WHAT DO I DO?

    Wednesday, August 1, 2012, 12:10 AM [General]

    How do we honor abusive, evil, reprobate, toxic ex-girlfriends?
    We honor them by not returning the abuse that they gave to us.
    We honor them by not wanting to destroy their lives, but to improve it/change it/transform it through Christ.
    We honor them by praying for their salvation and for their break though.
    We honor them by stop trying to save them, or change them, that it is Christ's job.
    We honor them by letting go and letting God work a miracle.
    We honor them by realizing that our enabling behavior & failure to give the ultimate consequence of no contact is getting in God's way.
    We honor them by not enabling them to continue their abuse with us or with others.
    We honor them by insisting that they get the professional help that they need, before they have anymore contact with us & our family members.
    We honor them by remaining in a No Contact status and not being tempted to break it "for the kids sake" during birthday, holidays, or any other special occasion for this would send a mixed message & defeat the purpose of No Contact.
    We honor them by giving them clear boundaries and consequences if they are not remorseful and repent/turn from/change/end their abusive behavior, OR we will have nothing to do with them.
    We honor them by reversing the curse, in that we will not allow their abusive legacy to continue to our children.
    We honor them by returning honor to the family's reputation & creating an awesome legacy for future generations.
    Do you know another way we can honor our evil girlfriends?
    Share it with us & leave it on the comments section.
    Just like there are two different kinds of girlfriends, loving/imperfect girlfriends and abusive/toxic girlfriends, there are two different kinds of honoring, honoring the loving person and honoring the abusive one (as mentioned above). Both kinds of honoring persons should be equally respected because they come from love. When we honor abusive, evil, toxic, reprobate people, as mentioned above, we are in fact fulfilling this commandment and need not feel any guilt that we can not do the other kind of honoring-it was not our choice to make. God blessed us with free will and it was our choice to be loving or abusive, therefore that places them in one category of honoring or another. Just as God says, I have put life (love/good) and death (hate/evil) before you -- choose life/love! Life/love is a choice and if we don't choose it then we get the natural consequence of our selection which is death. Death of a relationship with God and with others. God can not make people choose life/love and neither can we. The full responsibility of the death of a relationship lies on the abusive, evil, toxic, reprobate parent and no one else. A person should not be made to feel less of a Christian because she can not honor her evil parent in the exact same way a person who had a loving or imperfect parent. God says to rebuke evil--not honor it! We need to stop digging into one another, as the enemy would have us do, and start digging into scripture and stop ignoring what God says about people who are evil with a cold calloused unremorseful/unrepentful heart
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    YOU ARE HELD ACCOUNTABLE!!!!

    Wednesday, August 1, 2012, 12:00 AM [General]

    When people are being abused in the Church and you don't don't reprimand them you are equally responsible.

     

    Not even God can/will save an evil person who is unwilling to change--so why do some people think or act like they are better than God? Why do they think they can do something that God will not do? God never tells us to lay our life down for an evil/toxic person. In fact He tells us to stay away & rebuke evil. Imagine your beautiful little daughter comes home from school with tears in her eyes. She tells you how her "friend" at school has been verbally & physically abusive towards her. You comfort her and explain to her that it wasn't her fault that this "friend" is abusive and that some people choose to be mean & do evil things which makes them our enemy and not our friend anymore. There are many scriptures that tell us to identify something as either good or bad and take the appropriate actions (read articles Are They Good or Bad? They Get Worse Not Better With Time, and By Their Fruits You Will Know Them). After numerous failed principal/parental interventions the abusive child continues to be a threat to your daughter. This enemy of your child has no remorse and no motivation to change her abusive evil ways. This mean abusive person may say everything you want & need to hear (which implies insight & remorse), but her abusive behavior never truly changes -- so what do you do? How many times must your child be slapped in the face before you have her end this toxic abusive relationship with the mean girl? When does your daughter get to fight back and protect herself from this enemy's attacks, do you condemn her to a life of doormat and personal punching bag? Of course you don't. You have your Beautiful Daughter end the abusive relationship with the mean girl ASAP (As Soon As Possible). You want to protect your child from evil doers at all costs -- it is a parental instinct that God created us to use. God is the perfect loving parent. We are created in His image and He wants to protect His children from evil just like we want to protect our children from evil, toxic, abusive people. Therefore, if God wants to protect His children from evil, and is no respecter of person, then why do some people believe that God wants us to honor evil abusive parents? God is perfect and would not contradict Himself, by saying rebuke evil at one time and honor it at another.

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    Do You Have A Relationship Or Someone Who Won't Let You Go? READ THIS!

    Tuesday, July 31, 2012, 11:05 PM [General]

    Say this Prayer 3 times daily to rid yourself of unhealthy relationships and people who cling to you and won’t go away.

    Especially those who you consistently show love and are incapable of returning love.  If you find yourself continuously leaving and going back you may be ruled by witchcraft.

    There are many scriptures that tell us to identify something as either good or bad and take the appropriate actions (read articles Are They Good or Bad? They Get Worse Not Better With Time, and By Their Fruits You Will Know Them)

    STOP MAKING EXCUSES FOR THEM!  YOU WILL BE HELD ACCOUNTABLE FOR THE PEOPLE THEY HURT!!! 

    TO RETURN ALL WITCHCRAFT AND CURSES, PRAY THIS SEVERAL TIMES DURING THE DAY:
    IN JESUS NAME, I CUT AND BURN ALL UNGODLY SILVER CORDS AND LAY LINES. AS YOUR WAR CLUB AND WEAPONS OF WAR, I BREAK DOWN, UNDAM, AND BLOW UP ALL WALLS OF PROTECTION AROUND ALL WITCHES, WARLOCKS, WIZARDS, SATANISTS, SORCERERS, AND THE LIKE, AND I BREAK THE POWER OF ALL CURSES, HEXES, VEXES, SPELLS, CHARMS, FETISHES, PSYCHIC PRAYERS, PSYCHIC THOUGHTS, ALL WITCHCRAFT, SORCERY, MAGIC, VOODOO, ALL MIND CONTROL, JINXES, POTIONS, BEWITCHMENTS, DEATH, DESTRUCTION, SICKNESS, PAIN, TORMENT, PSYCHIC POWER, PSYCHIC WARFARE, PRAYER CHAINS, INCENSE AND CANDLE BURNING, INCANTATIONS, CHANTING, UNGODLY BLESSINGS, HOODOO, CRYSTALS, ROOTWORKS, AND EVERYTHING ELSE BEING SENT MY WAY, OR MY FAMILY MEMBER'S WAY, OR ANY DELIVERANCE MINISTRIES WAY, AND I RETURN IT, AND THE DEMONS TO THE SENDER, ONE HUNDREDFOLD, AND I BIND IT TO THEM BY THE BLOOD OF JESUS.

