Maya Angelou, a one of a kind daring and uplifting messenger
Her writings told us about the loneliness, the hurt, the despair that a minority woman in America experienced. Yet, Maya Angelou also wrote about uplifting…
Her writings told us about the loneliness, the hurt, the despair that a minority woman in America experienced.
Yet, Maya Angelou also wrote about uplifting aspects of life that keep us going and help make something better of ourselves. Ms. Angelou had immense talent in expressing her thoughts and emotions that made many of us take notice and contemplate about our own lives.
Through her poetry and storytelling she became the anchor for the African American community in responding to years of painful oppression.
But her work also served as the inspiration for many minority writers, especially Hispanics, who clearly took her lead in expressing their own thoughts and emotions much the same way as Ms. Angelou did beginning in 1969 with her memoir, I Know why the Caged Bird Sings.
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Lucky for us Ms. Angelou, as many first time writers tend to do, did not stop with her first memoir, but kept on writing.
There was much more she wanted to share with the world about her own personal experience and survival from being raped at the age of seven by her mothers boyfriend to getting pregnant at the age of sixteen, to experiencing the dark side of Americas prejudice, to becoming the first African American female cable car conductor. One doesnt have to be African American to learn from Ms. Angelou.
As Hispanics we can relate to Maya Angelous life (after all ,her brother Bailey gave her the nickname Maya after he read a book about the Maya Indians) our community at large has experienced up close and personal, the dark side of Americas prejudice There are women in our community who were raped by a mothers boyfriend and even a relative.
Weve performed jobs we didnt want but because of the limitations placed upon us by the ruling elite, consequently many of us became victims in an oppressed, caged world where we couldnt escape except through marriage, which in many instances turned out worse, or death.
Yet, we have countless Hispanic women that much like Ms. Angelou did, keep going until they find their peace and become part of a world ready to embrace them and appreciate their talent.