You're Dead to Me - Sojourner Truth: American abolitionist, suffragist, preacher
Episode Date: February 28, 2025Greg Jenner is joined in 19th-Century America by Dr Michell Chresfield and comedian Desiree Burch to learn all about abolitionist and suffragist Sojourner Truth. Born into slavery in a Dutch-speaking ...area of New England, Sojourner Truth fought to free herself and then others, becoming one of the best-known abolitionist activists in America. She even succeeded in freeing her son, making her the first Black American woman to win a court case. A devoutly religious woman, Truth felt that God had called her to travel the country, preaching and advocating for the end of slavery, women’s rights and universal suffrage. Along the way, she rubbed shoulders with abolitionists like Frederick Douglass, and politicians including Abraham Lincoln himself. This episode tells the story of her incredible life, beliefs and fight for justice, and even examines the true story behind her famous “ain’t I a woman?” speech.If you’re a fan of inspirational activists, courtroom drama and questionable cults, you’ll love our episode on Sojourner Truth.If you want more from Desiree and Michell, check out our episodes on Harriet Tubman and Josephine Baker. And for more abolitionist history, listen to our episode on Frederick Douglass.You’re Dead To Me is the comedy podcast that takes history seriously. Every episode, Greg Jenner brings together the best names in history and comedy to learn and laugh about the past. Hosted by: Greg Jenner Research by: Madeleine Bracey Written by: Madeleine Bracey, Emmie Rose Price-Goodfellow, Emma Nagouse, and Greg Jenner Produced by: Emmie Rose Price-Goodfellow and Greg Jenner Audio Producer: Steve Hankey Production Coordinator: Ben Hollands Senior Producer: Emma Nagouse Executive Editor: James Cook
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I want to talk to you about an undercover mission. I need two officers to infiltrate a gang dealing drugs. Hate to break it to you, Clinton, but we ain't street.
We're just doing a spot drug dealing now.
You got this.
What?
Take this shit off the bank.
This sounds dangerous.
It is.
There was drugs, nudity.
This goes all the way to the top.
God, I've always wanted to say that.
I need you to bury this body.
I'm going to kill you. I'm going to kill you. I'm going to kill you. I'm going to kill you. Hello and welcome to You're Dead To Me, the Radio 4 comedy podcast that takes history seriously.
My name is Greg Jenner and I'm a public historian, author and broadcaster.
And today we are strapping on our sturdiest walking boots and hiking across America to learn about renowned 19th century abolitionist,
orator and civil rights activist, Sojourner Truth.
And to help us, we have two very special guests.
In History Corner, she's an assistant professor
in African-American history at Cornell University.
Her research focuses on black and indigenous histories,
including the history of racial formation
and identity in America.
And you might remember her from our previous episodes
of this show about Harriet Tubman and Josephine Baker.
It's Dr. Michelle Cresfield.
Welcome back, Michelle.
Thank you for having me.
I'm so happy to be back.
The gang is back together.
It is.
Sort of series one reunion in some ways.
It's lovely.
And in Comedy Corner, she needs no introduction.
She's a comedian, actor, and writer.
You'll have seen her all over the TV
on Taskmaster, Frankie Boyle's New World Order,
the Horn section TV show, and Too Hot to Handle.
And you'll know her from this very podcast
from many, many episodes, including recent
highlights Pythagoras, What a Dude and the history of Broadway musicals.
It's your Dead to Me superstar, Desiree Burch.
Welcome back, Desiree.
Thank you so much.
But this is like a series one reunion.
I feel like they should do a behind the music on us.
You know, none of your young listeners know what that is.
But you know what I mean?
Like the inside documentary on podcasts, although I guess podcasts are already kind of an insider.
Anyway, you know what I mean? That's right. You and Michelle have previously covered Harriet
Tubman and Josephine Baker. Now Harriet Tubman, obviously an abolitionist, a very famous woman in
American history. Are you excited to be back for more abolitionist history? What are your emotions
when you hear the word Sojourner Truth?
She's one of the big ones, do you know what I mean?
It's also, she's one of the big ones that you learn about so early on, and then everyone's
like, what do you know about Sojourner Truth?
You're like, she's dope, dude.
And then you have to separate all the, you know, because you're like, okay, you know,
Harry Tubman did more of the gun wielding.
So Jernard Tooth did a lot of like the speaking and stuff.
Like there's stuff that she did that I vaguely remember,
but like I'm excited to find out the cool biopic,
biopic, biopic, I don't know how we say that word.
Biopic for me, but yeah, absolutely.
Yeah, I think it's biopic, but some people say biopic
and it sounds like a, it sounds bionic. it sounds bionic it sounds like it sounds like an eye
condition I'm biopic I can't see out of my left eye yeah I don't know yeah so I
see out of both eyes but not the way you think so what do you know
this is the so what do you know this is where I have a go at guessing what you
are lovely listener might know about today's subject. And I think American listeners are going to
immediately have a desiré response of, I know stuff! Hang on, do I know stuff?
Do I know anything?
Perhaps it's a childhood memory coming back. Outside of the state, I think probably less
familiar name. She's perhaps most famous for the quote, Ain't I a Woman, which has been
used by feminist activists for years, including by bell hooks for her debut book title. But there are no big movie biopics,
biopics, whatever we're calling it. There are no big TV dramas. If you go on IMDb, you're
not getting much back, which is quite surprising. So what was the journey? How did she go from
enslavement to crusading campaigner? And was ain't I a woman even her line? Let's
find out. Right Dr. Michelle we'll start at the beginning. When and where was
Sojourner Truth born? I'm presuming that wasn't her name at birth. That is correct
so the woman that we will come to know as Sojourner was actually born Isabella
Bumfree and while there is no exact date for her birth we know that she was born
around 1797 in Ulster
County, New York, which is a rural area about two hours north of New York City.
Isabella was the youngest of 10 or 12 children born to the enslaved couple, James and Elizabeth,
and she was nicknamed Belle.
And the young Belle was enslaved on a northern farm.
Unlike the southern plantations that pervade historical lore,
northern slavery was much more small scale.
Most people owned one or two enslaved people
who labored on small scale farming or domestic work.
So although slavery was relatively small in scale in this area,
northern slavery and New York state slavery in particular,
where Isabella will be held, was very central
to the international slave trade.
So her early life, she's on a farm, she's owned by a family who owns about six or seven
people, which makes that family very wealthy and notable for the time.
So this is like the milieu in which she begins her life.
