Slight correction: The video mentions that Reconstruction Efforts were dismantled at the end of the 20th century, when we meant to say that they were being dismantled at the end of the 19th century. Thank you to Evelyn Rodgers for pointing this out!
Thanks for taking the leap in doing a video on such a sacred song to African Americans. In these political times, anything that brings understanding and enlightenment to all peoples, is greatly appreciated.
Thank you very much. You had enough patience to explain the entire history behind our powerful anthem. I feel every American citizen should take the time to watch this. Great job! Thank you! 💯✔️👌🏽🤗
I think it’s more that people think there shouldn’t be a black anthem. Because when people come to this country they aren’t black or white anymore. We are all American
One of the best songs of all time. Thanks for posting. It can also be heard as a song about transcending the human condition, while recognizing that slavery was pure evil.
Although my comment is late, I remembered singing this song at a Catholic church when I was in secondary school in California. It's very melodic and memorable.
This song holds great historical value though a bit too religious in some aspects. There’s nothing wrong with the religious aspects those parts add color. I am non religious and can understand that this song has value to it.
As a native of Jacksonville, FL this video has much significance to me and is very much appreciated. The educational aspect is profound and much of the information I was unaware of. Our city is erecting a city park named after the song and I hope a museum with this information ℹ️ can be included.
Thank you for the kind words, much appreciated! That’s really cool to hear a city park will be named after the song too, hopefully it can spread awareness about the song and it’s beautiful purpose as well. 👍
@@americanhistorygeek1926 you’re welcome and I’m excited about it. I can’t wait until it’s done. The mayor recently presented a proclamation for it to be the nations national hymn.
Well done. I used to begrudge singing it during church and BSU meetings as a kid, but greatly appreciate the song as an adult. I think a lot of people have the wrong idea, and think BLM wrote the song or something. This is a pretty good analysis of the poem/song.
WOW! If our younger generations think the BLM movement originated this piece, this is another piece of the puzzle that reveals from where our children are receiving (or are no longer receiving) their cultural information. To me, it says children aren't "in church" much these days as well as the song not being taught in school music programs. But then, unless they are in elementary school, many students don't recite the Pledge of Allegiance nor sing the Star-Spangled Banner. The text of the S-SB has its own history - - that is in no manner as inclusive and representative of the true meaning of the freedom of which it attempts to speak.
This song is so beautiful. I first heard of it about 2005. James Weldon Johnson had also been given a position in the U.S. State Department under Teddy Roosevelt but sometime later Woodrow Wilson re-segregated the US government.
I have to disagree with your analysis of the final line. Our native land is not America, it is Africa. This is a call for African Americans to remember our roots and not forget who we are. This line is Pan-African and pays homage to our ancestors.
I can definitely understand that interpretation too. Native homeland is the country from which one is born, so I always saw him referring to America, since Johnson himself was born in America. Historically, Johnson always viewed America as a place to reform and live in, however your point about Pan-African homage and homeland is a totally valid analysis. I think poetry oftentimes has many different ways of speaking to all of us. I can definitely see how the final line pays respect to ancestors, whom before the evils of slavery were mothers, fathers, sons, daughters, and people in Africa. Thanks for the comment, I always love discussing historical writings with others!
You make a very solid and well researched point here. It may be that pan-africanists see our native land as the motherland and integrationists see it as the U.S. As a member of the N.A.A.C.P., he appears to be a member of the latter group. Thank you for sharing.
Thanks Will, for your presentation/interpretation of the history of the song "Lift Every Voice and Sing". I went to your RUclips page to see if you in turn had also made a video with your historical take on The Star-Spangled Banner. Seeing that there was no entry for that, I would be interested in your analysis of ALL of the verses of the S-SB as well. If, after doing so, I would like to see if you would care to make a comparison of both "national anthems"! I believe you might find that one is a lot more inclusive of the intended ideals of freedom, liberty, justice and especially humanity than the other. You did a fine job of your video production, keep up the good work!
