none of your business
Religion plays a huge role in black history. Specifically, slaves brought their religion over from Africa and it was what helped them get through the awful experience of enslavement. Much later on, in the 1950s and 1960s, the black church would serve as the heart of the civil rights movement.
Despite the progress of the late 1950s and early 1960s many young black Americans were frustrated, and those who lived in the ghettos felt anger at the high rates of unemployment, continuing discrimination and poverty which they experienced. Out of this frustration the Black Power movement emerged.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (commonly called the "Mormon" Church) does not specify race on it's membership records, and therefore it would be nearly impossible to tell. You may want to try to contact the Genesis Group (a church-sponsored group for black Church members based in Salt Lake City) or the people at blackLDS.org, they might have a pretty accurate idea. Please note, however, that these groups are intended for all black members of the Church, not just African Americans. Links are provided below under "Related Links".
Garvey Advocated black pride and black support of black-owned businesses
he inspired young african americans who felt that civil rights was not achieving anything and he made civil rights a civil right movement rather than just in the south
black nationalism
Calpurnia attended the First Purchase African M.E. Church in "To Kill a Mockingbird." This church was predominantly attended by African Americans in Maycomb.
It is probably clearer if you do capitalize it if you mean a religious community of African Americans. A "black church" sounds like you are talking about the paint on the building.
separate from white society and lead their own communities.
Religion plays a huge role in black history. Specifically, slaves brought their religion over from Africa and it was what helped them get through the awful experience of enslavement. Much later on, in the 1950s and 1960s, the black church would serve as the heart of the civil rights movement.
Black theatre, in the United States, dramatic movement encompassing plays written by, for, and about African Americans. ... Black theatre flourished during the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s and '30s.
He was also an African American and he felt that black people were being treated unfairly so he started a movement to change things.
Many African-Americans turned to the Black Power Movement because they had become disenchanted with the mainstream Civil Rights Movement. They were looking for an outspoken and reactive alternative to the more passive and non-violent predecessor.
Black people were adversely affected by these black codes because the black codes limited the rights of African Americans.
The programs in the New Deal benefited African Americans and black people :)
Do you mean black Americans, Africans who became Americans, or Americans who became African?
The Black Codes limited the freedoms of African-Americans, and that wasn't fair. The Black Codes pretty much segregated the African Americans from the Whites.