So like, was it that Southern slavery was more industrial and Northern slavery was more
sort of personal for like money families?
Why are there double digit number slaves in Southern plantations, but like only a handful
in the North?
Actually Isabella's birth date is very significant because it's the year that the cotton gin
is invented.
And it's the cotton gin that really allows Southern slavery to take the year that the cotton gin is invented. And it's the cotton gin that really allows
Southern slavery to take the shape that it does,
because it allows this kind of mass cultivation of cotton,
which will revolutionize the industry
and require much more human labor to cultivate those crops.
Northern slavery, by comparison,
you do have in the early years, right, of the 1600s,
people are definitely growing crops,
but by the time
that Isabella is born, it's very much shifted to where it's much more skilled labor, where
you might see enslaved labor being deployed in homes. You see at the time that she's born,
a real kind of shift, right, in the kind of power of slavery in the United States, but
also the ways in which slavery will become to look very different between the two regions.
That's fascinating. Desiree, do you know what language Isabella grew up speaking?
Oh, yeah, because it's New York. So Dutch, right?
Yeah, yeah, good knowledge.
Yeah, because there's so much weird Dutch stuff in New York that you're like, huh?
Yeah, I mean, New Amsterdam.
Dutch as her primary first language, and you said 10 siblings, possibly 11 siblings, we're not sure.
She's one of 12 or 10. So the parents have been enslaved, the children are enslaved,
and the person who enslaves them is Colonel Johannes Hardenberg.
And you said he's wealthy. What happened when he died?
So when the Colonel was alive, the parents were allowed to basically farm on a small
scale in a conditions that we would liken to sharecropping, which actually doesn't
really take formation to later. But essentially, Elizabeth and James live on their own in a
cottage where they farm a small tract of land that was rented from the Haudenbergs.
And in exchange from that land, they would have owed them labor, but also credits towards
whatever it cost to cultivate that tract of land.
We could conjecture that possibly at some point in time that the parents could have
been able to purchase that land outright.
But those dreams are really dashed when he dies and his son takes over.
And the son is really trying to make money and that involves selling the young Isabella
away at the age of nine.
So her parents are frequently depressed going into bouts of kind of emotional hardship because
many of her siblings are sold away.
So when Isabella grows up, she only knows her brother.
And so it's this constant fear that our parents
are going to have that their children will be sold away.
And this happens when Isabella is nine.
Just one by one, they all kind of get sold off to a play.
Yeah, I mean, it is really, really dark.
Like, once your first kid is sold off,
it's like constantly waiting for the next shoe
to drop, both for the parents and for the kids of like,
when am I going to get pulled away?
Like, I'm sure after the first one or two,
then you're just preparing for the worst constantly
and waiting for it.
And what does, you know, I mean, we talk about anxiety now.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
There was no well butrin.
There was no counseling.
You know?
And like, yeah, no one to talk to about the fact, you
know, you just had to, anyway.
It's the worst.
It sounds terrible.
It's a horrible, horrible childhood.
And she was sold to an English speaking family, the Neelys, and she didn't, she didn't speak
English.
Were they dicks about it though?
Well, you know, I imagine they weren't hugely supportive being a slave owning family.
Right.
That's correct.
So she's sold for $100 alongside
a flock of sheep. And the Neelies are an English-speaking family, and Isabella only spoke Dutch.
And so she had a hard time, as you might imagine, and so she can't comprehend the instructions
given to her. And on top of the language barrier, the Neelies are generally cruel people, and they
make life difficult for the young Isabella and she faces
violent and cruel punishments that she would later recall during, you know, her in her
later life and bear the marks of this abuse on her body for a long time.
Oh my god, how weird some English speaking people were weird about somebody else not
speaking their language.
Right.
Being like, what's this weird?
Right, but her father, so Isabella's
father, he is an older man and he is some distance from his daughter after the sale,
but he doesn't lose track of her. And this makes it very different than the relationship that he's
able to have with his other children. So he travels a distance and actually implores the Neelys to sell
Isabella. Oh. And so she sold again in 1809 to a tavern keeper
called Martinus Shriver.
And she spends about 18 months with the Shriver's
where she works at an inn.
She makes beer, she picks herbs, she fishes, she farms.
And she would claim that it's the Shriver's
who taught her to curse,
which is a very interesting development
for a woman who would be known for her piety and religious devotion.
If you're going to learn English, learn the important stuff first.
Yeah. Start with the slur.
Anytime you learn another language.
And then in 1810, Isabella was sold again for $175. Who is she sold to this time?
She sold to John and Sally Dumont, and she would spend the longest time of her
enslavement with the Dumonts, about 17 years in total. So she arrives around
the age of 12 roughly and she's there until about the age of 30. And it's
during her time with the Dumonts that Isabella would do farm work for John but
she also performed housework for Sally. And so she gains a reputation for the
hard work that also characterized her father. And she also has a stunning physique and figure. She's
you know just under six feet tall. She's a very tall, statuesque woman. So she's
doing the work of several people, which really gains her the kind of compliment
and the admiration of John Dumont. And she begins to care very much about how Dumont feels about her.
And that is in stark contrast to her feelings about Sally, who she resents more so and where
Dumont might praise Isabella in her work ethic. Sally is a lot more critical.
Matthew 10 So that's a strange dynamic, I suppose, that she's there for nearly 18 years and she's fond of the
man who's enslaved her. That's complicated stuff, Desirae, isn't it?
Yeah, but obviously everybody's experience is relative to their context and circumstances.
So if all you've done is grown up enslaved and you are, you know, like obviously you've been put
into hopefully a better position than you were before with a different family that was really horrible.
And if somebody's now giving you respect for your work, all the while there's someone right
next to you who sucks, like everybody else sucks, so that you're kind of like, okay,
well that's something.
At least someone is seeing some part of my humanity.
Michelle, we get a marriage for Isabella or Belle. Who
is she married to and is it her choice? How does this work?
So she is actually forced to marry another enslaved man owned by the Dumont family called
Thomas. But interestingly enough, this is not the first man that she falls in love with.
She actually falls in love with a young man named Robert who was owned by a neighboring family. And Robert and Isabella very much loved each other,
but Robert's owner did not want him with Isabella. And Robert actually defies his enslaver and goes
to see Isabella and he is beaten within an inch of his life, which really kind of breaks his
spirit to continue to kind of disobey. And so that relationship ends, which allows Isabella to be free to partner with
Thomas. We don't know a lot about Thomas, but they have a general affection for one
another and they have five children together. Diana, Peter, Elizabeth, Sophia and a fifth
unknown child. In 1826, Desiree, something important happens in Isabella's life, in many lives actually.