My most important comment is the references to God in the 3rd verse. Jewish and Muslim descriptions of God equally apply. Many Africans who were kidnapped and sold into slavery were Muslim. Many important Jewish leaders helped the civil rights movement. Booker T. Washington asked Mr. Julius Rosenwald, one of the founders and CEO of Sears and Roebuck, to fund and help open Freedom Schools throughout the South. My other comment is in regards to the line in verse 2 at time marker 6:05. 'with a steady beat' seems to me to refer to the beat of marching for civil rights.
Where from this idea that slaves from West Africa were Muslims? Even under latter day colonialism in the early days, many citizens were not converted to be Christians let alone Muslims. West Africans during the days of slavery worshipped God through the intermediary of gods and priests loosely defined as African traditional religion. Don’t be confused with the days of Mansa Musa who was a Muslim and think that Islam was the religion of West Africans who lived along the coast during the trans Atlantic slave trade period. It was not.
John Rosamond Johnson had a collaborator with the music 🎵. Bob Cole collaborated with Rosamond on the music and is given credit. I guess saying only the Johnson brothers makes the history sound better and helps the image of this classic song. No one give Cole any credit.....
The collaboration between Bob Cole and John Rosamond Johnson definitely existed, although I don't believe that Bob Cole took part in the original composition of the music for "Lift Every Voice and Sing." Bob Cole and John Rosamond Johnson were prominent musical partners on vaudeville productions in 1900, after the music for "Lift Every Voice and Sing" was originally conceived of, source via Library of Congress: www.loc.gov/item/ihas.200038836/
"where the gleam of our bright star is cast" One could object to white being used as a symbol of hope or goodness, or simply recognize that it is not always related to race. Great video.
Jah & Jahes love. Thank you so much for making this video and for sharing it with us. Blessed love.#1804 #Ayiti #ToutMounseMoun #AbolishCPS #AbolishPoverty #DefundFosterCare #ProChoice #RawVeganforLife #HR40NOW!
I think this country needs a new national anthem, but I would prefer Paul Robeson's Ballad for Americans. I would summarize its theme as: Americans of all races, religions, occupations, and social classes can have liberty, and all the other rights, if they are willing to organize and fight for them, when it becomes necessary. It also acknowledges the failings of America, and how we can fight to correct them. After it was released in 1939, it was tremendously popular. In 1940 it was sung at the conventions of both the Republican Party and the Communist Party. It was a song that could bring us together.
non e' che lascia spazio a tanti commenti! perche' mi ha lasciato con un (GROPPO) in gola (groppo e' quando ti si chiude la gola dall'emozione....proprio in questi giorni stiamo provando questa canzone in coro(PURPLE GOSPEL CHOIR) CON IL MAESTRO TIMOTHY MARTIN
42 seconds in, there's a glaring error. it should be "at the end of the 19TH CENTURY" not at the end of the 20TH CENTURY". the song deserves a better edited explanation.
Don't forget the narrator states that after he gave the introduction he went on to conduct a personal analysis of the song. This IS NOT research of the song but a personal analysis. Anyone can do this. My personal analysis recognizes that the poet speaks of heaven and earth and not the U S. Patriotism is in God and what he has created. I see the poet speaking to the world and to the people of Deuteronomy 28 start with verse 19 after the blessings. It was a popular movement to attach these words to West Africans in captivity during and after slavery. The narrator, through no fault of his own, has no clue about this identification in scripture. Hope you do your research.
the part of this song that no one seems to mentipn is that its all inclusive. EVERY VOICE. when the naacp had it performed at a school in the 90's it had nothing to do with race. its the media and news that created the racial division of the song. ur all being fooled and tought to be racist. the entire point of the song is the complete opposite of racism. yet when blacks make it about blacks, its counter productive. its disrespectful to the point of the song. god loves all.
