Sojourn Magazine, Winter 1999, Volume 3, Issue 1 
 

Ain't I a Woman?
Most students of women's history, and particularly black women's history, are familiar with Sojourner Truth's 1851 speech, "Ain't I a Woman?" Accused of being too intelligent and too tall to be a woman, she defended herself, women's rights, and herSojourner Truth Stamp right to defend abolitionists by exposing her breasts and saying: "Ain't I a woman?" 
 Textile artist Jean Ray Laury found the following words of Sojourner's in a small museum she visited in her own hometown in Iowa. Inspired by these words, she created a quilt from them, which now graces the office of the Mendocino Beacon: 

"We have many booby men in de land and they came from weak women who say 'I've got all de rights I want.' I tell you if you want great men, you must have great mothers. Why, children, rising from babies is the greatest and most important business that is done. How can a woman give brains to her baby when she hasn't got 'em herself?"

 
 
Sojourner Quilt
Submitted by Joanne Fisher

 Ain't I A Woman? ~ Cover Artist: Joanie Mitchell  ~ Dreamstream 
From the Publishers ~  Public Service  
Voice of the Infinite in the Small ~ Welfare Reform  
 Wild2K ~ Y2K Citizen's Action Guide 
Y2K Task Forces in Rural Northern California  
 

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