Loading...

hope care Foundation @hopecare  

88
Posts
103
Reactions
4
Followers

Michelle Obama was born on January 17, 1964, in a small apartment on the South Side of Chicago, the daughter of a man whose name the world rarely spoke but whose spirit made her into everything she became. His name was Fraser Robinson III, and he was a pump worker at a Chicago water filtration plant who tended boilers every single day, earned a modest city salary, served as a Democratic precinct captain in his neighborhood, and raised two children in a two-bedroom apartment on Euclid Avenue with a love so steady and a dignity so quiet that it left a permanent mark on the soul of a girl who would one day stand in the White House and call him the hole in her heart. When Fraser was just thirty years old, he was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, a disease that slowly and silently began eroding his central nervous system from the inside out. By the time Michelle was finishing elementary school, the single cane he had been using had become two crutches, and then eventually his legs could barely carry him across a room without tremendous effort. And yet Fraser Robinson never missed a day of work. He woke up earlier than anyone else in that apartment so that the extra time the disease had stolen from his mornings would not make him late. Michelle watched him struggle to button his shirt, watched him navigate the hallway on two crutches, watched him move with a slowness that broke her heart and built her spine simultaneously, and she told an audience decades later that the sheer act of him getting up every single day and going to work was a statement that stays with her every day of her life. He never felt sorry for himself. He never asked anyone to do for him what he could do himself. He laughed loudly, his baritone filling every room he entered, and he had a gift for finding the right record to play that would set the mood for the entire evening. He met Barack Obama when Michelle brought him home in 1989, took one measured look at this young Harvard lawyer, and privately told himself the relationship probably would not last because none of the others had. He never got to see how wrong he was. Fraser Robinson died in March 1991 at fifty-five years old, before his daughter walked down any aisle, before his son-in-law became a senator, before the little girl from Euclid Avenue became the First Lady of the United States. Because her father was gone, it was her brother Craig who walked her down the aisle at Trinity United Church of Christ in October 1992. Michelle wrote in her memoir that grief is so lonely, that it hurts to put on a pair of socks, that food tastes like nothing and music hurts, but that the memory of her father, of his laugh and his work ethic and his uncomplaining grace, has motivated her every single day since the morning she lost him." #MichelleObama #FraserRobinson #ObamaFamily #ChicagoHistory #strengthandgrace
0
   0
   0
  
   0
  

Blaqsbi Is the Digital Sovereignty for Black and Brown People.

"Share, Believe, and Inspire  our unity"

Blaqsbi is a Black-owned media and networking platform built on the principles of Black Digital Sovereignty. We provide a safe, independent space where Black people can speak freely, share ideas, and build community without fear of censorship or outside control.

Members huddle together to share knowledge, celebrate our greatness, and inspire unity.As the only Black-owned platform that rewards you for promoting Black culture, pride, and excellence, Blaqsbi ensures our data, our narratives, and our digital future remain in our hands.

Created as a positive alternative to mainstream social networks, Blaqsbi offers a safe, supportive, and culturally rich space to share ideas, shatter negative stereotypes, and cultivate cooperative wealth. Our platform serves as a modern digital sovereignty where members can unapologetically celebrate their heritage while building meaningful connections. Our unique ecosystem bridges the gap between conscious consumers, creators, and entrepreneurs.

Beyond standard social networking, members can explore a thriving global marketplace to buy and sell goods, list or discover companies in our comprehensive business directory, participate in localized events, and join focused, niche discussion groups called "huddles."

Best of all, Blaqsbi believes in true cooperative economics. We actively reward our community for their engagement and creativity; members earn Bmunts (our native reward points) simply for posting content, interacting with others, and completing challenges.

Furthermore, we are proud to offer a profit-sharing model that directly benefits our users, ensuring that the value generated on our platform is shared with the community that helps build it. Whether you want to amplify your voice, discover culturally relevant content, grow a business, or support Black-owned enterprises, Blaqsbi is your home for collective growth. 


Topic Lives

Empowering Music

Featured

Businesses

Videos

Music

Marketplace Items

Photos

Podcast/radio Shows

Featured

Challenge: Trivias

Funding Requests

Book Suggestions

News/opinions

Blaqsbi Is the Digital Sovereignty for Black and Brown People.

hope care Foundation @hopecare  

88
Posts
103
Reactions
4
Followers

Follow hope care Foundation on Blaqsbi.

Enter your email address then click on the 'Sign Up' button.


Get the App
Load more