My comment comes rather late on this discussion. (Will anyone read and respond?) I object to this song replacing our current National Anthem for the same reason that many, today, object to the "Star Spangled Banner". Both can be construed as racist. One forgoing the black American, the other emphasizing the African American. Yes, after due thought, I have reversed my opinion on our current Anthem. It does need to be replaced! That is said as a white American raised to respect my heritage. That heritage was understood, by myself, as a song glorifying a nation representing all races. After review, though that is a respected interpretation, IT IS WRONG! But why "flip the coin" to continue to show our nation as divided? We need unity. We need open horizons that leaves far behind prejudices and hatred. Until I am seen as American and see you as American regardless of skin color we have both regressed into times unexplainable to my freedom, forward thinking and UUNITED beliefs of and for these United States of America: Home of the free thinking, and land of all dreaming farsighted persons. So let those with more talent than I possess write a true anthem: colorless, United and free!
It doesn’t replace your national anthem, dummy. It was written 100 years ago when racial discrimination against Black people was legal. It is a freedom song against racial oppression.
If you saw a press article about this song being sung at the national July 4th celebration in Washington and interpreted that as replacing the Star Spangled Banner, then you were misled by what I call an 'fuel the outrage' headline. Both songs will be sung. Lift Ev'ry Voice and Sing is a standard in black churches and in schools and gatherings all over the U.S. One has to remember that, like this song, the Star Spangled Banner was a poem before it was set to music, I have never heard anyone ever sing the second verse of the Star Spangled Banner.. While the poem's other verses are an anathema today, the ideals of valor, loyalty, freedom and bravery while under fire that are in the first verse are still inspiring. As Americans, we too often think history is irrelevant to the present, but it isn't. Understanding the past is essential if we are going to ASPIRE to creating the country that fully lives up to our own ideals.
There was a call in congress for it to be made the *National Hymn* ... that means we wouldn't be getting rid of what has become a very beloved song but *adding* to our official musical heritage. Musically, is far more sing-able than The Star-Spangled Banner. I would argue it's a better-written piece as well - and it's fully from the United States where The Star-Spangled Banner had words by the American (Frances Scott Key) but the music is by an Englishman who wrote the music before the United States was even a nation... And the song didn't even become the National Anthem until the 1930s. Some of the things we believe are from "our founding fathers" are nothing of the sort. ;)
Black people have always lifted up when under sever wrongs being done to them, now my people let us lay aside all acts that ALMIGHTY GOD would Condemn, and move forward, so we will be pleasing to our GOD, we must!
Nothing but the Grace of God, black America has survived all the centuries of oppression and cruelty in America and the world. The analogies used don't tell half the story!
WE DO NOT NEED YOUR interpretation! You have NO right to interpret a song written by Brown people and for our people. Your interpretation is not accurate! This is about our relationship with the Most High GOD! Stay in your lane. Get your own damn history and STOP meddling in ours!!! Your day is already here............Wait for it because it's not long now! Ignore his interpretation because he is trying to sway you to his opinion!!!!
You are not qualified to discuss this phenomenon. You're dialect, terminology, and perspective is insulting. Your exercise of your privilege and hubris to believe you had the right to internationally discuss that which is beyond your truthful comprehension. Your attempt is disgusting.
It is true that white people do not have the lived experience and family history to have a full understanding of the song. We cannot speak for African Americans. We can just do our best to be an ally and help empower others to speak for themselves.
Slight correction: The video mentions that Reconstruction Efforts were dismantled at the end of the 20th century, when we meant to say that they were being dismantled at the end of the 19th century. Thank you to Evelyn Rodgers for pointing this out!
So he was a poet, a school principal and a lawyer, but he was opposed? Who held HIM back?
Thank you so much for this wonderful video.
@@Favorites227 Of course, thank you for your kind comment!
na there still being dismantled
Thanks for taking the leap in doing a video on such a sacred song to African Americans. In these political times, anything that brings understanding and enlightenment to all peoples, is greatly appreciated.
Of course, I'm glad that you enjoyed the video!
