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    Home » The Legacy of Slavery Still Breathes—And This Book Refuses to Let It Sleep – BlackPressUSA
    Art & Literature

    The Legacy of Slavery Still Breathes—And This Book Refuses to Let It Sleep – BlackPressUSA

    Savannah HeraldBy Savannah HeraldNovember 3, 20253 Mins Read
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    The Transatlantic Slave Trade: Overcoming the 500-year Legacy
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    Black Arts & Culture Feature:

    Key takeaways
    • The Transatlantic Slave Trade: Overcoming the 500-Year Legacy serves as a relentless reckoning with America's ongoing racial injustices.
    • The book links historical atrocities—slave ships, plantations—to modern systems: prisons, policing, employment discrimination.
    • Authors' lived civil-rights experience gives the work urgent moral authority and a refusal to soften uncomfortable truths.
    • In today’s climate of censorship and rising white supremacy, the book is both record and resistance, demanding survival and action.
    By Stacy M. Brown
    Black Press USA Senior National Correspondent

    A year after its release, The Transatlantic Slave Trade: Overcoming the 500-Year Legacy stands not only as a record of history but as a warning to the present. When Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis Jr. and this writer published their searing exploration of slavery’s enduring impact, they were documenting centuries of pain and resistance. Today, under the Trump administration, the book feels like a mirror held up to an America slipping backward into the shadows it once pretended to escape.

    The nation is again at war with truth. White supremacy no longer hides—it marches. Schools are banning books, censoring history, and rewriting the story of Black struggle. Statues of traitors return to public squares. Diversity is recast as division. Freedom of thought is hunted down under the guise of patriotism. Yet through it all, the Transatlantic Slave Trade remains a flame that refuses to die, its words echoing through classrooms, churches, and homes. It is sold at the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, a testament to its power and necessity in a country desperate to forget. Chuck D, the revolutionary voice of Public Enemy, saw it coming. “Dr. Chavis shows us that the fight against the legacy of the transatlantic slave trade is not just about seeking justice for past wrongs but about dismantling the present systems of oppression that have evolved from it.” His words read now like prophecy.

    Dr. Chavis, who once stood beside Dr. King and later became a political prisoner as leader of the Wilmington Ten, writes not from abstraction but from experience. His co-author has spent decades chronicling America’s racial truths, giving the story its pulse and precision. Together they lay bare the bloodstained architecture of a nation built on bondage and denial. This is not a book of comfort. It is a reckoning. It pulls no punches as it exposes the threads connecting the slave ship to the prison cell, the plantation to the paycheck, the overseer’s whip to the officer’s gun. It names what America still refuses to name. “We need this book because too many still don’t get it,” Chuck D wrote. “Too many still turn a blind eye to the realities of our past and present. Too many still refuse to connect the dots between slavery and today’s racial injustices.”

    A year ago, those words called for awareness. Today, they demand survival. The rollback of civil rights, the erasure of Black voices, and the glorification of hate all prove that the ghosts of the Middle Passage never left. They only changed their clothes. NBA legend Isiah Thomas said, “This book, co-authored by Dr. Ben Chavis, with his distinguished civil rights legacy, provides us with a unique perspective on how slavery’s legacy still affects us today.” What was written as a history of the past has become the story of now. As the walls of democracy tremble under the weight of lies, as racism once again hides behind law and policy, the Transatlantic Slave Trade stands as both record and resistance. “Failure is not an option. Victory is a must,” wrote Dr. Arikana Chihombori-Quao.

    And that, a year later, is the charge this book still carries.

    Read more from the original source


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