    SAMPLE PRAYER: Father, In JESUS' CHRIST Name, I break and loose myself from all witchcraft curses and demons being sent against me. Jeremiah 51:20. As your war club, I break in pieces the walls of protection that the satanists have put up for their protection and I send all demons and curses back to them sevenfold and bind it to them by the Blood of JESUS CHRIST. I break and loose myself from all psychic prayers, thoughts, warfare, all Catholic prayers being prayed for and against me, all ungodly intercessory prayers, all words spoken in hurt, anger, sorrow or bitterness in JESUS' CHRIST Name

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    The Spirit Of Deception Operating In Our Churches

    Monday, July 30, 2012, 6:05 AM [General]

    I have to let you know if your going to do battle with thais spirit you must fast and pray this spirit is the Ultimate Deciever and it will use everyone around it to help accomplish it's mission.  God, forbid if you ae getting close to the object of it's affections.  It will use everyone and everything it can to keep you at bay. But realize this "NO WEAPON FORMED SHALL PROSPER AGAINST YOU."

    I have encountered one who will smile and grin and you would think it was the sweetest thing but baby under all of this is THE MUST EVILEST PERSON I HAVE EVER ENCOUNTERED and get this it works in a church office. IT MUST BE IN CONTROL OF ALL THE AFFAIRS AND GOINGS ON OF THE CHURCH.  IT MUST BE SEEN AS THE QUEEN!  NOT ONLY MUST IT BE SEEN BUT IT WILL CALL AHEAD TO SEE WHAT YOU ARE WEARING SO THAT IT CAN OUT DRESS YOU!   SHALLOW AS IT MAY BE!

    This article is for those who may be encountering the same DEMON.

     

    The spirit of Jezebel is always around us and it seeks to hide itself,  seduce, intimidate, manipulate and trade in human souls. It is a religious  spirit but it promotes religious things that are contrary to God. Jezebel  promotes fleshly indulgence amongst God's people and shuns the cross. The  Jezebel spirit is the enemy of the true prophets of the Lord.

    Some people talk about the "Jezebel" spirit because this is the kind of  spirit that was working powerfully through Queen Jezebel, a Sidonian princess  who married King Ahab of Israel, and killed so many prophets of God. The book of  Revelation has a chapter almost exclusively devoted to exposing this spirit -  Chapter 17. In this chapter we read that the woman is drunk with the blood of  the saints and with the blood of the martyrs of Jesus. (Revelation 17:6). So  this spirit especially hates and seeks to murder righteous people and those who  speak faithfully the Word of the Lord, just as Jezebel the wife of Ahab was  responsible for most of the true prophets of Yahweh in her day (1 Kings  18:13)

    To say 'No' to this spirit you will start to experience opposition in this  life. You can dream along well enough and live a life of carnal pleasure,  telling yourself you are Christian, without having too much trouble from this  spirit, because in this way you are still held captive. Try to break free and  you will see what it is. But, the good news is that God has promised to judge  and destroy this spirit and its works. This will not come without pain to the  people of the world.

    There are problems with the Jezebel Spirit in many churches  (charismatic/evangelical churches). The person with this spirit is often unaware  of it, so are the people around them. She shows her true colors and nature quite  slowly and cunningly and ends up overpowering the situations around her. Either  they come to full control of the local church or finally divides it. People are  leaving churches due to this spirit. The main target of this spirit are the  leaders and elders of the church. Not only the church rather the whole world is  coming under her wings; be it our home, society, country or the whole world.  Jezebel spirit is growing in numbers each day. It leaves a person in total  deception. .The Jezebel spirit steals your peace. This spirits bring much  confusion to a church. They bring sickness, discord, and adultery. A little  leaven will leaven the whole lump. It will hit everyone unless we learn to  recognize her and throw her down like Jehu who destroyed Jezebel by throwing her  down off the wall 2 Kings 9:33.

    You are invited to visit www.christian-faith.com  This is a website dedicated to Christian Faith. You can find articles relating  to all topics concerning a human spiritual life and answers to many questions  that believers ask. In short, it is an online storehouse that supplies food for  your spiritual growth.

    Article Source: EzineArticles.com/?expert=Anu_Rekha

    Article Source: EzineArticles.com/2105896

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    Allenworth First Black Community In California eliminated from History Books

    Saturday, July 28, 2012, 11:45 PM [General]

    Here's another part of Afro-American History eliminated from the History books.

    Allenworth is still a tourist event.  I would suggest that Afro-American go see the first Black town in California and how it was destroyed because they moved the water supply from the town thereby cutting off all the water in order to rid themselves of the Black residents.

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    Allensworth: California's African American Community

    Originally published by Wild West magazine.              Published Online: June 12, 2006
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    Although a small, dusty town where residents constantly battled heat and drought may seem an unlikely setting for a heroic effort at colony building and racial self-determination, this community of 'race pioneers, with its commitment to limiting the parameters of prejudice, served as a beacon of hope to blacks in the Golden State and across the nation. The community, Allensworth, belied the notion of African-American inferiority and, in so doing, generated excitement, hope and confidence. As soon as our race gets property in the form of real estate, of intelligence, of high Christian character, it will find that it is going to receive the recognition which it has not thus far received, said Colonel Allen Allensworth, the community's founder. This town and its founder deserve a kinder fate than relegation to a historical footnote.

