The great president,Abraham Lincoln, had went through his own religious moment in the Civil War. Troubled by his son's death, he used the Minister's eulogy as the guide to his spiritual decision to ban slavery. Doing so, he effectively set a new path and goal for the Union, as a religious crusade to banish slavery, and racial equality, which he helped set up the progress to do so. His new religious view of god, that God chose to have this war decide the fate of America and Slavery, changed America forever as blacks now had a chance for equal opportunities and freedom. What surprised me about Lincoln though, was how deeply he believed that god was making him suffer to help change America, Comparing him to an old biblical tale of how a man was forced to wonder how one with a connection with god must suffer. Lincoln can be compared very closely with Frederick Douglass, the Black Abolitionist with his view on god's support of abolishing slavery and the recognition that force must be used to free the blacks as Lincoln showed as he declared that Slavery must be abolished with the might of the Union Army as they rushed to defeat the south. A religious man that did many great things for his country, Abe Lincoln will be remembered how his religious views changed the United States forever.
Moi

Can you handle the awesome?
Sunday, March 27, 2011
Journal #20: "A Nation Reborn"
Quite a shocking and informational video, "God in America" -- Part III: "A Nation Reborn," Shows the religious aspects on the issue of slavery between both the North and the South. The North made fronts on how evil and sinful the institution was while the South tried to defend by claiming its a god supported institution, both sides had ministers to back them up along with verses on the bible. The civil war was like a religious crusade for both sides to determine once and for all, who really had god's support. As the war reached its latter stages, the North saw the war in a new way, that it was a punishment for two hundred and fifty years of slavery, and that god was truly on their side.
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Journal Entry #19: "The Huck Finn Controversy"
To many, The Adventures if Huckleberry Finn is a classic story of American boyhood and his lesson about the truth behind slavery, to others, its a book that spams the "N-word" uncontrollably and makes it unusable for teaching American Literature. For me, I found it puzzling how just one word would make a countless number of schools ban one of the classics of American Literature. This was until I saw the "60 minutes" special about the censorship of Huckleberry fin and the disturbing power behind the "N-Word."
I understood the intentions of the man who was behind replacing the "N-word" with "slave" for his latest edition of Huckleberry Finn. More schools could use the book and still teach the message in the book about slavery, but does it? I don't think so, at least not to the same extent as the original copy. The use of such a word was not that uncommon back then in the South, and taking that out is like shedding a blanket over a serious problem back then. Alone, the word is just a word, but back then, white slave owners gave that word its true meeting and power as they used their word on their slaves. So taking that word away covers a part if American History that Southern whites and Blacks did want to see.
Thursday, March 17, 2011
First Post
Hello y'all, welcome to my blog. This is my first post and..........yeah. I like cheese. More intelligent posts later.
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