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African American artist/poet Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller
www.aaregistry.com/african_american_history/227/Meta_VW_Fuller_scul...
NOTE: Tune into BAP Living Radio on March 29th at 7pm EST for a discussion about Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller with Dr. Renée Ater, a Professor of American Art at the University of Maryland. Dr. Ater will discuss her research and soon-to-be published book about Fuller (born June 9, 1877 - died March 18, 1968). Click here to listen to the show: www.talkshoe.com/tc/18598.

Ethiopia Awakening by Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller (1914)
At A Crossroads of Awakening by Ananda Leeke
Copyright 2009 by Madelyn C. Leeke
Inspired by my participation in the Fem 2.0 Conference held at George Washington University on February 2, 2009, and African American artist Meta Warwick Fuller’s sculpture, Ethiopia Awakening (1914)
Excerpt from That Which Awakens Me (iUniverse, Inc. - Spring 2009)
We are at a crossroads.
It is offering us a grand opportunity filled with great awakening.
One that can bring us into a new day that gracefully unfolds into a new tomorrow and future.
It is happening everywhere.
Can you see it?
Can you feel it?
Do you want to be a part of it?
Whether we know it or not, we are manifesting the words of our very own American artist sistalove Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller:
"awakening, gradually unwinding the bandages of [our] past and looking out on life again, expectant but unafraid."
The bandages we are unwinding are complex layers of identities that include our ethnic groups, socioeconomic classes, educational backgrounds, professions, places of residence, sexual orientation, religious affiliation, and political beliefs.
Many of us wear an array of t-shirts that mark us as feminists, womanists, pro-choicers, right to lifers, democrats, republicans, green party members, socialists, communists, independents, conservatives, progressives, and middle of the roaders.
Our labels of identity have often created barriers to our growth, coalition-building, understanding, and affirmation as women.
Despite the differences, our identities make us who we are.
They give us individual and collective meaning.
And they must be valued, understood, respected, and affirmed.
With all that said, I am left with a question:
How do we awaken and unwind the bandages from the barriers of the past that created exclusion and misunderstanding?
The answers for those of us who are connecting online reveal themselves a little each day as we interact with social media tools that have the capacity to expand our quilt of sisterhood.
When we tell and document our stories, seek support and advice, educate and train, create and share content, advocate for common causes, launch businesses and nonprofit organizations, market and sell products and services, express our creativity, and engage in dialogue on our audio/video/text blogs, Twitter, Facebook, Myspace, YouTube, and other social networking and bookmarking sites, we give ourselves the opportunity to learn more about each other.
Our learning efforts can open the door to ways we can honor, promote, and practice diversity, tolerance for a difference of opinion, self-care, compassion, patience, acceptance, mindfulness, loving kindness, and forgiveness.
It all begins with our choice.
If we choose to do the work of understanding who we are and what we believe and want, and seek out common interests without imposing our own strong wills, agendas, beliefs, and branding strategies, we can usher in a much-needed paradigm shift that creates space for our right brain to jump the broom and marry our left brain so that our power, passion, and purpose as women are aligned in strategic ways that give birth to new ways of being, communicating, and working together.
Are we ready to awaken and fully unwind the bandages of our past?
Are we ready to look out on life again, expectant but unafraid of manifesting a shared destiny of common interests while affirming and maintaining our separate identities and causes?
These questions are rhetorical.
We already know the answer.
We are smart, capable, and talented women.
So let’s walk past the crossroads and make what we know a reality.
Won’t you come?
Won’t you come?
Won’t you come?
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