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    For blacks in California, the end of the 19th century and beginning of the 20th was a nadir: the U.S. Supreme court anointed racism's handmaiden, segregation, as the law of the land; a form of economic bondage known as share-cropping re-enslaved the mass of southern blacks as well as poor whites, and the black community's leadership was splintered by the acrimony between W. E. B. DuBois and Booker T. Washington. It was this atmosphere of uncertainty and discrimination that encouraged five gentlemanly looking Negro men (so described by the Delano Holograph on June 13, 1908) to work toward the creation of a race colony in California.

    Guiding his venture were the fervor and dreams of Allen Allensworth. Although born into slavery in Louisville, Ky., in April 1842, Allensworth refused to submit to that degrading institution.

    During his youth, despite laws forbidding the education of slaves, Allensworth mastered reading and writing, whetting his lifelong appetite for learning. After two unsuccessful escape attempts, he finally succeeded during the initial years of the Civil War. Recognizing the importance of that struggle, Allensworth wanted to participate.

    For several months in 1862, the former slave worked as a civilian aide to the 44th Illinois volunteer Infantry. But this service did not satisfy Allensworth. On April 3, 1863, he became a seaman, first class, of the Union Navy. During the remaining years of the civil war, he served on gunboats such as the Queen City and Pittsburg. He left the navy in April 1865 with the rank of first class petty officer.

    During Reconstruction, Allensworth underwent a religious conversion and decided to study theology at Roger Williams University in Nashville, Tenn. While at the university, he met and later married Josephine Leavell. After completing his studies, Allensworth maintained several pulpits in and around his native Louisville. Allensworth's success as a minister propelled him into politics, says Stanleigh Bry, library director for the Society of California Pioneers. He was one of Kentucky's delegates to the Republic National convention in 1880 and 1884.

    It was in 1882, however, that a black soldier came to Allensworth for help, complaining about the lack of black chaplains in the all-black military units. The soldier urged Allensworth to help recruit blacks to fill those positions. Allensworth did more than recruit, Bry says. He decided to become a chaplain himself. Reportedly, Allensworth hoped that as a chaplain, he could improve the lot of the average black soldier, help the race in its battle to win support and, at the same time, provide a secure future for his family. Thus motivated, Allensworth launched a concerted effort to gain appointment to the 24th Infantry (colored) in 1884.

    First, Allensworth solicited testimonials and letters of support from a myriad of major and minor southern politicians, Democrats and Republicans alike. Then he drafted letters to President Grover Cleveland and to the Office of the Adjutant General. In these missives, Allensworth crafted a persuasive argument. He reasoned to Cleveland that by appointing a black chaplain, the president could strengthen [his] administration among the colored people, particularly in the South. He also stated that he could be of service in securing good discipline and gentlemanly conduct among the soldiers.

    Finally, ever the pragmatist and fully aware of the reservation about social interaction between black and white officers, Allensworth wrote, I know where the official ends and where the social life begins, and therefore [guard] against social intrusion.

    Allensworth's considered exertions were rewarded: in April 1886, he was appointed chaplain of the 24th Infantry with the rank of captain.

    For 20 years, Allensworth ministered to the needs of his flock as the 24th moved from Fort Apache in the Arizona Territory to Camp Reynolds in California to Fort Missoula in Montana. During those years, the captain not only saw to the troops' spiritual needs, but also worked to raise their overall educational level, says Sibylle Zemitis, reference librarian at the California State Library. Throughout, he carried himself as an officer and a gentleman. And all in all, he was quite successful.

    When he retired in 1906, Lt. Col. Allensworth and his family relocated to Los Angeles. But an ordinary retirement was unthinkable for this man, so involved with the struggle to improve the position of blacks. Not least among the motives of the colonel was his desire to change white attitudes toward blacks.

    Rather than spending his golden years in the California sunshine, Allensworth continued to promote the African-American race and promulgate the teachings of another individual who had come up from slavery, Booker T. Washington. The colonel, an ardent supporter of the Tuskegean, believed that if the race was to rise, blacks had to be willing to do for themselves, to rely on black self-help efforts, rather than on white philanthropy. Allensworth was particularly fond of one admonishment published in the California Eagle by its editor, J. J. Neimore: Eschew cheap jewelry. Quit taking five-dollar buggy rides on six dollars a week. Don't put a five-dollar hat on a five-cent head. Get a bank account. Get a home of your own. Get some property . . . Don't be satisfied with the shadows of civilization; get some of the substance for yourself! (This statement is also credited to Booker T. Washington.)

    To spread these and other ideas, Allensworth embarked on a speaking tour to inspire and educate blacks. Presenting lectures entitled, the Five Manly Virtues Exemplified, the Battle of Life and How to Fight It, and Character and How to Read It, the colonel sought to encourage thrift, instill the value of education, and plot a strategy whereby the whole race might uplift itself. Allensworth's ideas, however, were restricted to theoretical discussion on the lecture circuit, until he met William Payne, a gifted teacher and university graduate living in Pasadena, Calif.

    Although different in age and temperament, Payne and Allensworth were kindred souls in the struggle to improve their race. Payne, a graduate of Denison University and a West Virginia native, had spent his youth in Corning, Ohio. Before settling in Pasadena in 1906, he had been an assistant principal at the Rendsvile School and a professor at the West Virginia Colored Institute. Arriving in California, however, Payne soon discovered that if black teachers were rare, jobs for them were even rarer.

    Recognizing the need for unusual measures, Allensworth and Payne plotted the creation of an all-black community — a colony of orderly and industrious African Americans who could control their own destiny. The two men believed that in such a community, free of the debilitating effects and limits of racism, blacks could demonstrate that they were capable of organizing and managing their own affairs.

    The colony would prove to all Americans that black people were worthy of their rights and responsibilities as citizens, says Bry.

    The soldier and the scholar envisioned a black community that would make opportunities for African-Americans  — opportunities being central to the philosophies of both men. They believed that the disappointing status of the race nearly half a century after emancipation was due to circumstance rather than color. Yet most of the country, then imbued with the wisdom of eugenics (the science of selective genetics), believed that blacks were intrinsically inferior and therefore incapable of contributing to the American nation of its road to greatness. White Californians, of course, held this same belief. Payne and Allensworth believed that given the opportunity, blacks could live up to their potential, and in the process, destroy that malicious fallacy. Their colony, they believed, would provide that very opportunity.

