Essay On Black Family

Words: 2520
Pages: 11

Throughout history, the idea of the black family has been a complex topic. There are many variations of black families, and many struggles, hardships, and triumphs that families of other races might never even think of experiencing. According to Moynihan’s War on Poverty Report, “The structure of the African-American family has long been a matter of Public Policy interest.” Moynihan wrote this in 1965 to warn African-Americans about the coming destruction of the Black family. At that time, rate of babies born out of wedlock in the Black community was 25%, by 2011 it was 72%. The structure of the Black family has struggled with the effects of slavery, the effects of mass incarceration, the “absentee father” myth, rape and sexual assault, long-lasting homophobia, and the unspoken mental illness that is running rampant through the community. This paper will examine these hardships in depth and the way they have affected the community’s growth over time.
The modern day black family dynamic is deeply rooted in the history of slavery. Families were separated when being taken from their villages in Africa. Even if a family made it on the ship together, they were often separated at slave auctions. Children were ripped
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The Black family embodies the words resilience and thriving. Resilience because of their ability to adapt to stress, adversity, and oppression. Thriving because not only do they face these stressors, adversaries, and oppressors, but they also function and gain skills, knowledge, and confidence. Black families thrive where other families might fail given the same hardships. They took our voices from us, locked up our men, raped our women, and then left us to fend for ourselves. We will take our voices back and we will rebuild our Black