Sue Bailey Thurman: Perbedaan antara revisi

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{{Infobox person
| name = Sue Bailey Thurman
| image = <!--Sue_Bailey_Thurman.jpg-->
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| caption = Sue Bailey Thurman, 1953
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'''Sue Bailey Thurman''' ({{lahirmati|[[Pine Bluff]], [[Arkansas]]|26|8|1903|[[San Francisco]], [[California]]|25|12|1996}}) adalah penulis, dosen, sejarawati, dan aktivis hak asasi manusia Amerika Serikat. Ia adalah mahasiswi bukan berkulit putih pertama yang mendapatkan gelar sarjana di bidang musik dari [[Oberlin College]], Ohio. Ia sempat mengajar selama beberapa waktu di [[Hampton Institute]], Virginia, before becoming involved in [[Internationalism (politics)|international work]] with the [[YWCA]] in 1930. During a six-month trip through Asia in the mid 1930s, Thurman became the first [[African American|African-American]] woman to have an audience with [[Mahatma Gandhi]]. The meeting with Gandhi inspired Thurman and her husband, theologian [[Howard Thurman]], to promote non-violent resistance as a means of creating social change, bringing it to the attention of a young preacher, [[Martin Luther King Jr.]] While they did not actively protest during the [[Civil Rights Movement]], they served as spiritual counselors to many on the front lines, and helped establish the first interracial, [[non-denominational]] church in the United States.
 
== Referensi ==
Thurman played an active role in establishing international student organizations to help prevent foreign students feeling isolated while studying abroad. She organized one of the first international scholarship programs for African-American women. She studied racism and the effects of prejudice on various people throughout the world, making two round-the-world trips in her lifetime. She wrote books and newspaper articles to preserve black heritage, and initiated the publishing efforts of the [[National Council of Negro Women]] (NCNW) by founding the ''Aframerican Women's Journal''. In addition to writing the second ever history of black Californians, in 1958 Thurman published a cookbook laced with historical information about black professional women at a time when African Americans had few civil rights. Recognizing that there was little academic interest in black women's history at the time, Thurman used the marketing ploy of food to report on the lives of black women who were not domestics. She participated in international peace and feminist conferences, and in 1945 attended the San Francisco Conference for the founding of the [[United Nations]] as part of an unofficial delegation. Thurman also established museums such as the [[Museum of Afro-American History]] in [[Boston]] in 1963.
 
Thurman and her husband retired in San Francisco in 1965. She worked with the [[San Francisco Public Library]] in 1969 to develop resources for black history of the American West. In 1979 she was honored with a Centennial Award at [[Spelman College]], sharing the recognition with [[UNESCO]] director [[Herschelle Sullivan Challenor]]. After her husband's death in 1981, Thurman took over the management of the Howard Thurman Educational Trust, which funded research for literary, religious and scientific purposes and assisted in scholarships for black students. On her death in 1996, she left the couple's vast archives to numerous universities.
 
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[[Kategori:African-AmericanPenulis womenAmerika writersSerikat]]
[[Kategori:African-American writers]]
[[Kategori:Oberlin College alumni]]
[[Kategori:Spelman College alumni]]
[[Kategori:Writers from Arkansas]]
[[Kategori:20th-century American women writers]]
[[Kategori:People from Pine Bluff, Arkansas]]
[[Kategori:American civil rights activists]]
[[Kategori:20th-century American writers]]