Do you want to guess what it is? Or maybe you know what it is. 1826 in New York's history?
I don't know if there's any, if there's like a state thing about slavery or something that happens,
because okay, because that's going to come to the South later, but like it comes to the North earlier. So I don't know if they abolish slavery or if they change
the rules to make it better or something.
Yeah. I mean, I love the way you figured that out.
There's, I, it's just trying to figure out what's the window of history, you know, cause
you like know the like cutoff date and then there's like a later real one and then you're
like trying to figure out what happened in the middle. So yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. one and then you're trying to figure out what happened in the middle. So yeah? Yeah, bang on. Michelle, 4th of July 1827, which then comes into act in 28.
That's the only date we ever do anything in America.
Yeah, 4th of July is a good date to do things.
Like all history happens on one day, one day a year. We get it all sorted out, everyone's
signing away.
Yeah, Michelle, the state of New York abolishes slavery or what is the definition?
Yes, that's absolutely right. Desire Desiree Burch you remain my best student.
Thank you oh my god that's all I've ever wanted to hear in my life Michelle thank you continue.
Official Cornell degree for you Desiree. Amazing good good I'm actually gonna not have to pay for
this one. Yeah no she's racking up the degree. She's a credentialed woman. But to get back to your point, you know, Isabella gets her freedom, but it's not an easy feat.
So in 1799, New York State passes the Gradual Emancipation Act.
And according to the act, children born to enslaved women after July 4, 1799 are born
free but are required to serve a period of indentured servitude, ending at 28 for
men and 25 for women.
And they do this because state leaders were very concerned about the state instantaneously
losing its labor force, right?
And so they want to transition away from slave labor.
In 1811, the state of New York announces that enslaved people born before 1799 will be free
on July 4, 1827. But it retained the provision of the
1799 Act for children born after 1799. Essentially, Isabella is poised to be free, but not her
five children.
Oh.
Yeah, right?
That's heartbreaking. And also, presumably that means the children could be taken away
from her still.
Right. Absolutely. And so because of the Act, the children are basically going to be laborers, right, for the owner of the mother, right, until they reach, you know, 28 for the young men, 25 for the women.
Isabella tries to bargain for her own emancipation in 1826 and an early emancipation, which Dumont grants on the condition that Isabella would, quote,
do well and be faithful.
And so if she does well and does her work, he agrees to free her one year early.
So on July 4th, 1826.
However, when that day arrives, Dumont went back on his word and argued that Isabella...
Oh, who needs to be faithful?
Not Dumont.
And so one of the reasons that he makes this claim is that she has an injury.
She hurts her hand.
And so she can't work at the full capacity, but she has these strong feelings of fairness
and wanting to do right by him.
These are feelings that she would later kind of narrate.
And so she sets a time.
She works until the autumn of 1826.
And so she spends 100 pounds of wool by hand,
in addition to doing much of this outside labor.
And she's beginning to turn that wool into yarn
that could be used for these various projects.
And then she decides that now is the time.
Is this where the Rumpelstiltskin story comes from?
Because this sounds like there's an evil troll man who's like, I won't let you be
free until you spin this yarn. What? Oh man. So Isabella takes things into our own hands and she
she goes on the run. Does she take any of her kids with her? Yes, so she takes her
infant daughter Sophia and she would later say, I did not run away because I thought that wicked.
I walked away because I thought that was all right.
And in walks she did, about 13 miles,
I calculated apparently that's a little over 21 kilometers
for our adherence to the metric system.
She goes and she takes refuge with a family,
the Van Wagenens, who are anti-slavery, have a strong opposition
to slavery and they take in Isabella and her infant daughter. And it's, I'm sure, a hard
decision. She leaves her children and her husband behind with Dumont in order to make
this break and to self-emancipate.
And does she escape or does she get tracked down?
So John Dumont eventually tracks her down.
He does.
He comes to the Van Wagonens and they implore him to sell Isabella and Sophia to them.
And so they paid Dumont $25, $20 for Isabella and $5 for Sophia, settling the debt and essentially
securing the freedom for both mother and child.
In a gesture of how much
this would mean to her, that the Van Wagenens would do this, Isabella actually takes their
surname. So she becomes Isabella Van Wagenen.
She's been taken in by the Van Wagenens. She's got her daughter Sophia with her. And
then she hears that her son Peter has been taken because her husband Thomas has died,
Michelle. Peter had been still in enslavement, by the Dumonts and John Dumont had decided to sell him to a
slave owner in Alabama. And this is hugely upsetting and she does something
extraordinary, Michelle. Can you tell us what she does in 1828?
Yes, so her five-year-old son is sold and not only is he sold, he's sold south to
Alabama, which is lives in the mind of many enslaved people
as the worst place that you want to be enslaved. You do not want to be sold down south. The
conditions are arduous and dangerous and violent, and it breaks the spirit. So Isabella is very
concerned about her son. She gets lawyers and she sues. Not only does she sue Getney,
so her son is sold to a man called Solomon Getney, for participating in the
illegal sale of her son because New York state law prevents the sale of a person
who would be free in a place where they cannot ever be free, right? So by going to
Alabama he's never going to be emancipated and she sues Albany Supreme
Court for allowing the sale to happen. So she sues the man in
the state and she is victorious. So in 1828 the judge rules quote, the boy be
delivered into the hands of his mother having no other master, no other
controller, no other conductor but his mother. And she becomes and bringing the
suit the first black woman to win a legal victory against a
white man to secure a family member's freedom. So this is hugely, hugely
historic. And we owe a lot to the archives. So the New York Archive
discovered records only a few years ago in 2022 that give us much more
information about the case, including the fact that Isabella was allowed to give a
deposition, which is very uncommon for Black Americans in the court at the time.
And Getney, we know from these archival records, was prosecuted for kidnapping and only returned
Peter to avoid indictment.
And the records also allow us to understand that the young Peter was returned to his mother
badly beaten and abused.
And so it's definitely a story of celebration, but also there's hardship.
But I'm really excited about what people might be able to glean now that we have these records.
The amazing thing really now is that Isabella is free. She's been assisted by the Van Wagoners.
She's still called Isabella Van Wagonen, but she goes off to New York and she now goes
to work for white families, but wealthy families as a free woman. And one family is called
the La Tourette's.
They sound quite French to me, Michelle. Is she speaking French now?
Not that I know of, I'm not sure, but you know, she's a multilingual woman, so who
knows?
And they're very religious, aren't they?
Yes, that's absolutely right. So the La Tourette's are as religious as they are wealthy, we could
say. And they're followers of a religion
that would come to be known as perfectionism.
And perfectionism is closely-
I worship that as well,
so I never get anything done.
Right, and so perfectionism is closely tied
to the Pentecostal tradition,
which I think Desiree,
some of this is gonna resonate with you.
So it's about spreading the gospel, living plainly, speaking in tongues, singing hymns,
seeking miracles, fasting, washing each other's feet. And so the Latvians begin this holy club,
which is essentially a church that they hold in their home. And they also minister in the
community amongst some of the most downtrodden, prisoners, prostitutes.
And Isabella begins to preach with this club as well, and she also works in the field.
She begins to really craft her oratory style, her spiritual conviction at this moment in
a really amazing way.
She becomes a housekeeper for Elijah Pearson, who is a successful businessman who would become a leading religious reformer.
And Pearson would claim to be a prophet, and he believed that he could cure illness and prevent death.
So much so that when his wife Sarah died,
likely the result of the extreme fasting that the community had been engaged in, he attempted to pray her back to life.
Right? So Isabella, yes, is enmeshed
in a society of deep religious devotion.
If you're going to try to do miracles, I would start on water first. I'd be practicing that.
Start on loaves. Just be like, oh, my wife said, well, it's time to crack it out. Boom.
But then she finds someone even more interesting. Someone comes to her door calling himself the prophet Matthias Desiree.
Who do you think he claimed to be?
I'll give you a clue.
He's wearing gold robes.
He's got a fancy beard when he shows up at her door.
I mean, if you hadn't told me that, if he just showed up on her door, I was like, ah,
Jehovah's Witnesses, pretend you're not home.
But they definitely never claimed to be Jesus.
Yeah, it's Jesus.
Also, we've all seen, well, I guess
he didn't have the benefit of seeing Indiana Jones.
But you know, you got to come as a carpenter.
Jesus isn't coming out in his Elvis gear,
like with a full Vegas gold on, just being like, oh,
I'm just a humble Lord and Savior right at your, no.
He's all like, oh, yeah, hey, I'm just a guy with a beard.
Do you want me to fix that shelf? Also, have, he's all like, oh yeah, hey, I'm just a guy with a beard.
Do you want me to fix that shelf?
Also, have you heard about my dad, God?
Like you gotta, you gotta do a slow roll on that.
Yeah, you gotta be humble.
So he just, Matthias is like, I know I'm named after a saint,
but I'm actually Jesus.
Michelle, was Isabella convinced by this gold-dressed man,
or did she Holy Ghost him?
Not at all.
She is so convinced that she wept for joy
and kissed his feet.
Oh, good.
Yeah.
Oh, man.
It didn't hurt that he styles his hair and clothing
to look like those chromatic images of Jesus
that were circulating at the time,
so he's very much trying to play the part.
Look, we've all been scammed before.
Everybody, no one can act like they're above it.
There's a scam for every single person out there.
That's why the banks are always letting you know what's up.
So I get it.
She's been waiting to meet him.
Yes, she does.
And in 1833, she follows him to a commune in Westchester
called Kingdom of Matthias.
Oh, she joins a cult.
She does. She cult. She does.
Yes.
She does.
She does.
Yes.
And members of this organization, cult, if you will,
it's what it is.
They sign over thousands of dollars in property to Matthias.
And he styles himself as a prophet chosen by God.
And he believes that he is the only prophet.
So Elijah Pearson, who has a lot of money,
also a prophet, he becomes kind of edged out,
even though he still remains a member of the community.
But it's Matthias who is the one who is speaking the word.
He takes what he calls a spirit match.
He's legally married to another woman,
but takes on this other woman as his spirit match.
He styles himself the father.
So he very much wants to be the head of everything.
This is a cult.
Yeah.
He literally is like, we're going to take all his property
and I'm going to have several wives.
This is exactly what a cult is.
Yeah, and we've done a cult already with Pythagoras.
So this is our second cult together, Desiree.
Yes.
Yeah, I'm just, he didn't invent the wheel.
No, no.
And Isabella is trying to preach, Michelle, but is not allowed to preach in this cult,
so that's not ideal.
Yes, and so she, you know, begins to, or attempts at least to defy him, but he uses physical
abuse and punishment against, you know, his followers.
And so it's a real tough situation that she finds herself in and is marginalized in this community.
Yeah, and the commune collapses in 1834, Desiree, so only a year later.
But Isabella stays loyal to Mathias.
She lends him money, she gets him a lawyer.
We all choose toxic people.
Even his own wife hadn't joined the commune, but Isabella is still Team Mathias.
It's a bit of a red flag, isn't it, when the wife won't join, but-
But like all she's known are red flags her whole life.
All right, I bring the up, like a relationship expert
would look at this and be like, you know,
it was bad from the beginning in our upbringing.
And then she met John, who would prepare the way,
the toxic relationship for this guy, Mathias,
who beats her and she stay, ah!
I love this and I hate this.
Mathias, he gets in trouble actually,
or he's alleged to have poisoned Elijah Pearson, who dies.
Oh, yeah.
So after a prolonged illness.
And so it makes the newspapers.
And this actually even brings side eyes, for lack
of a better word, to Isabella.
A family, the Folgers, accuse her of
trying to poison them. So they both need lawyers and she gets a lawyer for herself, she gets a
lawyer for Mathias, she tries to get all these statements. She even goes back to DeMont to get
a character statement. This is a really tough moment. It's all over the newspapers and Mathias
eventually kind of abandons Isabella, goes back to his
wife and so that's really how the whole thing kind of comes to an end that
particular chapter. So she's once again having to kind of start over. They didn't
teach us this in kindergarten when we were drawing her a picture on a piece of
worksheet and coloring it in. They were just like ain't I a woman she's a
feminist. The end. Not like oh she joins a cult and is like all up with the cult leader
who is super toxic and then he poisons.
And, and, I mean, but this is, this is exciting.
This is sexy stuff.
I want to talk to you about an undercover mission.
I need two officers to infiltrate a gang dealing drugs.
Hate to break it to you, Clinton, but we ain't street.
We're just doing a spot drug dealing.
You got this.
What?
Take this of the bank.
This sounds dangerous.
It is.
There was drugs, nudity.
This goes all the way to the top.
God, I've always wanted to say that.
I need you to bury this body.
Ah!