    Allensworth, California, belied the myth of African-American genetic inferiority by providing the opportunity for hardworking, orderly black Californians to control their own destiny, says Michael Harvey, chief library for the California Historical Society.

    Another function of the colony that would eventually become Allensworth was to provide a home for the soldiers of America's four all-black regiments. Obviously, this meant much to the colonel. In his promotional newsletter The Sentiment Maker (May 1912), the needs and desires of the soldier were stressed throughout. Headlines regarding Home, Sweet Home called out strongly to the wander-weary military men and their families.

    In Allensworth, it was promised that every man would have a good home. For a small outlay of your present pay, the colonel said, you may become independent, yes, even a richer soldier-gentleman, surrounded by people of your own kind, your own sort. As a final inducement, he promised that the community would eventually possess a home for soldiers' families. There, soldiers could leave their families in a beautiful balmy California climate, surrounded by the very best environment, while overseas on hazardous duty. In short, life in their colony, for the soldier, would be a reward for a job well done.

    As the mechanism to transform their ideas into reality, on June 30, 1908, Allensworth and Payne created the California Colony and Home Promoting Association, with offices in the San Fernando Building on Main Street and in downtown Los Angeles. Although Allensworth and Payne were the chief officers of the association, several others also played a significant roles in the colony's founding: John W. Palmer, a miner; William H. Peck, a minister; and Harry A. Mitchell, a real estate agent.

    The association soon ran into difficulties, however, in the problems and expenses of acquiring choice land for a black settlement, and it seemed that the venture might flounder until, as one contemporary put it, the Pacific Farming Company came to the rescue. This white-owned rural land development firm offered the association prime land in Solito (or Solita, as it was spelled on Santa Fe Railroad schedules), a rural area in Tulare County 30 miles north of Bakersfield. Quickly renamed Allensworth in honor of the colonel, Solito/Solita was a good site for the colony. It was a depot station on the main Santa Fe Railroad line from Los Angeles to San Francisco, the soil was fertile, the water seemingly abundant, and the acreage not only plentiful but also reasonably priced.

    Initially, many of the colony residents, including Colonel Allensworth, were surprised but gratified that a white company had come to their aid. Yet within five years, the Pacific Farming company would become the colony's adversary in a water controversy. Its incorporation papers state that the Pacific Farming Company was organized in 1908 to develop rural land into town and village sites. Led by William Loftus of Fullerton, Calif., and Los Angelenos J. R. Treat and W. H. Bryson, this moneymaking venture was headquartered in the Security Building at 508-510 Spring Street in the heart of the Los Angeles business district.

    Once the deal was consummated, the association began to market the colony as a haven for conscientious blacks who desired fertile land and a community where their exertions [would be] appreciated. Within a year, the Tulare County Times reported that 35 families were residing in Allensworth. Although obtaining accurate figures concerning the early settlement is difficult, the colony generated enough excitement to attract pioneers from throughout the nation.

    The colony's population was greater than figures listed in government records because of Allensworth's floating population of people who would come and stay there three or four months and go and the county registrar would know nothing about it, says Henry Singleton, a former resident of Allensworth.

    Population figures are also blurred by the fact that many individuals purchased lots but lived in other areas, intending eventually to make Allensworth their home. By 1912, however, Allensworth's official population of 100 had celebrated the birth of Alwortha Hall, the first baby born in the town, and enjoyed two general stores, a post office, many comfortable homes, such as the one Allen and Josephine Allensworth built in 1910, and a newly completed school, the pride of the community, that also served as the center for the town's social and political activities.

    The 1912-1915 period marked the apex of Allensworth as a thriving community. African-American newspapers throughout the nation noticed the tiny hamlet: The New York Age chronicled its growth; the Washington Bee congratulated all involved with the enterprise; and the California Eagle gleefully exclaimed that there is not a single white person having anything to do with the affairs of the colony. Even the Los Angeles Times took note, labeling Allensworth an ideal Negro settlement.

    The national black community was starved for race victories. Newspaper editors, political leaders, businessmen and educators wall were pleading for blacks to prove themselves to be more than a dark blot on the national character (as a Southern senator had once labeled them). In a sense, these individuals endorsed (though many did so unknowingly) the belief of W. E. B. DuBois that a talented tenth must lead the race to new heights. Positive actions such as those taken by Allensworth residents were one way to portray blacks in a more favorable light.

    Also during this period, Allensworth's 200 affected the surrounding area's economic and political structure. Sources such as the Oakland Sunshine [a leading San Francisco Bay area black newspaper] claim that in 1913, the citizens of Allensworth generated nearly $5,000 monthly in their business ventures, says Jayne Sinegal, chief librarian for the California Afro-American Museum.

    Furthermore, voting registration records of 1915 list an impressive array of occupations of colonists, including farmers, storekeepers, carpenters, nurses and more, all suggesting that the colony's business and industrial output was prodigious.

    Allensworth's grain warehouses, cattle pens and storage bins served the needs of the local farmers and the railroad. Business enterprises developed by the colonists included the large poultry farms of Oscar Overr; a 10-room, 75-cents-per-night hotel run by John Morris, that also served as a restaurant; a large general store, owned by the Hindsmon family; a cement manufacturing enterprise; plaster and carpentry shops; and sugar beet agriculture. All this industry was geared to prove to the white man beyond a shadow of a doubt that the black man was capable of self-respect and self-control.

    Politically, Allensworth became a member of the county school district, the regional library system, and a voting precinct that elected Oscar Overr the first African-American justice of the peace in post-Mexican California.

    In 1914, the California Eagle reported that the Allensworth community consisted of 900 acres of deeded land worth more than $112,500. In a strictly economic sense, this was an auspicious beginning.

    Along with this burgeoning sense of political and economic influence came a true sense of community. It always seemed home to me,  says former Allensworth resident, Gemelia Herring. The grass was green, and wildflowers grew all over. I thought Allensworth was one of the most beautiful places I ever saw.

