and is incorporating philanthropy. Through Feb. 28, The Home Depot is offering a commemorative “Dream” gift card celebrating the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. When customers purchase the collector’s edition “Dream” gift card, The Home Depot will donate five percent of all sales to the Center for Civil and Human Rights, up to $1 million dollars. The donation will assist in the building of a permanent exhibition home for his personal writings and papers.
The collection of original documents by Dr. King includes more than 10,000 items, among them 7,000 handwritten notes spanning from 1946 to 1968. They include drafts of his "I Have a Dream" speech, his "Letter from a Birmingham Jail," other theological writings and his Nobel Peace Prize addresses. The King Papers will be part of the exhibition offering of The Center for Civil and Human Rights. The Dream cards can be purchased at any store, or online at homedepot.com/dream.
Home Depot has been generous enough to offer one of my readers a $50.00 gift card. In honor of Dr. King and Black History Month I would like to hear a tidbit about Black History from you. Who has inspired you (other than Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. or President Obama)? Do you have an interesting Black History fact to share? If you can't come up with something off the top of your head please find one fact and share it here in the comments.
This contest is open to US Addresses and the deadline for entry is February 24th. A winner will be chosen by random.org and will be contacted by email. If there is no response within 72 hours a new winner will be chosen.
Good Luck!
Comments
kc@mominthecity.com
I'm from Atlanta, you know the Deep South? I am a child of integration/desegregation and busing. I've seen prejudice from all races and I have also seen and lived inclusion.
In my childhood in the 70s in Atlanta I went to an elementary school that was majority white when I started in 2nd grade and majority black when we moved 7 years later. My high school in the 80s in Rome, Ga was 50% black 50% white, give or take a percent every year. In college, I worked and studied with people of many different races.
One of my very best friends, EVER, is black. We went to college together and have since worked together and she purchased a house within 5 miles of mine, which is saying a lot in a sprawling metro area like Atlanta.
She and I went on a cruise with 2 of our friends who are also black. One of our friends said their mom was surprised that they had a white friend who would go on a cruise with 3 black friends.
Ironically, my friend and I worked together at The Home Depot. When I encouraged her to join me at THD one of the things she remembers me telling her I liked about the company is the diversity of race and ethnicity. There were truly people of all different colors on the teams we worked on. I liked working in an environment where I could learn about other cultures as was having lunch with my co-workers.
So, my point is, I live an integrated life. I think it is important to expose children to greatness of all hues, regardless of hue. It is possible to have friends who differ from you in ways that may seem significant on the surface: color, religion, political ideology, etc. but really are not significant in the long run. You have to be willing to listen to them and to respect and appreciate the differences.
Oh and to answer one of your other questions, as a conservative, a black man who inspires me is Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas. He is a man from Georgia who grew up in a time when race truly did make a huge difference. He has achieved greatness from very humble beginnings even while being ridiculed and raked over the coals for his achievements and beliefs.
More relevant artwork followed, including Southern Justice in 1965, which illustrated the murder of a Civil Rights worker by KKK members in Philadelphia, MS...and he again featured children in 1967 in his piece New Kids in the Neighborhood depicting the desegregation of families in the suburbs.
I LOVED that....
They have friends of all colors, nationalities, and that speak different languages. They are truly color-blind. They don't see why or how the color of a persons skin, the accent that rolls off their tongue, or even if they have 2 moms matters.
I know they will grow up and learn more about MLK and why President Obama's inaguration meant so much. For now I consider it history that it means so little to them.
Also, the Panthers ran an article in their very first issue of the Black Panther Party Newspaper, on April 25th 1967, about the murder of a 22 year old named Denzil Dowell. He was my grandmother's first cousin. Its so crazy how "your" history is always just a piece of a larger history.
You can read about it here ---> http://mindfully.org/Reform/Denzil-Dowell-Killed25apr67.htm
My great-grandmother, my father's grandmother, was a sharecropper in Mississippi.
As many of you know, former slave owners offered African slaves jobs or careers as sharecroppers after the Abolition of Slavery. The former Slave owners needed the Africans to continue to work the land or else they would go out of business. Sharecroppers were given housing and either a portion of the crop or actual cash as payment. Well many of the former slave owners cheated the Africans out of their pay. Essentially, the Africans were making little money or no money at all. Some people would say it was slavery continued.
Well my great-grandmother grew tired of the land owner cheating her. After not receiving her just due for the 10th time, she simply gathered her one daughter and the clothes on her back and left everything and moved to New Orleans, LA. She raised her daughter and grandchildren in New Orleans and because she was a savvy business woman, she made dinners, homemade praline candy, caramel cakes, and other treats for sale! I love hearing this story about my great-grandmother. She was smart, courageous, and a survivor!