Black Ops, all episodes now streaming on Hulu. I need you to bury this body. Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa the woman people have heard of, the person Desiree colored in at school. How does Isabella van Wagenen become Sojourner Truth?
Yes, so on June 1st, 1843, the day of Pentecost, she claims to have experienced the Holy Spirit
calling her to travel and preach. At that point in time, she had been known more frequently
as Sojourner, but that's when she really adopts the surname Truth, because she believes that, you know, she is as true as God's Word, God is with her.
Sojourner Truth is one who travels to preach God's truth, and she spends several
months on the road trying to convince audiences to seek salvation before
Judgment Day, which she predicts would occur in March 1844, so it is imminent.
And so there's a huge expediency to her work at this moment.
Oh, she believes the world's gonna end.
She does.
And she travels...
She was in a cult.
...around New England.
She's preaching.
She doesn't speak to her children or family
about this decision.
And she gave her employer at the time
only one hour's notice before she sets out on this new path.
Amazing.
Sounds like she's also the reason
that employers now require a minimum of two weeks.
Yeah, exactly, yeah.
One hour, one hour.
That's one hour, not gonna cut it.
She'd gone from Isabella Bounfri to Isabella Wagonen,
she's now Sojourner Truth,
and soon she was living in another commune deseret.
Such a hippie.
I'm into it.
We never saw this part.
Loves a guy in a beard and robes.
But this one's less problematic, Michelle. This is the Northampton Association for Education
and Industry, which sounds like a kind of local government thing. What is this commune?
Yeah, so it's a kind of education, civic organization focused on women's rights, liberal education,
abolition. She doesn't immediately love it. It's kind of a stark kind of place that people bathe in a river, right?
So it's about this kind of like essential kind of living.
But she believes it gives her equality of feeling, liberty of thought, and the largeness
of soul.
And so this is a utopian community that's a stop on the Underground Railroad.
And it's really where she begins to cultivate her kind of feelings around anti-slavery and
women's issues particularly.
So it's a huge moment for her and her development as a speaker.
And Desiree, this is where she meets another very famous American abolitionist.
Do you want to guess who?
Can it please be Harriet Tubman?
Because there she's on the Underground Railroad.
It's a stop.
Did Harriet be like, hey, handshake?
Like, I love it.
It's like, you know, it's like the fingers touching
on the Sistine Chapel.
It's like, ah.
I mean, if it's not her, then it's Frederick Douglass?
Yeah, well done. Yeah, very good.
OK.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, Harriet was probably busy sort of breaking people.
It was busy shooting people.
She was busy on the ground, you know,
breaking people out of prison.
Yes, doing the whole thing.
She was like, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I'll meet her later.
All right, I have a few things going on.
But if she's speaking, so is Frederick Douglass, so I'm sure that they would be sitting on
plenty of panels together.
Exactly.
And Frederick Douglass, we've done an episode on it.
Listeners, if you want to check that out, it's a really good one.
Douglass is a renowned orator.
He's a brilliant speaker and incredibly articulate.
You might assume that Douglass and Sojourner Truth get on really well, but there's sort of tension, Michelle.
There can only be one!
It's not Highlander, that's right.
Yes.
It's like comics meeting at the same show. It's like, oh, I see you trying to cut into my abolitionist coin. Cool.
Who's the headline act? Is it Frederick Douglass or is it Cessadina Drew? Yeah, I mean the headline act is, well, you know, Frederick Douglass is just starting
out and so there's tension and they disagreed on these kind of philosophical things that
also I think bled into their personality differences. So Douglass really stressed the importance
of education. He taught himself to read and write, and really wanted to be the sophisticated public orator,
who styled himself on the figures that surrounded him.
Sojourner Truth, she's Sojourner Truth now,
she was illiterate.
She never learned to read and write.
And I think by this time in her 30s, she was OK with that.
She wasn't trying to change.
And she had this more kind of homespun accessible type
of demeanor.
And, you know, Douglas would say something not so nice about her.
Douglas would write about how she would publicly point out his mistakes
and also call him to the carpet for things that he would do in terms of prioritizing black men over women.
Douglas really believed that truth was trying to really make him look bad in the public.
I mean, it's fascinating, isn't it? Because we can lift both of these up as heroes and
as pioneers, but actually there's a sort of fractious relationship there. Sir John of
Truth does copy one of Douglas' better ideas, i.e. a book. He writes a sort of very, very
famous book, sells quite a lot of copies, 4500, and six months later Sir John of Truth
sort of announces that she's gonna do a book.
What's her book called Michelle?
Yeah so Sojourner needs the money right she's given it all the way to Matthias and these
other types of institutions that she's involved in.
So she narrates her life story to Olive Gilbert who's a friend of William Lloyd Garrison so
the noted abolitionist.
So it's the narrative of Sojourner Truth drawn from her book of life, and it's published in 1850.
And even though the narrative is about Sojourner Truth,
she is a person who can't read and write.
So she's narrating her life story to Olive Gilbert,
and Gilbert's voice is actually very present,
and at one point kind of implores the reader,
you need to buy this book,
this woman has spent her money poorly.
Her daughters are not taking care of her.
Like the only way that you're gonna support this woman
is if you buy this book.
And so it-
Did you do that at the beginning?
Cause no one's gonna find that in the middle
if they haven't already bought the book.
Yeah, put it on the front cover.
You must buy this book.
It's very important.
Like seriously you guys, buy this book.
So it's published in 1850.
So it takes four or five years or so to actually get this book down
And it's an autobiography with two voices which is a slightly unusual idea
But there is a PR strategy in that the general truth quite cleverly gets a celebrity endorsement
She gets the endorsement of Harriet Beecher Stowe. Do you know Harriet Beecher Stowe Desiree?
Uncle Tom's Cabin? Yeah, that's right. Yeah, okay huge Huge, huge bestseller, another abolitionist, by getting an endorsement that sells copies.
And later Michelle Stowe publishes an article about meeting Sojourner Truth.
It's an interesting document, but it's tricky.
Yes.
So in 1853, Sojourner Truth approaches Harriet Beecher Stowe for this endorsement.
She gives it.
And then 10 years later, Stowe will publish this article titled Sojourner Truth, the Libyan Sibyl.
And the piece actually suggests that Truth had died, so she has to come out later and
like you know tell the people, I didn't die, I'm still around.
It also is notable because it depended on inaccurate, heavily racist stereotypes. Yeah, it really gains notoriety and really contributes
to a particular narrative of truth
that is less sophisticated than the real person.
