2006年VOA标准英语-Americans Celebrate Black History Month wi(在线收听) |
By Chris Simkins ------------------------------------------------------ Frederick Douglass was one of America's most outspoken black leaders in the 19th century. He was born a slave in the eastern U.S. State of Maryland in 1818. Margaret Hutto, Exhibits Manager at the Reginald Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History in Baltimore, says Douglass was one of the state's most famous people. As a freed black man Douglass traveled to New York and taught himself to read and write. In 1841, he began lecturing against slavery and campaigning for the rights of freed blacks. He traveled around the country delivering his anti-slavery message. In 1845, fearing he might lose his freedom he left the U.S. He traveled to Britain and Scotland where he spent two years giving speeches to enthusiastic crowds. Greg Carr, a professor of African-American Studies at Howard University in Washington, D.C., says Douglass dedicated his life to fighting racial injustice.
Greg Carr says Douglass gained worldwide attention after writing three autobiographies, which detailed the realities of slavery. In 1847 he also began publishing a weekly newspaper called The North Star in which he wrote scathing editorials on a variety of topics including the evils of slavery. "It is important to understand he was one of only a hand full of black folks who were writing with any regularity, so as a consequence he really became the representative voice of the black community, which is a heavy burden." He met with President Abraham Lincoln to press his call for the establishment of black regiments in the Union army. He later got his wish and during the last two years of the war some 200,000 blacks were serving in Army units. Frederick Douglass went on to become an advisor to three other U.S. presidents and served as the U.S. ambassador to Haiti. On a tour, the guide explained, "Mr. Douglass' oldest daughter Rosetta played the piano and Mr. Douglass was a self-taught violinist and if you or I were visiting the home and we did not play an instrument they would give us a tambourine." The National Park Service is just one organization committed to keeping the legacy of Frederick Douglass alive. Other groups are also making sure this leader, who fought so hard against racial injustice, will hold a prominent place in American history. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/2/31185.html |