Every child in Detroit schools learned this song in the 70’s. Love this song.
Thank you very much. You had enough patience to explain the entire history behind our powerful anthem. I feel every American citizen should take the time to watch this. Great job! Thank you! 💯✔️👌🏽🤗
Of course, happy to hear that you appreciated and enjoyed the video!
If more Americans understood this, people really wouldn’t be so negative about this song. It’s a very patriotic song.
People don’t actually want to do research. Just hear some news report that says it’s unpatriotic and their mind is made up
Agreed, it's a very beautiful and American song in nature!
They understand they just don't care. It is a challenge to white supremacy and they don't like it.
I think it’s more that people think there shouldn’t be a black anthem. Because when people come to this country they aren’t black or white anymore. We are all American
Unfortunately there is still too much racism and ignorance in this country
One of the best songs of all time. Thanks for posting. It can also be heard as a song about transcending the human condition, while recognizing that slavery was pure evil.
I agree and thank you for your insight!!
Although my comment is late, I remembered singing this song at a Catholic church when I was in secondary school in California. It's very melodic and memorable.
Very nice story, thanks for sharing!!
Thank you very much. You clarified the most IMPORTANT INFORMATION, related to the words of this extremely lifting song
Thanks so much!
This was amazing. Thank you for taking time to analyze the stanzas to help educate. Thank you!
Of course, it's a truly beautiful song! I'm very happy to hear that you enjoyed the video! 🙂
I'm not the religious type but I hold this song close to my heart as a black woman
It is a truly beautiful song, I really hope it gets more of the recognition that it so rightfully deserves!
I’m a Latino man, but I stand with my black brothers and sisters and hold this song closely. We sing it at my church.
This song holds great historical value though a bit too religious in some aspects. There’s nothing wrong with the religious aspects those parts add color. I am non religious and can understand that this song has value to it.
What type are you?
@@benpurcell4935 Religion is not the objective, this song acknowledged our history. That's why it's National Black Anthem.
As a native of Jacksonville, FL this video has much significance to me and is very much appreciated. The educational aspect is profound and much of the information I was unaware of. Our city is erecting a city park named after the song and I hope a museum with this information ℹ️ can be included.
Thank you for the kind words, much appreciated! That’s really cool to hear a city park will be named after the song too, hopefully it can spread awareness about the song and it’s beautiful purpose as well. 👍
@@americanhistorygeek1926 you’re welcome and I’m excited about it. I can’t wait until it’s done. The mayor recently presented a proclamation for it to be the nations national hymn.
This video was assigned for me to watch by my music teacher. Thank you for informing me!😊
That's awesome! I'm happy you hear that you enjoyed the video! 🙂
Sacred Song and well done video
Thank you for not holding back you told the truth and nothing else!!!!!
Thank you, glad to hear that you liked the video!!
Well done. I used to begrudge singing it during church and BSU meetings as a kid, but greatly appreciate the song as an adult. I think a lot of people have the wrong idea, and think BLM wrote the song or something. This is a pretty good analysis of the poem/song.
WOW! If our younger generations think the BLM movement originated this piece, this is another piece of the puzzle that reveals from where our children are receiving (or are no longer receiving) their cultural information. To me, it says children aren't "in church" much these days as well as the song not being taught in school music programs. But then, unless they are in elementary school, many students don't recite the Pledge of Allegiance nor sing the Star-Spangled Banner. The text of the S-SB has its own history - - that is in no manner as inclusive and representative of the true meaning of the freedom of which it attempts to speak.
Thank you so much for the detailed analysis. Being a foreign teacher it has helped me a lot to educate my students on the history of the US.
Amen! Thank you for providing the history of “Lift Every Voice and Sing.”🙏🏽❤️😊
God bless you for this explanation of such a powerful song that speaks to the soul of America and still brings tears of hope to my own heart. ❤️👍🏾👏🏾🙏🏾
This song is so beautiful. I first heard of it about 2005. James Weldon Johnson had also been given a position in the U.S. State Department under Teddy Roosevelt but sometime later Woodrow Wilson re-segregated the US government.
