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About 'medical supply store chicago'|...around the world, alphabetized by cities (see N for New York, C for Chicago, F for Frankfurt, D for Dusseldorf etc.). For more info, please contact Waqas Usman...







About 'medical supply store chicago'|...around the world, alphabetized by cities (see N for New York, C for Chicago, F for Frankfurt, D for Dusseldorf etc.). For more info, please contact Waqas Usman...








African               Americans               have               faced               many               struggles,               from               slavery               to               segregation.

During               the               early               nineteen               hundreds,               they               were               not               afforded               equal               housing,               educational               or               economic               opportunity.

The               civil               rights               movement               was               a               reaction               to               the               intolerable               conditions               of               the               time.

The               characters               from               Lorraine               Hansberrys               play,               "Raisin               in               the               Sun,"               are               indicative               of               the               strength               of               will               that               helped               to               overcome               the               racial               prejudices               of               the               day,               and               increased               freedoms               for               future               generations               to               come.

The               civil               rights               movement               reached               its               peak               between               the               years               of               nineteen-fifty               five               through               nineteen-sixty-five.

The               idea               behind               the               movement               was               that               all               Americans,               regardless               of               race,               color               or               cultural               differences               should               have               the               basic               rights               guaranteed               by               our               constitution,               and               that               no-one               should               be               denied               these               rights               based               solely               on               their               physical               attributes.
               At               the               time               of               the               civil               rights               movement,               many               Americans               of               color               faced               discrimination               in               almost               every               area               of               their               lives.

For               instance               it               was               not               until               nineteen-fifty-four               that               the               Supreme               Court               found               public               school               segregation               illegal               and               overturned               the               "separate               but               equal"               doctrine               of               Plessey               v.

Ferguson.

The               Civil               Rights               Act               of               nineteen-sixty-four               prohibited               discrimination               by               employers,               programs               receiving               federal               funding,               and               public               accommodations               such               as               hotels,               restaurants               and               gas               stations.
               Even               with               all               of               these               overwhelming               obstacles,               numerous               African               Americans               have               defeated               the               odds               and               become               great               success               stories.

These               people               include               such               greats               as               Martin               Luther               King,               Harriet               Tubman,               Zora               Neale               Hurston,               Colin               Powell,               Rosa               Parks               and               Maya               Angelou.
               There               are               many               opinions               on               racial               inequality               and               discrimination               and               how               to               combat               these               issues.

The               play               "Raisin               in               the               Sun,"               gives               the               reader               a               very               good               idea               of               what               life               was               like               for               some               economically               challenged               black               families               during               the               pre-civil               rights               movement               of               the               fifties               and               sixties;               and               delivers               insight               into               the               conflicts               that               occur               within               a               black               family               struggling               to               keep               their               heads               above               the               poverty               line               during               this               time.
               African               Americans               in               Chicago
               The               struggle               of               many               Americans               in               Chicago               was               finding               work.

Most               blacks               were               domestic               help               and               manual               laborers.

Facing               employment               discrimination               was               a               constant               battle               for               them               and               included               challenges               such               as               finding               good               jobs               and               earning               promotions               and               a               wage               increases.
               The               African               American               population               in               Chicago               dealt               with               many               obstacles               in               their               search               for               a               better               way               of               living.

It               did               not               matter               whether               they               wanted               to               start               a               business,               own               a               home,               or               go               to               college;               they               face               many               difficulties               on               their               journey.
               Between               nineteen-fifteen               and               nineteen-sixty,               thousands               of               black               southerners               fled               the               south               attempting               to               escape               the               segregation               that               existed               and               hoped               to               seek               economic               freedom               in               the               north.

Many               went               to               Chicago               because               it               had               progressive               anti-discrimination               legislation               However;               the               state               was               also               one               of               the               first               to               use               racially               restrictive               housing               covenants,               which               put               limits               on               housing               integration.

Three               quarters               of               the               city's               black               population               lived               on               the               South               side               of               Chicago.
               It               was               common               for               African               Americans               to               cohabitate               in               an               apartment               and               share               bathrooms               with               different               families.

In               the               story,               the               author               describes               the               bathroom,               "And               goes               out               to               the               bathroom,               which               is               in               an               outside               hall               and               which               is               shared               by               another               family               or               families               in               the               same               floor."               (Hansberry               1543).
               Generational               Differences
               Within               the               play               there               are               differing               opinions               about               race               among               the               characters.

All               of               the               main               players               are               African               Americans,               and               make               up               a               family               unit,               yet               one               can               clearly               see               there               are               generational,               as               well               as               economic               viewpoints               that               cause               the               characters               to               have               different               ideas               about               the               meaning               of               success.
               The               characters               within               this               story               all               play               a               role               in               the               advancement               of               African               Americans               within               our               educational               systems               and               the               workforce               in               general.

