I'm the one responsible for getting Washington, D.C. filmmaker/writer Michelle Parkerson's article appreciating the beauty of black women in the New American (formerly the Black American), a weekly newspaper, where I worked as a proofreader and copy editor. I edited out of the manuscript* she sent me all references to her girlfriend and the word "lesbian" because of the paper's past homophobia. I gave the piece to Mayo, the art director, who had it typed and pasted up for the printer.
Mrs. Offord, the office manager and wife of the owner, was upset that we hadn't cleared it with her. I immediately pointed out that Parkerson was a good writer, she reluctantly agreed. So even though I tried to camouflage the homoerotic aspects of the article, the lesbian slant was still there, between the lines.
My goal was to see how successful I'd be in slipping in subliminally gay content. Parkerson became a Trojan horse.
The following is the brief article by Michelle Parkerson that ran in the New American (April 25-May 1, 1991):
An Open Letter To African Women Everywhere
I confess.
Last night, I was mesmerized by the September issue of Essence. The pages overflowed with vibrant images of sisters with everything on the ball and all of their clothes on. Each one varied in skin shade or circumstance, but everyone of them was gorgeous and giving it to the camera. I flipped through the photos, feasting on our particular beauty: dark and fair, dread and silky, abundant, angular, Black.
Undoubtedly, women of color are God's most fascinating creation. And undoubtedly, we are the most impoverished. I thrive on the fierceness, the borrowed magic that sustains us through generations of adversity. I know the future belongs to us.
We are the lineage of African women who lavished in their own brilliance, women who struggle now on every frontline. When Black women come together and touch, it is a measure of bravery, a testament to the distance traveled.
*Note: I believe Parkerson originally submitted this manuscript to me for inclusion in the black gay and lesbian supplement I guest edited for the New York Native in 1984.
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