The nonpartisan “Igniting Change Radio Show with Barbara Arnwine, Esq. and Daryl Jones, Esq.” program will be aired from 12:00 p.m. to 1:00 p.m. Eastern Time (ET) on Radio One’s WOL 1450 AM in the Washington, DC metropolitan area as well as nationwide on WOLDCNEWS.COM and Barbaraarnwine.com.
Please note, during the show there are 3 hard stop commercial breaks at 12:13 PM Eastern Time, 12:28 PM ET and 12:43 PM ET.
Prof. Ernest J. Quarles, Esq.: 12:00 PM – 12:57 PM Eastern Time
Professor at John Hopkins University and African American Policy Forum Board Member; practicing attorney, civil rights advocate, and educator; former student of the late Honorable Judge A. Leon Higginbotham (3rd Circuit Court of Appeals) and was mentored by the late Professor Derrick Bell (Harvard and NYU)
Tiffany Pogue: 12:00 PM – 12:57 PM ET
TJC Alumni and Fellow. Tiffany Pogue is a native to Mobile, AL. She is a community organizer, mental health advocate, empowerment activist, and youth mentor. Tiffany is an alumni of the University of South Alabama, holding a Bachelor’s degree in Psychology with a minor in Sociology. She utilizes her degree by developing programs, initiatives, and events that curate moments of empowerment and awareness. She is a founding Executive Board Member for Stand Up Mobile, a local non-profit voter mobilization organization. Tiffany is the founder of the Boys & Girls Clubs of South Alabama’s Annual Advocates for Girls Conference – where young girls learn from and connect with prominent women in the Mobile community. The third annual Girls’ Empowerment Conference was held on Monday, March 18th and impacted over 100 girls throughout Mobile County. Tiffany is also a lifetime member of the Clotilda Descendants Association – where she shares the story of her African ancestors who survived the last known slave ship in America and she actively supports the community they built: Africatown, AL.
INTRODUCTION:
The Igniting Change Radio Show on Tuesday, March 19th, 2024, from 12:00 PM – 1:00 PM Eastern Time, entitled, “The Transformative History of African American Women in the U.S. Part 2”., will be live with Radio Show Co-Hosts and Transformative Justice Coalition (TJC) Co-Leaders Attorneys Barbara Arnwine, Esq. and Daryl Jones, Esq. and feature special guests Prof. Ernest J. Quarles, Esq. and Tiffany Pogue. This is Part 2 of Igniting Change’s look into Black women’s contributions to the United States, a direct follow up to last week’s show. This show will also begin with two major announcements:
Coming off the heels of African American History Month, this month is Women’s History Month. Very few people are knowledgeable of the full record of amazing accomplishments of Black women throughout the history of the United States. Yet, decade to decade, African American women have left a powerful imprint upon every page of American history. This show will continue to look at African American women, known and unknown, who have made a significant mark upon this country from its inception to the present.
In addition to highlighting more extraordinary African American women who made major contributions to our history, we will also discuss the women in the mostly unknown story of the Clotilda and Africatown, AL. The story of the Clotilda really exemplifies the evil of American slavers who, based on a dare, decided to defy the law and illegally operated a slave ship that trafficked 110 African men, women, and children. Once the ship reached the US in 1859, after the enslaved people were taken off the ship, the ship was sunk into the waters near Mobile, Alabama. The descendants created what is now known as “Africatown”, Alabama. This story would be lost to history except for the work of renowned Black author Zora Neale Hurston, who in 1931 interviewed a survivor, Cudjo Lewis, and produced a book titled “Barracoon” based on his story.
QUESTIONS: