Naleighna Kai's Literary Cafe Magazine BH Magazine Final | Page 16

The Most Underrated Man Shakir Rashaan Angelia Vernon Menchan His signature to me, although it was written over a hundred years ago, still resonates and has power in present-day America, as he offered his own perspective and analysis on race relations. His ideas for curing the racial gap between those of African descent and those of European descent combined both political involvement and achieving higher education (as evidenced by his being the first man of African descent to earn a doctorate from Harvard University). That combination, in his purview, would result in a cultural renaissance that would be built, while being a part (albeit a limited part) of mainstream American life. In short, it would be the catalyst for efforts like the famed “Black Wall Street” in Greenwood, Oklahoma. As a teenager growing up in Atlanta at one of the most historic black high schools in the city, we were exposed to some of the greatest black influences in history, and not only during Black History Month. I counted my easy top five: Frederick Douglass (for obvious reasons, I attended the school that bears his name), Carter G. Woodson, Maya Angelou, Langston Hughes … and Dr. W.E.B. DuBois. Dr. DuBois, in my opinion, is perhaps the greatest and most underrated and under-read black voice in the 20th century, and probably more so in the 21st century, despite Ta-Nehisi Coates saying that his direct influence of writing Between the World and Me was Dr. DuBois. The novel that was a direct influence on my world view was The Soul of Black Folk, although a case for The Talented Tenth can be made as my Black History literary recommendation. 16 | NKLC Magazine His books, and his famous encounters with Booker T. Washington that spawned the iconic poem, Booker T. & W.E.B. by Dudley Randall, are mostly the reasons for my desire to place the spotlight on Dr. DuBois, since his ideology mirrors my own, although it is also dashed with a bit of Mr. Washington’s ideology to balance things out. At the end of the day, Dr. DuBois is the reason I wanted to continue my education, no matter where it led me, and it has led me to some of the most interesting and exotic places the mind can conceive, and influenced my desire to pick up the pen. Salute, Dr. DuBois … as a good friend of mine loves to say, “I hope the ancestors are pleased with you.”