I have to disagree with your analysis of the final line. Our native land is not America, it is Africa. This is a call for African Americans to remember our roots and not forget who we are. This line is Pan-African and pays homage to our ancestors.
I can definitely understand that interpretation too. Native homeland is the country from which one is born, so I always saw him referring to America, since Johnson himself was born in America. Historically, Johnson always viewed America as a place to reform and live in, however your point about Pan-African homage and homeland is a totally valid analysis. I think poetry oftentimes has many different ways of speaking to all of us. I can definitely see how the final line pays respect to ancestors, whom before the evils of slavery were mothers, fathers, sons, daughters, and people in Africa. Thanks for the comment, I always love discussing historical writings with others!
You make a very solid and well researched point here. It may be that pan-africanists see our native land as the motherland and integrationists see it as the U.S. As a member of the N.A.A.C.P., he appears to be a member of the latter group. Thank you for sharing.
@@keithd9831 Of course, thank you for sharing as well! It was very good to hear your perspective!! 🙂
The exchange between you two on this particular thread has given even more insight and a broader perspective. Thank you.
ALL colored people didn't come from Africa. There were Negroes who were native to America !!!
You did such a great job on this video. We learned this song as kids in elementary school in Mississippi.
Thank you, that's very cool to hear!
This is great information. Thank you for your efforts.
Of course, happy to hear that you enjoyed the video!
Thanks Will, for your presentation/interpretation of the history of the song "Lift Every Voice and Sing". I went to your RUclips page to see if you in turn had also made a video with your historical take on The Star-Spangled Banner. Seeing that there was no entry for that, I would be interested in your analysis of ALL of the verses of the S-SB as well. If, after doing so, I would like to see if you would care to make a comparison of both "national anthems"! I believe you might find that one is a lot more inclusive of the intended ideals of freedom, liberty, justice and especially humanity than the other.
You did a fine job of your video production, keep up the good work!
I must say you did a very good commentary on our(Black Americans') beloved hymn.
Thank you, I'm happy that you liked the video!
I'm struck that you called the song writer American. I agree, it just struck me.
Why would you think that they wouldn't be called Americans?
@@dtodd30 That part.
Sounds like a good song
Definitely, it played a key role in the Civil Rights Movement too!
Fantastic analysis! 🤔🧐🎶👍🏽
My most important comment is the references to God in the 3rd verse. Jewish and Muslim descriptions of God equally apply. Many Africans who were kidnapped and sold into slavery were Muslim.
Many important Jewish leaders helped the civil rights movement. Booker T. Washington asked Mr. Julius Rosenwald, one of the founders and CEO of Sears and Roebuck, to fund and help open Freedom Schools throughout the South.
My other comment is in regards to the line in verse 2 at time marker 6:05. 'with a steady beat' seems to me to refer to the beat of marching for civil rights.
Where from this idea that slaves from West Africa were Muslims? Even under latter day colonialism in the early days, many citizens were not converted to be Christians let alone Muslims. West Africans during the days of slavery worshipped God through the intermediary of gods and priests loosely defined as African traditional religion. Don’t be confused with the days of Mansa Musa who was a Muslim and think that Islam was the religion of West Africans who lived along the coast during the trans Atlantic slave trade period. It was not.
Great review and video. Thank you
Of course, thanks for watching and commenting! :)
Thank you.🙏🏾
Of course, happy you enjoyed the video!
Thank you for this.
Of course, more videos to come in the future as well! 🙂
Loved it! Love the song. Love the video. BTW. the end of the 19th Century was 1999. I believe you meant to say end of the 18th Century.
Evelyn Rodgers
Thank you so much, that’s awesome to hear! Also thanks for letting us know, I’ll see what we can do about that. Thanks so much again!! 🙂
The end of the 19th Century was December 31, 1900. The 20th Century ended in 2000. We are now in the 21st Century.