But at the same time, Stowe is hugely credited
with furthering truth celebrity, right?
So this article makes her hugely popular.
She's able, from the money sold on the book,
to buy her own
home actually. So in addition to the Harriet Beecher Stowe endorsement, the fact that it
only cost 25 cents, which apparently at that time I know nothing is affordable. So the
book is flying off the shelves, right? And allowing her to make this money.
SONIA DARA-MARTINEZ-MARTINEZ I mean, for the author of Uncle Tom's Cabin,
are we surprised that she gave her an endorsement that was a little bit sort of not as, as woke as we would have enjoyed for the time. But also
I think they're always artists who are like, yeah, they don't fully get me, but everybody
listens to them. You know, even now.
Yeah, you want that endorsement, you just have to sort of cringe your way through it,
I guess. In 1852, just the year before that kind of big interview with Harriet Beecher Stowe, or that big moment with Harriet Beecher Stowe, in 1852, Sojourner
and Frederick Douglass clashed again, because Douglass was starting to sort of suggest that
taking up arms might be necessary for the emancipation of African Americans, and that
perhaps God had abandoned them. And Sojourner manages to shut him up in public
in front of an audience by saying,
Frederick, is God dead?
What a line.
Yes, yes.
So she said, you know, in saying this,
she's really trying to get him to think
that only when God is dead will violence be the answer.
So she, at the time, is very, you know, against violence.
She believes that, you know, prayer, faith,
faithfulness to God's word is what's going to see African Americans enslave people through
this moment. And so it's this, again, another example of this ideological tension between
these two people.
He's literally silenced by this lion deseret. Can you imagine her with hecklers in a comedy
club? So Jonah Truth, live and loud. You can't handle the truth. Abolitionist totally destroys other abolitionists
on stage at the Chuckle Hut.
I mean, yeah, because he's like, look,
I know you're Frederick Douglass,
but are you ready to be Nietzsche right now?
Is God dead?
Yeah, yeah.
Or are you just showing your weakness right now?
I mean, she's like, don't mess with me.
I've been in two cults.
So.
That's true.
You don't want to know how determined
and strong my faith is.
Yeah.
So in the 1850s, with the book out,
Sir John De Chuth went on a book tour.
Her name means traveling, so she's living up to her name.
She's traveling.
And she's fighting for women's rights as well.
That's an abolitionist, which is a really
important distinction. And she meets Michelle William Lloyd Garrison,
she meets a British MP, George Thompson. So there's an international movement here, which
is interesting. Is she famous by this point? Is she renowned? Are people flocking to go
and see her talk?
So she has a lot of audiences, but actually the media is very uneven about its coverage of her.
So oftentimes she's not mentioned by name and in the papers.
And so if we're looking at it from the historical record, it's very hard to tell.
Yet we also have narratives of people speaking about what a great orator she is.
And so it's very clear that whenever she is speaking, that she's really, that the audience
is raptured by her. She's known for, she sings to them, she has this powerful speaking quality,
and she's also really funny and apparently very sarcastic. And so, and she's able to really infuse
this wit and this humor into her speaking engagements where she's talking about these
issues, right? Like, you know, slavery, abolition, women's inequality, right?
Very serious things, but she's able to do so in a way that really invites audiences
in.
So she's funny, Desiree.
And she's 5'11".
She's got this deep, strong voice.
I mean, I'm just saying.
Like, I mean, my predecessor here, although I'm probably not going to sing on stage anytime
soon, but you never know.
If it works, it works.
You know, it's interesting, her approach.
You know, there's always been, there's always a back and forth
within sort of Black progress about like,
Elaine Locke and Zora Neale Hurston did the same thing
about like, you know, can you use vernacular
and can you be relatable to people,
or does it need to be about like,
the talented 10th and all of this other stuff.
So like, you know, you need both.
Like, you need a Malcolm and a Martin.
Like, you need both sides of this.
So it's amazing that, you know, yeah,
she didn't learn how to read.
She learned how to have a reputation.
She also flexed her biceps.
She sort of, you know, she showed off her guns.
She's a show woman.
Yeah.
Come on.
There's songs.
There's stories. There's Jesus, there's guns,
but not the kind Frederick Douglass is talking about because God is very much alive.
Exactly. There we go. Now, I think we have to get to the most important speech that she
is set to have given, which is, of course, the entire woman's speech, Michelle. And this
is an iconic speech. Does she say that? What do we know about the speech? Can you give
us a potted history of it?
I will also say that I gave this speech as a kid on the news, on the morning news at
6 a.m. So it's very dear to me, but it is a complicated history. So Truth gave this
speech or is purported to have given this speech at the Ohio Women's Rights Convention
that was held in Akron in May 1851. And in this speech, we do know that True spoke about how she could do as much physical labor
as a man, about how Jesus was the Son of God and of a woman, argued very humorously that
women were valued in the eyes of God in a way that men were not.
She says she's plowed and planted and gathered into barns and no man could heed me and aren't
I a woman?
So that's the part of the text that's often attributed to her.
The article was written by an organizer of this convention called Frances Dana Gage.
It is believed that she writes this directly in response to Stowe's more stereotypical
and damaging kind of depiction of truth in that Libyan Sybil piece.
And so Gage here is making a specific point about the intersection of a kind of women's
ideology or political orientation in that of a kind of black pride or kind of black
ideology, right?
She's trying to bring these things together, that you can be both black and woman.
She does so in adopting a dialect that was not
truth. Much of the kind of practice of the time for particularly writers who are trying to elevate
the abolitionist cause is that they're translating the kind of oratory of enslaved or formerly
enslaved people into broken dialect. And it's offensive, right, particularly to our kind of
modern ear. It's also inaccurate. That's not how truth spoke. We've made it clear offensive, right, particularly to our kind of modern ear. It's also inaccurate.
That's not how truth spoke.
We've made it clear today, right, she was of Dutch heritage, right?
She had a Dutch accent and spoke like many people in her region.
In one line, then that little man in black, he say woman can't have as much right as man.
That would not have been the speech.
Yeah, but if you're going to come and do some rap,
you're going to pretend you've been to jail.
You know, like you're going to talk about how many, you know,
like you're going to come hard.
You're not, like even if you're Dutch,
you're going to try to sound like you're American black
and not Dutch if you want to sound authentic.
And she's doing the performance.
So like, I don't know.
I kind of get it.
We'll talk more about it in the nuance window. I know Michelle, but the thing that follows
the speech soon after is the American Civil War. What did Sir Jenna Truth do in the Civil
War?