Romare's work does all the same things. His collages simply move me beyond all reason.
Google them both--they're incredible artists.
About 8 years ago I was the assistant manager to an upscale retail store. I was the first person to recruit and hire women/men of any race outside of Caucasian. (Can you believe I even worked there? sigh. I guess I was put there to be the change I want to see in this world.) It was a very cold winter day and I was walking the store as usual. I turned my head and saw the cutest bundle of pink with big BIG brown eyes waddling in a snowsuit, around the shoe department. If I had my head on crooked I would have picked her up and ran for the door. Back to reality, the little girls mom and I made introductions...and the most amazing friendship was born. The little girls has grown up. She is a huge fan of my husbands and wants to follow him into a science career. At the start of the school year I had the opportunity to do some homework with her and together we researched a famous African American by the name of George Washington Carver, a man that I once researched after seeing a coin with his face on. (I still have it.) He is a botany and agriculturalist...a scientist and humanitarian. His favorite saying:
“It is not the style of clothes one wears,
neither the kind of automobile one drives,
nor the amount of money one has in the bank, that counts.
These mean nothing.
It is simply service that measures success.”
Human needs over ego and power. One mans words that ring true years ago and years ahead.
Thanks for the trip down memory lane, I think I'll call my friend today...
Some interesting tidbits that I have learned:
1. Black History month started in 1926 as Negroe History Week.
2. The first African-American woman to get her pilots license was Betsie (I think)...more interesting is that she did this in the early 1900's! Amazing for a woman!
3. Maya Angelou was asked to read an original poem for the presidential inauguration of Bill Clinton.
There have been many, many more interesting tidbits....and all have made me appreciate black history even more.
PS...the first African-American Senator was Hiram Revels...1869 in Mississippi!
Lieutenant Henry Ossian Flipper is the First African-American Graduate of the U.S. Military Academy
http://www.history.army.mil/html/topics/afam/flipper.html
Thanks for entering me! Great Contest!
Janna Johnson
jannajanna@hotmail.com
http://feedyourpig.blogspot.com
http://feedyourpiggiveaways.blogspot.com
"If I have a monument in this world, it is my son."
Have it on the wall above my son's photographs, everyone comments on it.
She just says it perfectly.
I think that the person that has inspired me the most is Rosa Parks. I teach 1st grade and I love telling her story to them because they can see that even one person can make a difference. I'm not sure that I would be strong enough to do what she did. She was such a woman of courage and strength!
Leslie
LeslieVeg@msn.com
treflea4 at gmail dot com
http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=us&vol=387&invol=369
luckydolls123[at]verizon[dot]net
sounders68 [at] gmail.com
maggie@mannwieler.com
i've been impressed by oprah and the story of rosa parks, but my real inspiration were my friends melissa and cookie, who bucked the trend when it wasn't trendy. melissa (white) and cookie (black) fell in love and got married. and stayed married. and were the most normal couple you could have met.
thanks for having this contest.
angelmama1919 (at) yahoo (.) com
Sign me up!!
paddyboo@hotmail.com
mjgroesbeck@yahoo.com
(Thanks for a great giveaway!)
email: firemom @ stopdropandblog dot com
My mother in law and grandmother in law have instilled in me never to judge people and to leave that up to God and to care for everyone no matter what they look like. So I try to instill this in my family as well, and whenever I am around young people I always , when I get the chance, try to talk to them about it too.
jimmyrug@hotmail.com
Her life story is full of obstacles but one by one she overcame them to become one of the most powerful women in the world.
In addition to her political status, she is an accomplished scholar and pianist.
Dr. Rice gets my vote for admirable Black American for this Black History Month. :-)
mrsaharper at hotmail dot com
I think I would really like to honor Rosa Parks for standing up for what she believed in. What a great and brave woman she was!
weblynx at hotmail.com
He's a choreographer, first black Principal dancer in a major dance company and founder of Dance Theatre of Harlem.
What a wonderful gift he has given to countless people.
nhmummab@comcast.net
c81280@hotmail dot com
Thank you for the chance to be a winner.
I would like to be able to purchase a window shade at home depot, I buy one each time we have extra money so thank you..
camper223[at]live[dot]com
Thanks for having the wonderful giveaway.
dianad8008 AT gmail DOT com
I would like to share a first, Matthew A. Henson, 1909, accompanied Robert E. Peary on the first successful United States expedition to the North Pole.
Wendell Oliver Scott (August 28, 1921 – December 23, 1990) was an American stock car racing driver from Danville, Virginia. He is the only black driver to win a race in what is now the Sprint Cup Series.
Here is a fact: Black History Month is also celebrated in the UK. But, October is the Black History month in the UK.
Thanks!