    Allensworth became a town, not just a colony. This is evident in the number of social and educational organizations that existed during Allensworth's golden age. The Owl Club, the campfire Girls, the Girls' Glee Club, and the Children's Saving Association met the needs of the young, while adults participated in the Sewing Circle, the Whist Club, the Debating Society, and the Theater Club. The Girls' Glee Club, modeled after the internationally known Jubilee Singers of Fisk University, was the community's pride and joy, says Sibylle Zemitis. Organized by Professor Payne with musical accompaniment provided by the able teacher, Margaret Prince, the Glee Club traveled all over the various little white towns to sing, she says. Although primarily a form of entertainment, the Glee Club was also a tool used to win support for the colony.

    Along with the school, the library was the focus of many community activities. From the colony's inception, many had recognized the benefits of a public library system, and on February 2, 1912, residents petitioned the Board of Trustees of the Visalia Free Library to establish a depot station at Allensworth. Although the request was approved, the space designated for the reading room was inadequate, so in 1913, Mrs. Josephine Allensworth, as a memorial to her mother, donated land and money to build a library that would do credit to even a larger community. This coal box style edifice, begun in May and completed in July 1913 at a cost of $500, had a book capacity of 1,000. When the Mary Dickinson Library was dedicated on the Fourth of July, Colonel Allensworth immediately donated his private library to the enterprise. As word of the library spread, Zemitis relates, the community received books from Visalia, San Francisco and North Dakota. Tulare County supported the venture by paying the costs of a custodian for the facility, local Allensworth resident, Ethel Hall.

    The library became a hub of activity as Allensworth residents, reflecting the founders' concern with self-education, relentlessly explored its holdings. In 1919, a local periodical noticed the community's preoccupation with learning. The Visalia Delta, in an article headlined, Allensworth Folks Great Readers, delineated the varied interests of the colony in books about questions of political economy, the warring nations in Europe and those dealing with the problems and interests of the colored race in America and elsewhere. As with many other African-American communities in the Golden State, Allensworth's back churches were a major factor in the development of community spirit and mutual respect. The first Baptist Church held regular services in what was described as a neat church edifice, while the first A.M.E. Zion membership worshipped in the school, and in 1916, plans were made to erect a structure for the Methodist congregation.

    Another element in Allensworth's development of the sense of communal responsibility was the struggle to establish a state-supported industrial school. Early in 1914, Colonel Allensworth lobbied for an educational institute to be based on the model pioneered by Booker T. Washington in Alabama. Allensworth envisioned a Tuskegee of the West that would provide practical training in such technical fields as agriculture, carpentry and masonry to black youths in California and the Southwest. When a bill to create the school was introduced in the California State Legislature, the colony of Allensworth anticipated an exciting and prosperous future, says Michael Harvey. It seemed that Allensworth would, as claimed by author Delilah Beasley, 'become one of the greatest Negro cities in the United States,' if not the world.

    But it was not to be. Colonel Allensworth and Payne had been duped by the Pacific Farming Company, and let down by others.

    Almost immediately, the Allensworth colony faced several crises that led to its eventual decline. In 1914, the Santa Fe Railroad, never a supporter of this black community, built a spur line to neighboring Alpaugh, thus allowing most rail traffic to bypass Allensworth and depriving the town of the lucrative carrying trade. The Santa Fe's decision was the culmination of a series of conflicts between Allensworth and that railroad — and racial prejudice. Initially, the rail line refused to change the name of the depot from Solito/Solita to Allensworth. In an article in the Tulare County Times in July 1909, officials argued that the new name was too long to fit on signs or in the book of schedules. It was several years before the company relented and changed its policy, says Herring. A more serious problem was the Santa Fe's employment practices. The corporation refused to hire African Americans as the manager or as ticket agents of the station located in the colony and, despite repeated letters and recriminations, the railroad continued to restrict block people to menial labor, says Sinegal.

    Further, the dream of having the Tuskegee of the West ended when the bill to create the school failed to pass the legislature. It went down in May of 1915, partly because of strong opposition from the African Americans in Los Angeles and San Francisco, who believed that a Tuskegee-like institution would implicitly sanction and thereby reinforce educational and residential segregation, says Bry.

    Moreover, the community continued to reel under the long-standing water problem. As part of the initial purchase, the Pacific Farming Company had agreed to supply sufficient water for irrigation, regardless of how large the town grew, but as early as 1910, the Pacific Farming Company was failing to honor its commitment. Eventually, the community sought and gained legal redress: the control of the Allensworth Water Company passed to the town. But it was a pyrrhic victory at best because the town now owned an outdated water system, and had the unexpected burden of massive, unpaid taxes. Not until 1918 was the community able to rid itself of the tax burden and begin to upgrade the pumping machinery, but by then the water table had dropped too low and the equipment was ineffective.

    But the single most critical factor in the community's decline was the death of Allen Allensworth in 1914. On September 13, Allensworth was in the foothill city of Monrovia to speak at a church. Shortly after he left the train station, crossing the street, he was struck by a speeding motorcycle and died the next morning. Riding the motorcycle were two white youths, E. S. White and W. F. Ray, who claimed that an excited Allensworth was responsible for the accident. But after the colonel's family filed a legal complaint, the two were arrested in late September. After funeral services at the Second Baptist church of Los Angeles, with a military honor guard of both races, Colonel Allensworth was interred at the Rosedale Cemetery on September 18, 1914.

    The Allensworth community was devastated. Although Payne and Overr assumed the leadership of the colony, no one could replace the colonel. Without Allensworth's spiritual guidance and leadership, the community began to disintegrate. By 1920, the two leading figures, William Payne and Josephine Allensworth, had left the area. Payne accepted a teaching job at El Centro, while Mrs. Allensworth returned to Los Angeles to live with her daughter, Nella. The exodus continued during the years of the Great Depression and World War II.

    Henry Singleton painted a bleak and disappointing picture of the community's decline during this period: any Negro that wanted to work in plowing, in potatoes or the grapes grown in Delano could just move into Allensworth, move into one of the empty homes. They could stay, no rent, no nothing, nobody owned it. Some of the houses were good, others were falling down. It was a sort of a camping ground.