Yeah, so she becomes a huge figure in terms of trying to galvanize support amongst black
Americans, particularly to the union cause. And so she works very hard to recruit black men into the Union army.
Her grandson, right, also enlists.
And so that's a huge moment.
And she speaks with President Abraham Lincoln about what is to come for black Americans.
And she comes to, you know, really support the war.
She sees it as necessary, as religiously morally necessary for the country.
And she becomes really interested in what's gonna happen
for people after the war.
But in terms of her work for the Union, army in particular,
she's collecting food for troops.
She's using her photographs
to bring awareness to the war cause
and really trying to popularize the notion
that this is an important endeavor for black Americans to be engaged in.
She met three presidents in her life Desiree. She met Abraham Lincoln but she also met
Andrew Johnson and then Ulysses S. Grant as well. So she's you know she's moving
in high circles. How do you think the meeting went with Abe Lincoln? Desiree, what's your... Well, if you ask it like that, I mean...
I'm not leaving the witness, I'm just asking.
She loves that truth.
She loves that tea.
She's spicy.
So someone like Douglas might have been a little bit more like, oh, hello, and blah,
blah, blah, and we're doing official things.
She might have been a little bit freer with her opinions about how lucky this president
was to meet her and all of her insight.
So I don't know, I think it could have been spicy.
So you think she played Sojourner Truth or Dare with the president? She was a bit of a risky game.
Michelle.
He was like dare.
Dare, yeah. Michelle, I don't think we know how it went necessarily, but we get a sense perhaps
that the person she was with
felt that he was rude to her.
Yeah, there are conflicting accounts here. Yeah, thank you very much for that. So, truth
would describe Lincoln as amenable and someone who greeted her as an equal, but she would
attend this meeting with her friend and colleague Lucy Coleman, who would later describe Lincoln
as tense when he met truth and Coleman alleges that Lincoln actually addresses her
Truth as he would a washerwoman and so as actually not recognizing Truth's stature and importance.
Yeah, I suppose for Sir Jenna Truth, her saying he was amenable to me, that works in her favor.
So maybe she wants that meeting to be well received.
Yeah, I wanted her to be up in there and be like, oh, so you're the president.
Well, let me tell you something.
But yeah, I also can see how she'd be like, you know what?
It helps to have powerful people on your side.
So let's make him feel like everything was great
and get what we need, especially since she's so pro-war now.
I love when she's like, you know, I was never against the war,
I was just against Douglas.
Yeah, exactly.
I just could never stand him.
So like Douglas,
Sojourner Truth used photography very carefully,
very cleverly to sort of disseminate her image.
But after the war,
was she an important part of the conversations
in the rebuilding of America, Michelle?
Did Sojourner Truth get her due after the crisis
had ended?
Yes and no. So she becomes really part of these circles, right? So she is with leading
women's rights and suffrage figures. So in 1872, she joined Susan B. Anthony and trying
to vote in a presidential election. She's turned away. She's touring New York state.
And by this time, in 1870, she's in her 70s.
And she's lecturing daily, sometimes twice a day.
She participates in efforts to try
to get land for Black Americans, even though that's never really
supported by Congress.
So she really has and is developing
grand political ambitions well into her later years and really has what you know we will know to be really powerful and to lacquer tours.
But you know I would say you know going back to something that we discussed earlier right we we often know their names and know more about them than we do about truth.
So there's certainly an unevenness.
often know their names and know more about them than we do about truth.
So there's certainly an unevenness.
When you say land for African-Americans, are you saying that she wanted to create like reservations almost for, for people who'd been freed?
So mostly like not, not quite a reservation, but wanting to have the kind of
40 acres and a mule kind of conversation, right?
There was a kind of brief dream of this, but it wouldn't become a realized,
but I do think it's a kind of testament to her vision
that she anticipates that the Civil War
will leave much undone for black Americans.
I can't remember the timing of 48 years of Emile,
but this is post Civil War, so this is like Reconstruction,
so that must have come up.
Like, is she part of a conversation
or is she starting a conversation that takes off later? Like, what's the timing of her trying to do this?
So she's very much part of a conversation that's going on, but I think because of her
proximity, right, she's one, in addition to Frederick Douglass, who's actually meeting
the presidents. And so she has a unique position to actually be effective and to talk to them
firsthand about this.
And so while, you know, it's not necessarily a discourse that she starts,
she's a really effective administrator in terms of getting that message out there.
And so the end of her life, I mean, she's already elderly in her 70s.
She lived into her 80s, but at the end of her life, how did her life end?
So she has various bouts of illness. She tries to travel locally. By this time, she's
in Battle Creek, Michigan. So she's relocated again, and she really finds refuge and community
in Michigan. It's a place that she really comes to love. But you know, she's very sick. And during
this time, she continues though to give speeches, she continues to draw audiences
and her speeches are printed very widely.
But unfortunately she dies on 26th of November, 1883
at home at around the age of 86.
And she is eulogized by her many colleagues,
including Susan B. Anthony and Frederick Douglas.
So her long frenemy will come back and speak of her upon our passing.
Oh, that's nice.
Of course, you've got to speak well of the dead, especially if you outlive them.
Yeah, well, yeah, but also...
He's like, my favorite frenemy.
What can be said?
First of all, I'm here and you're not, but also you are great.
But you know, sometimes the greats need a rival to push them further on.
Of course.
So 1883, 86 years old, that's a long, long, extraordinary life.
It's been quite the sojourn we've had Desiree.
Any final thoughts before we do our nuance window?
This was amazing.
You've given me a notebook and I've studied for this.
Like I was cramming for an exam.
There are five pages here.
I don't even know if I've listened as well as I've written down notes about this person.
I love this.
The cult years are delicious.
Just like, you know, also like her, her touring comedian performer years, like I feel like
it's, there's a series like Hacks
that, like, we can watch build.
You know, I'm like, it's a film, it's a series.
Like, I want to see the, like, the abolitionist speaking
circuit and all of the, like, you know,
the sort of backstage happenings.
But also, like, it was cool to see how much she was able
to emancipate herself in various ways over and over and over again.
This is stuff that they don't teach you and I'm really in awe of. So thank you.
Beautifully summarized. And also I just love the fact that she had a Dutch accent. You just don't imagine that, right?
Yeah, the whole time.
The whole time.
Which is like not, it's not the one that you're thinking of.
No.
You know what I mean? It's not the one. In the movie you're like, who's going to pull that one off?