They               all               have               different               wants               and               needs,               sometimes               separate               from               what               is               best               for               the               good               of               the               group.

However,               the               main               theme               behind               all               of               their               dreams               is               the               advancement               of               themselves,               the               culture               or               the               family.
               The               Characters
               Conflict               arises               due               to               the               adverse               financial               conditions               under               which               they               suffer.

When               the               father               dies               and               leaves               a               large               insurance               inheritance               the               mother               is               practical               in               her               approach               to               the               needs               of               the               family               unit.

She               wants               a               house               they               may               call               their               own,               and               a               garden               she               can               tend.

Being               black               and               a               homeowner               was               uncommon               during               this               time.

In               nineteen-forty,               less               than               twenty-five               percent               of               the               black               male               household               heads               were               homeowners               (Margo).

For               women               this               number               was               even               lower.
               Mama               wants               a               new               house               in               which               to               raise               her               grandson               and               her               unborn               grandchild               in               a               better               environment.

She               knows               moving               to               an               all               white               neighborhood               may               bring               violence               upon               her               family,               as               was               the               case               in               nineteen-nineteen               when               five               days               of               rioting               left               twenty-three               black               Chicagoans               dead               and               three               hundred               wounded,               however               she               is               optimistic               they               will               escape               this               fate               .

It               is               this               kind               of               determination               that               helped               African               Americans               conquers               segregation.
               Walter               Lee               Younger               is               her               son.

He               works               as               chauffeur,               and               spends               his               days               driving               white               people               around               Chicago.

He               will               not               be               happy               until               he               is               a               rich               man.

He               perceives               his               life               as               a               failure               because               he               cannot               give               his               family               the               possessions               he               feels               they               need               and               deserve.
               Walter               appears               to               view               racism               and               the               lack               of               opportunity               it               causes               as               the               root               of               his               problems.

Some               of               Walter's               beliefs               about               race               and               the               inequalities               between               whites               and               blacks               are               surely               true;               however               Walter               tends               to               use               this               as               an               excuse               for               his               perceived               failures.

He               believes               everything               that               is               wrong               in               his               life               is               because               of               the               racism               he               endures.

This               has               become               a               crutch               for               Walter.

He               does               not               have               the               job               he               wants               and               he               is               unable               to               advance               his               career,               so               he               blames               it               on               racism.
               Walter               wants               to               use               the               insurance               money               for               a               business.

He               feels               owning               a               liquor               store               will               put               him               on               better               financial               footing               and               help               him               support               his               family.

His               value               as               a               person               seems               to               hinge               on               his               ability               to               gain               wealth.

He               dreams               of               the               white               man               coming               to               him               for               advice               and               thinks               that               owning               his               own               store               will               elevate               him               to               a               different               plane               within               society.
               He               also               wants               his               own               business               because               he               feels               it               will               provide               his               son               with               more               opportunities               to               succeed.

He               tells               his               son               "Just               tell               me               where               you               want               to               go               to               school               and               you               will               go.

Just               tell               me               what               it               is               you               want               to               be               and               you               will               be               it.

Whatever               you               want               to               be,               you               name               it,               son               and               I               will               hand               you               the               world"               (Hansberry               1586).
               He               needs               to               supply               his               family               with               the               best               and               is               willing               to               risk               everything               to               obtain               these               goals.

He               is               blinded               by               his               desire               for               money               and               respect.

In               the               end,               this               brings               trouble               upon               his               family               and               leads               to               a               substantial               monetary               loss;               however,               history               has               shown               us               that               it               is               the               unwillingness               to               concede               to               failure               that               ultimately               determines               success.
               Joseph               Asagai               is               a               native               African.

While               Walter               is               frustrated               and               angry               at               the               black               man's               situation,               Joseph               Asagai               maintains               an               even-tempered               sensible               view               on               this               subject.

His               goals               are               not               to               become               successful               and               assimilated               with               the               white               race               in               the               United               States,               but               to               continue               to               work               and               thrive               in               his               own               land,               and               to               bring               African               ideology               and               pride               to               America.

He               is               proud               of               his               African               heritage               and               of               the               color               differences.

Joseph               Asagai               does               not               refer               to               the               people               of               his               country               in               terms               of               color.

He               speaks               of               them               as               Africans.

This               sort               of               pride               enabled               Americans               of               African               descent               to               maintain               their               determination               throughout               years               of               struggle               and               adversity               during               the               civil               rights               movement.
               Beneatha               is               Walters's               sister.

She               befriends               Joseph               Asagai               and               learns               to               be               proud               of               her               heritage.