@@MrTravisshort Each century starts with 0 and ends with 9 because the beginning was 0 A.D. and the end of the first century was 99 A.D.
Excellent !
Very helpful!!
Thank you, I'm happy that you liked the video!!
John Rosamond Johnson had a collaborator with the music 🎵. Bob Cole collaborated with Rosamond on the music and is given credit. I guess saying only the Johnson brothers makes the history sound better and helps the image of this classic song. No one give Cole any credit.....
The collaboration between Bob Cole and John Rosamond Johnson definitely existed, although I don't believe that Bob Cole took part in the original composition of the music for "Lift Every Voice and Sing." Bob Cole and John Rosamond Johnson were prominent musical partners on vaudeville productions in 1900, after the music for "Lift Every Voice and Sing" was originally conceived of, source via Library of Congress:
www.loc.gov/item/ihas.200038836/
God bless your soul young man
Thank you for your kind words, bless your soul as well!
"where the gleam of our bright star is cast" One could object to white being used as a symbol of hope or goodness, or simply recognize that it is not always related to race. Great video.
Jah & Jahes love. Thank you so much for making this video and for sharing it with us. Blessed love.#1804 #Ayiti #ToutMounseMoun #AbolishCPS #AbolishPoverty #DefundFosterCare #ProChoice #RawVeganforLife #HR40NOW!
I think this country needs a new national anthem, but I would prefer Paul Robeson's Ballad for Americans. I would summarize its theme as: Americans of all races, religions, occupations, and social classes can have liberty, and all the other rights, if they are willing to organize and fight for them, when it becomes necessary. It also acknowledges the failings of America, and how we can fight to correct them.
After it was released in 1939, it was tremendously popular. In 1940 it was sung at the conventions of both the Republican Party and the Communist Party. It was a song that could bring us together.
0:43 did you mean 19th century?
Thos is very enlightening
non e' che lascia spazio a tanti commenti! perche' mi ha lasciato con un (GROPPO) in gola (groppo e' quando ti si chiude la gola dall'emozione....proprio in questi giorni stiamo provando questa canzone in coro(PURPLE GOSPEL CHOIR) CON IL MAESTRO TIMOTHY MARTIN
42 seconds in, there's a glaring error. it should be "at the end of the 19TH CENTURY" not at the end of the 20TH CENTURY". the song deserves a better edited explanation.
Don't forget the narrator states that after he gave the introduction he went on to conduct a personal analysis of the song. This IS NOT research of the song but a personal analysis. Anyone can do this. My personal analysis recognizes that the poet speaks of heaven and earth and not the U S. Patriotism is in God and what he has created. I see the poet speaking to the world and to the people of Deuteronomy 28 start with verse 19 after the blessings. It was a popular movement to attach these words to West Africans in captivity during and after slavery. The narrator, through no fault of his own, has no clue about this identification in scripture. Hope you do your research.
the part of this song that no one seems to mentipn is that its all inclusive. EVERY VOICE. when the naacp had it performed at a school in the 90's it had nothing to do with race. its the media and news that created the racial division of the song. ur all being fooled and tought to be racist. the entire point of the song is the complete opposite of racism. yet when blacks make it about blacks, its counter productive. its disrespectful to the point of the song. god loves all.
I had a argument w/ my grandmother about anthems and I was wrong about it . I'm sorry 😩😩🌮🌮
A little naive there in the beginning. When haven't we been a "very polarized" country?
This is me Victorino
My comment comes rather late on this discussion. (Will anyone read and respond?)
I object to this song replacing our current National Anthem for the same reason that many, today, object to the "Star Spangled Banner". Both can be construed as racist.
One forgoing the black American, the other emphasizing the African American.
Yes, after due thought, I have reversed my opinion on our current Anthem. It does need to be replaced!
That is said as a white American raised to respect my heritage.
