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Post: In eighteen, twenty eight, long before freedom was granted, a black woman named Sojourner Truth walked into an American courtroom and demanded justice. She wasn't a politician. She wasn't a millionaire. She was a formerly enslaved woman who couldn't read or write. Her son had been sold illegally to a plantation in Alabama. And Truth said no. She took the case to court, a black woman suing a white man in the eighteen hundreds. It was unheard of. The courtroom wasn't built for her. Every stare told her to leave. Every law was written against her. And yet she stood tall. She listened. She spoke from memory, from pain, from conviction. She called on Truth, not the law, to make them see her. She refused to back down. She fought. She argued, and against all odds, she won. She became the first black woman to successfully sue a white man in US CT and get her child back. That moment didn't just change her life. It cracked the system. And yet this story isn't in your school books. They teach her speeches, but not her courtroom war, because they don't want you to know. We were always fighters, always brilliant, always capable. Sojourner wasn't an exception. She was the proof. And when I realised a black woman with no formal power could beat the odds before slavery even ended, that broke me. Follow if You're ready to remember the names they hoped we'd forget, Share, Believe, Inspire, Black SBE.

Post:: In eighteen, twenty eight, long before freedom was granted, a black woman named Sojourner Truth walked into an American courtroom and demanded justice. She wasn't a politician. She wasn't a millionaire. She was a formerly enslaved… #HarrisonBarnes #eighteentwenty #twentyeight #eightbefore

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