When               he               jokes               with               Beneatha               about               her               hair               looking               ugly               because               she               mutilates               it,               he               is               really               telling               her               she               is               assimilating               the               white               people.

He               makes               these               references               occasionally               during               the               play.
               Beneatha               desires               the               insurance               money               for               school.

She               wants               an               education.

This               is               something               her               mother               never               had.

In               her               mother's               generation,               a               womans               place               was               at               home               raising               the               family               or               performing               some               menial               work               to               them.

They               would               never               have               dreamed               of               an               education.

Beneatha               wants               to               out               of               the               ghetto               and               to               leave               her               mark               on               the               world.

She               also               appears               very               interested               in               learning               more               about               her               African               heritage.

She               strongly               entertains               the               idea               of               joining               her               African               friend               in               returning               to               his               homeland.

She               has               no               tolerance               for               her               mother's               antiquated               ideas               and               beliefs.
               Beneatha               appears               to               have               has               lost               all               of               her               mother's               moral               values               and               begins               a               search               for               "self."               This               is               apparent               when               she               tells               her               mother               she               no               longer               accepts               the               "God"               that               her               mother               feels               is               so               important.

Her               focus               is               not               on               monetary               gain,               but               on               her               own               needs.
               These               ideas               were               also               integral               to               obtaining               a               foothold               in               the               war               for               equality.

Through               actions               such               as               sit-ins               and               other               peaceful               protests,               African               Americans               gained               rights               they               had               been               denied               in               the               past.

"The               demonstrations               have               shifted               the               desegregation               battles               from               the               courtroom               to               the               marketplace."               "They               showed               that               nonviolent               direct               action               and               youth               could               be               very               useful               weapons               in               the               war               against               segregation."               (Lisa               Cozzens;               "Sit-ins")
               The               generational               differences               on               the               importance               of               money               are               very               apparent               throughout               the               play.

Mama               only               wants               a               small               place               she               can               call               her               own.

She               does               not               seem               to               have               any               real               interest               in               the,               soon               to               come,               civil               rights               movement.

For               her,               happiness               is               having               her               family               close               and               making               things               right               within               her               apartment.

She               does               not               equate               success               with               the               amount               of               riches               she               has               but               finds               solace               in               the               love               of               her               family               and               the               successful               moral               upbringing               of               her               children.

She               has               seen               slavery               first               hand               and               knew               what               true               hardship               is.
               Women               and               Youth
               Each               succeeding               generation               plays               a               role               in               the               search               for               equality,               but               younger               Americans               have               always               been               the               determining               factor               when               it               comes               to               making               a               major               change.

"The               youngest               Americans               stand               out               for               their               broad               support               of               racial               preferences               ­               48%               of               those               in               Generation               Y               believe               every               effort               should               be               made               to               improve               the               position               of               blacks               and               other               minorities,               even               if               it               means               giving               them               preferential               treatment.

That               is               far               higher               than               any               other               age               group,               and               well               more               than               the               percentage               of               Generation               X               that               expressed               this               opinion               in               1987-1988               (36%)."               (Pew               Research               Center,               2004)
               As               America               evolved               the               Civil               Rights               movement               emerged.

"First               blacks,               then               other               racial               minorities,               including               students,               the               New               Left               and               peace               protesters               emerged               one               by               one               as               forces               demanded               social               change."               (Carabillo)               With               a               passion               for               the               possible,               women               emerged               just               as               quickly.
               Beneatha               is               an               example               of               the               free               spirited               African               American               women               that               helped               liberate               a               generation.

She               has               her               mind               set               on               becoming               a               doctor,               even               though               African               American               women               had               few               rights               at               this               time.

She               does               not               appear               to               consider               that,               in               the               sixties;               women               in               general               are               discouraged               from               obtaining               a               medical               degree.

"In               1961               there               was               a               large               reservoir               of               educated               women;               but               the               medical               field               was               dominated               by               men.

It               was               not               until               1963               was               there               even               an               attempt               to               establish               equal               pay."               (Carabillo)
               Beneatha               seems               to               view               the               future               through               eyes               that               are               different               than               most               women               of               this               era.

One               gets               the               impression               she               is               a               feminist               ahead               of               her               time.

She               is               passionate               about               getting               out               of               her               current               environment               and               making               a               successful               life               for               herself.

Her               brother               wants               her               to               marry               George,               a               local               upstanding               youth,               because               he               feels               he               can               provide               a               better               way               of               living               for               her.

When               Walter               finds               out               his               sister               is               planning               to               go               to               Africa               he               tells               her               "Girl,               if               you               don't               get               all               them               silly               ideas               out               your               head!

