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by Drusilla Dunjee Houston, Edited by Dr. Peggy Brooks Bertram Peggy Bertram Publishing
Have you ever heard of Drusilla Dunjee Houston (1876-1941)? Honestly, neither had I before reading the very informative, annotated biography by historian Dr. Peggy Brooks Bertram which serves as an extended introduction to Wonderful Ethiopians of the Ancient Cushite Empire. We learn therein that the author was a very prolific writer and a regular contributor to the editorial page of the Oklahoma Black Dispatch for more than a quarter century. And although she didn’t have a college degree, Dunjee Houston did not allow herself to be intimidated by colleagues with impressive credentials. Instead, she embarked on a serious career dedicated to serious academic research, with the aim of unearthing proof of a noble and rich African past in order to refute the conventional wisdom of the day which dismissed blacks as a “backward race.” After seeing such nonsense in one of her daughter’s school books, she decided that the best hope for undoing the damage rested with blacks researching and then writing an accurate version of their own history. The upshot of her efforts to this end was Wonderful Ethiopians of the Ancient Cushite Empire, a seminal contribution to the annals of African American literature. "The previously unpublished Book II: Origin of Civilization from the Cushites is comprised of 39 enlightening chapters of generally genealogical analyses of the origins of the Nubian, Ethiopian, Egyptian and numerous other ancient civilizations." Plus, perhaps most significantly, it also belatedly sheds some light on an
almost-forgotten role model deserving of wider recognition and further study.
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