Black Summit

Black Summit has grown to become one of the most important and well-attended conferences in the world to discuss issues of importance in communities of color.

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This gathering is used to provide important information that promotes the development of functional solutions and informed advocacy. This virtual experience will prove to deliver the same high-quality content as in previous years. The online platform allows for more flexibility and possibly full access.


Blacks belong to the African geographical race. The race comprises dark-skinned people who live or whose ancestors live south of the Sahara, a vast desert that stretches across North Africa. In addition to dark brown skin, most people in this race have eyes, dark, oily, curly hair, and thick lips. Most black Americans use five terms to refer to themselves. The terms Negro (meaning black in Spanish and Portuguese) and color were commonly used until the mid-1960s. Since then, most black Americans have expressed great pride in their color or identity by calling themselves black, African American, or African American.


The majority of American blacks trace their origins to West Africa controlled by three massive and wealthy black empires from about 317 to the late 1900s. These empires Ghana, Mali, and Songhai, developed trade and formed effective governments. In the early 1500s, European countries began the slave trade, bringing black Americans from West Africa to European colonies. For almost the next 300 years, millions of slaves were sent across the Black African Atlantic to the Americas and Latin America.


History is essentially a story of their struggle for freedom and quality. From the 1600s to the Civil War (1861-1865), most black Americans worked as slaves throughout the South. He helped a lot in expanding southern agriculture. At the same time, free calls helped develop industry in the North. After 1865, when slavery was finally abolished, black Americans briefly relinquished their civil rights during Reconstruction. Achieved. But after the Reconstruction, they once again lost their rights and faced widespread isolation and poverty. A strong civil rights movement began in the 1950s due to the determined efforts of black Americans to achieve equality and justice.