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SPEAKER_06: Hey, it's Jenny. Before we get started, I wanna tell you about another show I think you'll love. How can we practice self-care through COVID-19 and beyond? And why should we? It's easy to create distractions with the latest technology, news, or television shows. Welcome to Mindful by Design, an audio course all about mindfulness, meditation, how it works, and how to make it work for you. With insights from the world, and accompanying meditations, Reverend Angel Kyoto Williams introduces core principles of the mindfulness practice through both science and lived experience. You can find Mindful by Design and exclusive guided meditations on the Himalaya Learning Platform. Himalaya Learning is an audio learning platform that provides an extensive library of courses from the world's greatest minds, like Malcolm Gladwell, Tim Ferriss, Seth Godin, and more. Go to Himalaya.com slash mindful and enter promo code mindful to get your first 14 days free. The link and promo code are also available in our episode description. Check it out. They were so angry about just us going over, trying to register to vote.
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SPEAKER_06: Hello, from Wonder Media Network, I'm Jenny Kaplan, and this is Encyclopedia Wamanica. Today we're talking about a key figure in the civil rights movement who risked her life to lift her voice and the voices of other black Americans. Through violence and abuse, she campaigned for equality and became the first black woman to serve as a mayor in Mississippi. This is the story of Unita Blackwell. Unita Zellma Blackwell was born Uzi Brown on March 18th, 1933 in Lula, Mississippi. Her father was a sharecropper, and Unita picked cotton in the field alongside her mother until her mother sent her to live with relatives in Arkansas to receive a better education. At that time in Mississippi, black children could only attend school for two years before they were forced to return to the fields. Though Unita's mother couldn't read or write, she was determined to give her daughter a better life. Unita chose her own full name after her teacher told her she couldn't just go by the initials Uzi. She decided to go with Unita Zellma. At the age of 12, Unita left school. She returned to picking cotton until she was 31 years old. She married three times, but kept the last name of her first husband, Jeremiah Blackwell. It was with him she had her only child, Jeremiah Jr. The turning point of Unita's life came in 1964 during the Freedom Summer. The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, or SNCC, was campaigning to raise awareness about registering black citizens to vote. Unita signed up to help right away. During her attempts to help register black voters across her community, she was arrested more than 70 times. She was also targeted by the KKK, whose members burned crosses in her yard. Unita was one of only eight black people in her county who tried to register to vote. Armed white men threatened Unita and the other brave people trying to vote outside the courthouse, and nearly prevented them from entering. When they were finally allowed to enter the building, they were forced to undergo an unfair literacy test, which all of them failed. Unita realized that despite the fact voting was a legal right, society still stacked all the odds against the black community. She was more determined than ever to make her voice heard, so she began to participate in one movement after another to fight the unjust system. In 1965, Unita sued her county's Board of Education for suspending 300 students, including her own son, for wearing freedom pins. She also sued to desegregate the school district. These cases traveled all the way up to federal courts. Though the pins remained banned, the district was ordered to desegregate. In 1976, Unita was elected mayor of Mayorsville, which reportedly made her the first black woman to serve as a mayor in Mississippi. When she took office, the 500-person town had unpaved streets and no sewer system. Many residents lived in small tin-roof shacks with no running water. Unita immediately set to work on improving conditions, serving the town for two decades from a one-room city hall. She led the way for the town to pave and name its roads, install streetlights, build sewers, improve its housing, and even get its first fire truck. In 1983, Unita earned a master's degree in regional planning from UMass Amherst, having never previously attended college. In 1992, she brought national attention to Mayorsville and all rural communities when she won a $350,000 MacArthur Genius Grant. Throughout her career, Unita traveled internationally. She gave speeches, advised presidents like Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton, and never stopped fighting for civil rights. She was defeated for reelection to her position in 2001. By then, she'd long made a positive mark on the rural communities of Mississippi and beyond. Unita Blackwell passed away on May 13th, 2019. She made an enormous difference in Mayorsville, Mississippi, and her influence extends far beyond her hometown. She fought for the rights of all Americans and brought attention to often forgotten areas of the country. All month, we're talking about politicians. For more on why we're doing what we're doing, check out our newsletter, Wamanica Weekly. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram at Encyclopedia Wamanica, and follow me directly on Twitter at Jenny M. Kaplan. Special thanks to my favorite sister and co-creator, Liz Kaplan. Talk to you tomorrow.
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