That heritage was understood, by myself, as a song glorifying a nation representing all races. After review, though that is a respected interpretation, IT IS WRONG! But why "flip the coin" to continue to show our nation as divided? We need unity. We need open horizons that leaves far behind prejudices and hatred.
Until I am seen as American and see you as American regardless of skin color we have both regressed into times unexplainable to my freedom, forward thinking and UUNITED beliefs of and for these United States of America: Home of the free thinking, and land of all dreaming farsighted persons.
So let those with more talent than I possess write a true anthem: colorless, United and free!
It doesn’t replace your national anthem, dummy. It was written 100 years ago when racial discrimination against Black people was legal. It is a freedom song against racial oppression.
If you saw a press article about this song being sung at the national July 4th celebration in Washington and interpreted that as replacing the Star Spangled Banner, then you were misled by what I call an 'fuel the outrage' headline. Both songs will be sung.
Lift Ev'ry Voice and Sing is a standard in black churches and in schools and gatherings all over the U.S. One has to remember that, like this song, the Star Spangled Banner was a poem before it was set to music, I have never heard anyone ever sing the second verse of the Star Spangled Banner.. While the poem's other verses are an anathema today, the ideals of valor, loyalty, freedom and bravery while under fire that are in the first verse are still inspiring. As Americans, we too often think history is irrelevant to the present, but it isn't. Understanding the past is essential if we are going to ASPIRE to creating the country that fully lives up to our own ideals.
There was a call in congress for it to be made the *National Hymn* ... that means we wouldn't be getting rid of what has become a very beloved song but *adding* to our official musical heritage. Musically, is far more sing-able than The Star-Spangled Banner. I would argue it's a better-written piece as well - and it's fully from the United States where The Star-Spangled Banner had words by the American (Frances Scott Key) but the music is by an Englishman who wrote the music before the United States was even a nation... And the song didn't even become the National Anthem until the 1930s. Some of the things we believe are from "our founding fathers" are nothing of the sort. ;)
Black people have always lifted up when under sever wrongs being done to them, now my people let us lay aside all acts that ALMIGHTY GOD would Condemn, and move forward, so we will be pleasing to our GOD, we must!
If you find yourself hating this song, then you yourself he is pure evil.
Surprised you did not actually play the song
The the end of the 20th century?
This should be our ONLY national anthem.
19th Century, not 20th Century,
go back and do over!!!!!
I am. This is terrible and a disgrace to ALL ADOS. Our GODS are NOT the same to BEGIN with confused yt boy
the line true to our native land because we our the moors of this Moroccan empire now called America learn first
Nothing but the Grace of God, black America has survived all the centuries of oppression and cruelty in America and the world. The analogies used don't tell half the story!
False……… iykyk
Do video on WHY HOMOSEXUALITY IS BIBLICALLY SHAMED
You have no idea, God does not exist in America. You can’t explain what you have not experienced.
WE DO NOT NEED YOUR interpretation! You have NO right to interpret a song written by Brown people and for our people. Your interpretation is not accurate! This is about our relationship with the Most High GOD! Stay in your lane. Get your own damn history and STOP meddling in ours!!! Your day is already here............Wait for it because it's not long now! Ignore his interpretation because he is trying to sway you to his opinion!!!!
Wow….give the guy credit for respecting us.
You are not qualified to discuss this phenomenon. You're dialect, terminology, and perspective is insulting. Your exercise of your privilege and hubris to believe you had the right to internationally discuss that which is beyond your truthful comprehension. Your attempt is disgusting.
He did it in good taste so there was no problem with this video. What is your problem?
I see literally no problem. Making issues where there are none
So do you think black people are qualified to interpret a Bible that was written for white people?
True to our God, True to our Native land (Africa). Truth makes us Free.
It is true that white people do not have the lived experience and family history to have a full understanding of the song. We cannot speak for African Americans. We can just do our best to be an ally and help empower others to speak for themselves.
A beautiful song by Freedmen/Foundation Black Americans !!!!!!!!!!!!!