Shirley Chisholm

Shirley Chisholm
Shirley Anita St. Hill Chisholmwas an American politician, educator, and author. In 1968, she became the first African American woman elected to the United States Congress, and represented New York's 12th Congressional District for seven terms from 1969 to 1983. In 1972, she became the first major-party black candidate for President of the United States, and the first woman to run for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionPolitician
Date of Birth30 November 1924
CityBrooklyn, NY
CountryUnited States of America
Service is the rent we pay for the privilege of living on this earth.
Service is the rent that you pay for room on this earth.
We Americans have the chance to become someday a nation in which all radical stocks and classes can exist in their own selfhoods, but meet on a basis of respect and equality and live together, socially, economically, and politically. We can become a dynamic equilibrium, a harmony of many different elements, in which the whole will be greater than all its parts and greater than any society the world has seen before. It can still happen.
Of my two handicaps, being female put many more obstacles in my path than being black.
Of my two "handicaps," being female put many more obstacles in my path than being black
In the end antiblack, antifemale, and all forms of discrimination are equivalent to the same thing - antihumanism.
To label family planning and legal abortion programs "genocide" is male rhetoric, for male ears.
Racism is so universal in this country, so widespread and deepseated, that it is invisible because it is so normal.
My God, what do we want? What does any human being want?
One distressing thing is the way men react to women who assert their equality: their ultimate weapon is to call them unfeminine. They think she is anti-male; they even whisper that she's probably a lesbian.
Which is more like genocide, I have asked some of my black brothers - this, the way things are, or the conditions I am fighting for in which the full range of family planning services is available to women of all classes and colors, starting with effective contraception and extending to safe, legal terminations of undesired pregnancies at a price they can afford?
As a black person I am no stranger to prejudice. But the truth is that in the political world I have been far more often discriminated against because I am a woman than because I am black.
Of my two `handicaps,' being female put more obstacles in my path than being black.
I am not antiwhite, because I understand that white people, like black ones, are victims of a racist society. They are products of their time and place.