Reverend Crystal Bates is now the Texas NAACP’s assistant secretary. Rev. Bates who is also vice chair of the Environmental & Climate Justice Committee...

There are moments in history when a single act of generosity reveals the moral decay of an entire nation. MacKenzie Scott’s $38 million gift to...

It did not come as a surprise to Atiya Henley’s parents, alumni of Head Start, that she would become a published author before the...

People in the News

Friday, October 31, 2025

People in the News

Friday, October 31, 2025

Black History Spotlight for Sept. 5: Sengal’s Leopold Sedar Senghor

Leopold Sedar Senghor was born in the small fishing village of Joal-la-Portugaise, which is located in French West Africa, present-day Senegal. Senghor wrote, “I grew up in the heartland of Africa, at the crossroads- of castes and races and roads.”  At the age of 12, Senghor attended the Catholic mission school of Ngazobil. He then studied at the Libermann Seminary and Lycee Van Vollenhoven where he finished secondary-school education in 1928.

Senghor was a poet and statesman. On Sept. 5, 1960 Senghor was elected as president of Senegal. He is the founder of the Senegalese Democratic Blue. He is noted for his concept of Negritude, defined as the literary and artistic expression of the black African experience. He retired from his presidency in 1980. Senghor was the first African elected as a member of the Academie francaise (French Academy). Senghor was an important African intellectual of the 20th century.

“L’èmotion est nègre, la raision est héllène.” (emotion is Negro, reason is Greek) “Negritude is the totality of the cultural values of the Black world.” – Leopold Sedar Senghor