    The lure of jobs in Oakland and in other war industry sites further decimated the town's population, and in 1966, arsenic was found its water supply. This seemed to sound the death knell for Allensworth. Yet the colonel's dream would not die. Beginning in 1969, various community organizations, led by Ed Pope and Eugene and Ruth Lasartemay, expressed interest and support in creating a state historic site at Allensworth. By 1973, the state had acquired the land, and the advisory committee, under the direction of Dr. Kenneth Goode, began its work. In May 1976, the state Department of Parks and Recreation approved the plans to develop the park, and on October 6, 1976, the park was indeed dedicated. So the colonel's dream, if not his colony, endures.

    When the Department of Parks and Recreation was collecting oral histories during the 1970s as a prelude to establishing the park, however, several of the former residents who were interviewed wondered why anyone was interested in Allensworth. After all, hadn't the colony failed? Why commemorate an unsuccessful venture?

    While the colony existed as symbol of hope for less than 20 years, it assumes greater significance in the context of the political and racial pre-World War I America. From that era of segregation, characterized by vitriolic racism and the extralegal atrocities of Judge Lynch, arose the ambiguous leadership of Booker T. Washington. His policies of accommodation to white racism, mixed with his exhortations for black self-help and virtuous living, were clarion calls for much of the African-American community. Certainly many early Allensworth residents agreed with Washington when he said: One farm bought, one house built, one home sweetly and intelligently kept, one man who is the largest taxpayer or who has the largest banking account, one school or church maintained, one factory running successfully, one garden profitably cultivated, one patient cured by a Negro doctor, one sermon well preached, one life clearly lived, will tell more in our favor than all the abstract eloquence that can be summoned to plead our cause.

    The community of Allensworth was an indirect result of Washington's philosophy of racial self-help. There, black men and women who controlled their land and destiny could prove to white America than, left to their own devices, they could create businesses, churches and communities that would contribute to black America's rise to greatness.

    Allensworth has also had a role in the historical continuum of all-black towns. While most African-Americans have always believed that hard work, perseverance and education would eventually lead to the triumph of justice and racial equality, if not for them, then for future generations, other African Americans have been less optimistic. The later African Americans doubted that a nation that had spawned the Ku Klux Klan and limited its black citizens' opportunities by legislative and de facto discrimination would ever embrace the black man and woman as an equal. To some, the only hope lay in distancing themselves from whites. For example, individuals such as Paul Cuffee (18th century) and Bishop Henry Turner (19th century) urged African Americans to return to Africa, where one could develop one's talents to the fullest as well as reaffirm ties to the African heritage. But such African repatriation plans met with limited success, for the simple yet powerful reason that most black people viewed American, not Africa, as their homeland and so greeted attempts to create African-American towns within the continental United States with much more enthusiasm.

    Black settlements have appeared on the American landscape since the colonial era, an example of which is the community of Parting Ways in Massachusetts. Like Allensworth, Parting Ways and countless other all-black communities were a response to overt racism: they were heralded by the black press as a positive step forward; were greeted with distrust and at times hostility by the neighboring towns; were begun with enthusiasm and pride, but with little capital; and almost all have been forgotten.

    Allensworth, Calif., differed from other all-black towns in its sense of mission and use of those modern promotional tools previously described. Payne and Allensworth had hoped that by giving their town the widest possible national circulation, their thriving city on a hill would eventually change the attitudes of white America. Thus the community tempered individual gain with the need t uplift the African-American race. And that is surely worth commemorating.

    One might just as well wonder why Americans commemorate the failed defense of the Alamo, for the fact that Allensworth ultimately failed is not the most important fact about the venture. What mattered then is that the attempt was made. And what matters now is that all Americans finally discover the depths of character and vision of those who, through their attempt to build a colony, tried to provide an opportunity for men and women to transcend race-based limits, and thus control their own destinies.


    This article was written by B. Gordon Wheeler and originally appeared in the February 2000 issue of Wild West.

    His Black California: The History of African-Americans in the Golden State is suggested for further reading, along with The Black Infantry in the West, 1969-1891, by Arlen L. Fowler; The Battles and Victories of Allen Allensworth by Charles Alexander; and The Negro Trail Blazers of California by Delilah Beasley.

    For more great articles be sure to subscribe to Wild West magazine today!

    7 Responses to “Allensworth: California's African American Community”


    1. 1
      Scott Braley says:

      A good synopsis of the basic history of Allensworth, that we somehow missed while working with Mrs. Alice Royal on "Allensworth: the Freedom Colony".   If Gordon Wheeler is still around, I would like to hear from him.

      Scott Braley

    2. 2
      Maj M. B. Parlor says:

      I miss the days when I appeared on KJLH 102.FM in Los Angeles to remind others.

      I am the administrator for the Facebook Buffalo Soldier site, where I include histrory regarding Allensworth.

      Semper Fi, "Major Pain'

    3. 3
      Dave Myers says:

      Here is more perspective …

      www.facebook.com/inbox/readmessage.php?a...

    4. 4
      Chante M Jones says:

      Hi My Name Is Chante Jones and some years back I was blessed to be able to visit  the Allensworth Town with my Church Inglewood South Side Christian Church and boy what a time I had. My Question  is do you give Scholarships to Black teens? I have a 17 year old Daughter and she wants to be a Lawer and a Writter she has a 3.3 grade average. Thank you have a blessed night.

      • 4.1
        Lisa Diggs says:

        Hi Chante Jones, My name is Lisa Diggs and I am an educator. I would like to share a few resources for your daughter to persue her education to become a lawyer.  She needs to appy for scholarships with as many sources as possible, she can find them through logging on to the www.thecollegeexpo.org, which tours around the country.  You can sign her up on it to be a recipient of their newsletter and college info.  Also you can sign her up on FastWeb.org, which is a free search engine, where she will set up an account and profile according to her interests, what she wants to study etc.  Also she can check out the UNCF.org – United Negro College Fund website, as well as Harvard University, which provides tuition free for 4  years for families that are middle income to low-income.  Google – Free College Information, also check with her  school counselor, they should have information on college scholarships.  Oh I just remembered – check the Thurgood Marshall Scholarship – this is for students interested in law.  Also check with the state of California- internships in Government and Policy  (Governor's Intern Program).