You               better               marry               a               man               with               some               loot"               (Hansberry               1607).
               Beneatha               ignores               his               advice               and               continues               in               her               quest               for               a               higher               education.

She               almost               demands               everyone               understand               that               she               will               become               a               doctor,               regardless               of               her               race               or               circumstance.

She               believes               in               using               education               as               a               means               to               escape               the               poverty               she               has               grown               up               in.

Her               way               of               thinking               was               ahead               of               her               time.
               It               is               this               sort               of               drive               and               courage               that               helped               African               American               women               gain               a               foothold               in               the               civil               rights               movement.

Women               like               Beneatha               demanded               equality               and               rights               as               human               beings,               and               not               only               as               women.

This               attitude               helps               to               determine               the               success               of               the               civil               rights               movement               for               women.
               A               Different               Kind               of               Woman
               Mama's               children               feel               they               need               to               be               successful               through               education               and               monetary               gain               whereas               Ruth               and               Mama               are               homemakers               and               not               as               concerned               about               equal               rights               for               women               as               they               are               about               the               survival               of               their               family.

These               women               did               not               place               any               importance               on               their               own               educational               goals.

They               seem               content               in               their               roles               as               homemakers               and               caregivers.
               Ruth               is               a               woman               who               depends               on               her               husband               to               support               her               and               the               family               and               has               very               little               say               in               the               financial               aspects               of               their               life.

However,               in               her               own               way,               she               also               influenced               the               advancement               of               African               Americans               by               ensuring               the               cohesiveness               of               the               family.

She               and               Mama               place               their               hopes               in               the               endurance               of               the               home,               and               their               strength               lies               in               the               determination               to               keep               the               clan               together               at               all               costs.
               Taking               Risks
               All               of               these               dreams               played               a               part               in               the               success               of               the               civil               rights               movement.

If               African               Americans               had               not               taken               the               risk               needed               to               become               entrepreneurs               or               further               their               educational               goals,               they               may               never               have               succeeded               in               achieving               the               equality               they               have               within               society               today.
               Mama               knows               she               must               support               her               children               emotionally               to               keep               her               family               strong.

She               encourages               her               granddaughter               to               pursue               her               passion               to               become               a               doctor.

She               also               supports               and               believes               in               her               son.

When               Mama               gives               her               son,               Walter,               the               last               bit               of               money               she               has               from               the               insurance               settlement               to               pursue               his               dream               she               puts               her               faith               in               his               judgment.

She               hopes               he               knows               the               importance               of               this               money               for               the               family.

His               wife,               Ruth,               has               just               found               out               she               is               pregnant,               and               is               hopeful               he               will               not               squander               the               inheritance.

Unfortunately               he               loses               everything.
               Even               after               Mama's               son               presumably               shatters               the               family's               dreams,               they               pull               together               and               support               one               another.

There               is               a               moment               of               shock               and               disbelief               at               the               unexpected               development.

Walter               has               lost               his               sisters               college               money               and               possibly               jeopardized               his               son's               future,               as               well               as               that               of               his               unborn               child.

However,               the               family               will               not               be               subdued.
               Although               they               are               warned               by               the               white               neighborhood               before               they               move               that               they               are               not               wanted.

When               the               money               is               lost               they               almost               give               up               their               dream.

However,               their               inability               to               allow               racism               to               triumph               forced               them               to               come               together               and               realize               Mama's               dream.

They               all               decide               they               will               do               whatever               it               takes               to               retain               their               hopes               of               having               a               home               of               their               own.

In               the               end,               this               kind               of               commitment               and               determination               is               what               allowed               the               civil               rights               movement               to               succeed.
               Works               Cited
               Cozzens,               Lisa.

The               Civil               Rights               Movement               1955-1965:               Introduction               "Sit-Ins."               2004.


               Hansberry,               Lorraine.

"Raisin               in               the               Sun."               Literature               and               its               Writers.

Ann               Charters               and               Samuel               Charters.

Boston:               Bedford/St               Martins,               2007.

1047-49
               http://www.watson.org/~lisa/blackhistory/civilrights-55-65/
               The               Pew               Research               Center               for               the               People               and               the               Press.

"The               2004               Political               LandscapeEvenly               Divided               and               Increasingly               Polarized."               November               5,               2003
               http://people-press.org/reports/display.php3?PageID=754
               Mango,               Robert.

"Historical               Perspectives               on               Racial               Economic               Differences:               A               Summary               of
               Recent               Research".

NBER.

2005.

Html>
               Carabillo,               Toni;               "A               Passion               for               the               Possible"               Feminist               Majority               Foundation.
               Nov.

18,               2007.
               "Living               the               Legacy:               The               Women's               Rights               Movement               1848-1998"               History               of               Movement.
               Nov.

19,               2007.






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