Finding a Home in America
Dear Nina Simone,
After viewing a snippet of your 70 years of life, I am in awe. Your life was so misunderstood and complex, yet you had such an candid approach to life guided by your musical aptitude. You epitomized Elsa Barkley Brown’s commentary on the analogy of "asymmetrical" jazz to intersectionality in America through your songs and brave activism of civil rights amongst its most prominent diverse leaders. Your music compositions were fast-paced and radical, but your words and actions were even more radical and powerful. You created songs of empowerment and change- focusing on Black rights while representing the silenced voices of Black women in particular. But I wonder what made you stop fighting in America and instead leave the country for good. What made you lose hope in America's progress for Black people? You seemed to neglect your poignant identity as a Black American women at a time America desperately needed it- especially with the deaths of Martin Luther King and Medgar Evans. I’m curious to know why you chose places like France or Liberia to find belonging when your birthplace was America, specifically the home of Black people who depended on your valor. Of course, you battled outright discrimination and bigotry on a public stage daily, but as a figurehead of the civil rights movement, I would argue that your words and presence were essential to progress. So what would you say was your true home? Did you truly believe America was a lost cause?
Kaela
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