With support from the University of Richmond

New perspectives on how history is made

New meaning for Black History Month

The election of Barack Obama as the 44th president of the United States has become a landmark in both American and black history. With Obama's inauguration just a few weeks ago, the significance of Black History Month is especially prominent this year.

"Everything changed with the last election," said Nicholas Smith, a recording arts major. "There is no reason why a black person can't be president. The opportunity is there - it's been there - but now it's more accessible."

Much of Smith's knowledge of black history comes from his parents, he said. His mother was a black student in an all-white high school in Los Angeles, and his father was born in the South, at a time when the "n-word" was written on his birth certificate.

Growing up, Smith's mother made her children memorize Martin Luther King Jr. speeches, Smith said.

"I never got all of 'I Have a Dream' memorized," he said. "I did get the good parts, though I've forgotten most of it now."

Read entire article at The Orion: The student-run newspaper of the journalism department at Chico State