        Best Wishes to you and your daughter

        Lisa

    5. 5
      gil says:

      looking for information on the vann family of allensworth

    6. 6
      Marty Pay says:

      Excellent article on the times and the story behind Allensworth!!



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    I Have Purpose is completed

    Thursday, July 26, 2012, 3:10 PM [General]

    I have purpose is completed.

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    LAND OF THE BEAUTIFUL, HOME OF THE FREE WHY DID YOU REMOVE THE ORIGINAL STATUE OF LIBERTY "A BLACK WOMEN."

    Thursday, July 26, 2012, 2:06 PM [General]

    I have taken several courses in high school and college on Afro-American History.  I was curious to find out where my ancestors came from and how we got here (America).

    Those courses taught me alot about Afro-American history and in particular "Slavery In America.

    It taught me about the deception involved in the idealism of slavery, why that call soul food, soul food (it was said that the slaves would eat anything including the soul of an animal).  A statement that I find ironic considering this was the only food that the slaves with given to eat.

    How slaves were told to hold up their index finges during church services which was and indication to the slave masters that the slaves were asking to go to the bathroom.

    I learned about the KKK (klu Klux Klan) a group of people who are said to hate non-whites especially Blacks, Jews, etc. but carry a cross which represents Jesus who was a Jew (go figure).

    But I just discovered that the original "Statute Of Liberty" was a Black Women.  Why isn't this in our History books.  America are you trying to re-write history and exclude us?  (Afro-American).

    BLACK people we need to teach our children our history!  In the bible God told the Israelites to tell each generation how he delivered them out of slavery.  That was a command. 

    The Jews will never let you forget the HOLOCAUST!   So, don't ever let them forget SLAVERY!

    God's word says "MY PEOPLE PERISH FOR LACK OF KNOWLEDGE." 

    And don't tell me nothin' about we are all one in Christ I understand that but even Esther took up for her people in the bible and so should we if your people are being mistreated.  Yes, none of us should stand for the mistreatment of other but we should especially stand united when it is (us) being mistreated.

    Read the story of Esther.

    Below is the website about "the Original Statue of Liberty" including pictures

    www.nps.gov/stli/historyculture/black-st...

     

     

     

     

     

    0 (0 Ratings)

    Gaslighting

    Tuesday, July 24, 2012, 12:56 AM [General]

    Gaslighting

    Gaslighting is a strange-sounding term which refers to the way in which abusers such as Narcissistic Mothers lie to you, by word or deed, intentionally or not intentionally, to convince you that your version of reality is not right.

    The phrase comes from the 1940's film Gaslight, in which an abusive husband deliberately dims the gaslights in the house, but when his wife comments on it he tells her she's imagining it, that the lights never dimmed at all.

    Gaslighting is one of the most insiduous, viscious, nasty and effective forms of emotional and psychological abuse.

    Click here for the free "DONM Guidebook to Healing and Thriving"

    And why not check out our vibrant and friendly forum?

    It can make the victim feel as if she's going crazy. If your perceptions of reality are constantly denied, and above all, denied by your mother, the person you look up to and who you think knows everything, it is very, very head-wrecking and crazy-making.

    This gaslighting can be done deliberately, as in the example from the film above, in order to make you go crazy. Malignant Narcissists would be prone to

    doing this.

    Or the crazy-making can just be a side-effect and the gaslighting is done in order to preserve the Narcissistic Mother's vision of herself as perfect, without her actually having to do the stuff that would make her perfect.

    I wrote about my wedding and how my mother never gave me any compliment, but swears blind, shouting it, that she did. This is gaslighting.

    She didn't deliberately say to me on the day, "Pity you look so ugly," and then deny it - that would be the act of a Malignant Narcissist.

    But she was too self-absorbed and self-centred to say anything nice to me AND she was too convinced of her own wonderful motherness to even entertain the possibility that she wouldn't say anything nice to me, so she re-wrote history to make that that she did.

    It's impossible for non-narcissists to get into the mind of narcissists, so I have no idea if this is right. But my best guess is that in her mind it's a case of: "A wonderful mother would have told her daughter she looked lovely, and I am a wonderful mother, therefore I would have/must have said it, and if Danu says differently she must be mistaken".
    Gaslighting is also insiduous because so many of a Narcissistic Mother's cruelties are small ones. Any particular example of them can be dismissed as just a thoughtless word, and we're all thoughtless sometimes.

    But her cruelties add up to death by a thousand cuts, and if you're trying to reason with her (which, don't bother doing. But until you realise this ...) and you're using previous examples of the same cruelty in an attempt to show a pattern - well, it won't work because she will simply deny that the previous examples happened.

    Another form of gaslighting is the denial of your right to be upset. In this case the Narcissist might accept that the situation happened, but will invalidate you by vehemently denying that there was anything untoward about it, or any valid reason to get upset.

    You might like to check out our Narcissistic Mother-English Dictionary.

    You might aso find the film/movie Gaslight to be interesting. It clearly (and chillingly) shows exactly how gaslighting works

    Read more: daughtersofnarcissisticmothers.com/gasli...
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    Dictionary of A Narcissistic Mother

    Tuesday, July 24, 2012, 12:53 AM [General]

    Narcissistic Mother-English Dictionary

    This is the result of a bit of fun we had on our forum. But it's all very real under the humour. It's all classic gaslighting and invalidation.

    WHAT SHE SAYS

    WHAT IT MEANS

    I love you.
    1. I want to manipulate you.
    2. You're showing signs of breaking away and I want to suck you back in.
    3. I've heard people say this and it seems to get a good reaction.
    4. I command you to love me.
    Don't ever feel like you HAVE to come see me for my birthday If you don't make the 650 mile pilgrimage to celebrate me, I promise I will do something to make you pay dearly.
    Go do something constructive. Be gone, I have no interest in my own children.
    You were an "accident". You are only here because homicide would get me jail time, and I thought you'd be a better slave, so I didn't opt for adoption.
    You go have yourself a good cry! I resent your emotions, but at least I can use them to hurt you.
    I never said that!
    1. Damned if I'm going to admit it.
    2. Yes I said that but it doesn't work in the conversation right now.
    3. I know I said it but it’s so much fun to f*** with your head until you don’t know what is true and you think you really are crazy! Yeah me!!!
    It's been a long time since I talked to you and just called to see how you were doing. I am running low on my Narcissistic Supply and need another fix.
    I have no idea what you're talking about! Damned if I'm going to admit to it.
    You just aren't remembering correctly. My version of events shows me in a better light, so that's the official one.
    You never do anything for me! I know you've done a lot for me in the past, but that was then and it no longer counts. What have you done for me today?
    It's time this stops. None of my ploys have worked to pull you back so now I will treat you like a child.
    I miss you.
    1. I miss having control over you.
    2. I'm lacking my Narcissistic Supply - please provide it pronto.
    Who have you been talking to, in therapy with, what book did you read, etc, etc, etc.... I'm not getting the usual emotional response from you and you are too dim-witted to have figured out how to shut me down on your own.
    Your brother and sister-in-law took us out to dinner last night. We had such a nice time - I don't think we have ever been treated that well. You had better step up your game and show some appreciation for all I've done for you.
    I'm so proud of you.
    1. You have made mefeel good and/or *I* feel good because of you.
    2. I can take credit for that accomplishment.
    Why are you wasting your time on something so silly and that takes you away from your family? Why are you wasting your time on something so silly and that takes you away from me?
    Your father and I think ... I think ...
    So how are you?
    1. I'd better ask, but don't worry I won't really be listening. Or as soon as you say a trigger word, which reminds me of something else, I'll interrupt and be off again!
    2. I'm running out of things to boast to my friends about, so please come up with some accomplishments.
    I'm so sorry your beloved 14-year old dog died. Sigh ... I'd better at least mention it and then I can talk about myself again.
    It's so sad! It's so exciting! I love being this close to tragedies! The drama!
    I'm sorry.
    1. I will say the words but never change my behaviour.
    2. I'll say anything to shut you up, but don't worry, I don't mean it.
    I'm thinking of you. I will continue to ignore your boundaries.
    Let’s just let go of the past. Let’s pretend everything is ok and I’m not a nightmare of a mother so I can continue to torture you and get my Narcissistic Supply.
    Your sister-in-law is such a great cook! Simply amazing! I want to take away any pleasure or pride you have in your own cooking skills.
    I just want you to love me. All I really want is for you give me my Narcissistic Supply.
    What’s wrong with you today? What is your problem? I’m pissed that you are denying me my much needed Narcissistic Supply. Damn you!
    I was only trying to help! I demand the freedom to interfere in your life any time I want. That is my right!

    What happened to the nice girl I once knew?

    Why are you no longer the easily manipulated and uncomplaining-of-abuse girl I raised you to be?

    After all I’ve done for you! You’ve never appreciated me!” wah wah wah I have violated your boundaries most of your life and I resent the hell out of your standing your ground and refusing to allow me to interfere, manipulate and control you.
    Why are you treating me so badly? What have I done wrong? I have the right to interfere in your life and abuse you without any consequences.
    Because I’m the Mama! You are really just a child, after all. I’ll never acknowledge that you are now an adult.
    I want to give you this or that because I love you. It’s really because you will then be beholden to me and this gives me great leverage to milk you for Narcissistic Supply.
    I want to help you with your kids. I plan to interfere in the upbringing of your children by spoiling them, disciplining them differently to your way, and ignoring your decisions and wishes regarding them. I will not acknowledge your position and rights as the mother of these children.
    1. You were very difficult to raise.
    2. You were always my problem child.
    You resisted my attempts to violate your boundaries, abuse you and humiliate you.
    I never want to be a burden to you. I will over-run your life and suck the life force from you and your children.
    Have you lost some weight? I am so glad that I brought that sticky bun with me on this visit.
    You take me the wrong way. I will invalidate your feelings as I have done your whole life.
    You're such a good cook. You got that from me!
    You're such a good mother. You got that from me!
    You don't respect me! You won't let me abuse you!
    1. I have to walk on eggshells around you.
    2. You're over-sensitive.
    You won't take my abuse uncomplainingly.
    You won't forgive me! You won't allow me to allow me to trample all over you even though I have expressed no repentance and will continue to act exactly as I always have.
    1. You need more time to think about it.
    2. Well have a think about it and get back to me.
    I am not accepting your decision/opinion.
    I was just joking even if I did say and do that, which I didn't. I did say/do it, and I did mean it, but damned if I'm going to acknowledge that.
    You just won't admit when you're wrong. You defended yourself from my lies!
    Medical emergency Broken finger nail
    Disaster Phone bill arrives
    Major Disaster Visitor cancelled
    Read more: daughtersofnarcissisticmothers.com/narci...
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    I HAVE POTENTIAL

    Friday, July 20, 2012, 11:20 AM [General]

    God says "I Have A Plan and A Purpose for You!" 

     When we receive Jesus in our hearts and become a child of God, then we have the privileges God has given to all of His children available to us. We are then pure in the sight of God, and therefore our works before Him become good works. Through following our Lord daily we are able to live the overcoming life. 

    Jeremiah 29:11

    New International Version (NIV)

    11 For I know the plans A)"> I have for you,” declares the Lord, “plans to prosper B)">  you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.

    That sounds like a purpose to me.  Yes, God has a purpose for me.  For some of us who have traveled off the original plan of God it may seem a little difficult in getting back on the original path that God has for us.

    Let God be your navigation system, all we have to do is say "God I Am Willing To Go Where You Lead Me."

    If your anything like me I want to know when, where, how, are why?   Buw tith God he says "Just Trust Me."

    Once we Let Go and  Let God he'll say just like our navigation system; turn right here, turn left here or your going the wrong way make a u-turn.

    After many sleepless and restless night wondering about what I was going to do and how I am going to make it I finally surrended realizing that God has a plan and a purpose for me.

    Like my pastor says "I have to trust God." 

    Seeming, after I resolved to letting God take the helm I was able to rest in God knowing that he will order my footsteps

    He (God) has a plan and a purpose for me and no one can pluck me out of his hands.

    God will see that all his plans come to his expected end. 

    I am praying for God to direct my path so that I will stay on course.

    The lesson learned is not to de-rail!  I HAVE PURPOSE!

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