Because it's real specific. Real niche.
The Nuance Window!
Time now for The Nuance Window.
This is where Desiree and I listen in rapturous silence for two minutes while Dr.
Michelle preaches to us about something we need to know about Sojourner Truth.
So my stopwatch is ready. Please take it away Dr. Michelle preaches to us about something we need to know about Sojourner Truth. So my stopwatch is ready. Please take it away, Dr. Michelle.
So you know Sojourner Truth, she is what we know to be this really great figure. But a
lot of her life exists, you know, at the edge of myth and reality. There's so much about
her that we can't know, we won't ever know. Like what she really sounded like, right? A lot of that comes from the kind of narrations of others.
And because she is someone so kind of shrouded in myth,
I think it's important for us to really sit with what she did
and what we can know based on what she did, right?
We know that she is a woman who was deeply religious,
who stepped out on faith
to self-emancipate herself, who moved about in these various kind of avenues to live the
life that she wanted for herself as a free person. And we know that she really tried
to thread this needle between a faithfulness to her race as a black woman, but also to her gender, right, as a woman
who wanted to seek equality.
And this is not an easy balance to contend with at the moment at which she's doing it,
right?
We have examples today of how hard that is for some people.
And so there's so much about what she said that we'll never know for sure.
But we know that she worked tirelessly on behalf of black people,
on behalf of women to improve their lives. And so I think if we know that, we know as much truth
that is important and possible to know. Thank you so much, Michelle. Desiree?
That was incredible and inspiring. Thank you for making this person, just breathing this sort of modern
day heroine into her that she deserves. That was really cool. And yeah, I mean, just kind
of remind you like that we're all history in the making. And you know, how you choose
to focus and how you choose to build that, you know, as part of a legacy that other people
100 plus years later,
pick up and go like, oh, wow, I didn't know what this person was doing and how inspiring
that is to what I would love to do.
That's amazing. And also, I think sometimes we don't always know what people said exactly
in speeches, but you can sort of see the effect they had on people. It's almost like you can
see where the ripples are in the water and the pebble is gone, but the ripples are still there.
And that's quite nice that with the journey of truth,
maybe she didn't say, ain't I a woman,
but she definitely communicated that concept to people.
So it's still amazing.
So what do you know now?
So what do you know now?
So what do you know now?
So time now for our quiz.
This is the, so what do you know Now? This is for Desiree to
see how much she has learned. And Desiree, I mean, at this point, we know that full marks
is guaranteed with you. You are our quiz champion.
I mean, every single time I'm trying to conjure this up, this spirit of like, I've never been
lucky in anything. So like, if I can keep it at the table, you know, like in Vegas and keep high rolling, I feel so great about this.
Ten questions. I mean, I'm sure you'll get most of them, but let's see if ten is doable.
Let's take those takes right on, Deb. How about we do that?
Alright, let's do ten questions.
Because, you know, everyone is allowed to be human.
Fine. We'll start with an easy one. Question one. What was Sojourner Truth's first language?
Oh, Dutch.
Very good. Okay. Question two. What did Sojourner Truth do when language? Oh, Dutch. Very good. Okay.
Question two.
What did Sojourner Truth do when a cult leader, Matthias, appeared at her door saying he was Jesus Christ?
She was like, right then, finally, you found me great.
Let's go ahead and leave together because you're Christ our Savior and let's carry on.
And what did she do to his feet?
Oh, like wash them, kiss them, love them.
Yeah, yeah, well done. Like, you'd massage them forever. Like, come on. And what did she do to his feet? Oh like wash them, kiss them, love them. Yeah yeah. Massage them forever. Like come on. Question three, what was the name of
Sojourner's son whose freedom she successfully sued for in a court of law?
Oh Peter. It was Peter. Peter that she went to go get. Question four, why did she adopt the
name Sojourner Truth? What did it mean to her? That she was going to travel the
world as she knew it and preach God's truth.
Very good.
Question five.
Which fellow abolitionist and longtime rival did Truth first meet at the Northampton Association?
Sorry, she met Frederick Douglass and it's just so funny.
We're like, hey, what's up?
I hate you.
It's a mutual respect.
Question six. What is unusual about Truth's autobiography?
Well it's an autobiography written by a different person.
So it's an autobiography that features two voices inside of it.
It's Olive Gilbert.
Question seven, what famous line from a speech given by Sojourner Truth at the Ohio Women's
Rights Convention might have been misquoted.
It's, uh, ain't I a woman? But ain't I a woman? She might have said dis dat and the other
because she did it in dialect and everybody just wrote down what they wanted.
And maybe with a Dutch accent too.
Yes!
So there we go. Question eight. What technology did Sojourner Truth use to disseminate her
image?
I mean, a photo. Like there's a photo. What is that?
Yeah, photography. Yeah. She's like... to disseminate her image? I mean a photo like there's a photo what is that? Yeah photography yeah
Question nine what was notable about Sojourner Truth's appearance and physicality?
She was tall and buff she was almost six feet tall and she was like swole because she did all the work
Yeah yeah and question 10 this for a perfect 10, which, to tell you the truth, met three US presidents.
Can you name two of them?
Grant and Lincoln.
And the other one was Johnson?
But whatever, Grant and Lincoln.
Perfect.
Well done.
Desiree Burch, never in doubt, 10 out of 10.
Well done.
I couldn't have lost it on someone this amazing.
This is a revelation.
Thank you so much, Michelle and Greg.
You remain the best student.
I mean, I would study this forever.
Can I come back to Cornell, but like for no money?
Yeah, come on.
Is that a thing?
Don't tell him my setting.
Listener, if you want more from Desiree and Michelle, check out our episodes on Harriet
Tubman and Josephine Baker, both extraordinary women.
And for more abolitionist history, why not listen to our episode on Frederick Douglass, who was a very important
and interesting man. No, he's incredible. And it's cool when amazing people are like,
yeah, but I could take him or leave him, you know, with the other one. That's kind of a rivalry.
He's great. Exactly. Exactly that. I'm a big Douglas fan. But yes, I think there was genuine
rivalry and respect, I think,
there in that relationship with The Journal of Truth.
But anyway, listen to that one too.
And to you lovely listener, join me next time as we follow in the footsteps of another forgotten
firebrand.
But for now, I'm off to go and grow my beard, cover myself in gold, and convince my neighbours
that I am Jesus Christ.
Hello!
Bye!
This episode of You're Dead to Me was researched by Madeleine Bracey. Hello! Bye! Cook. You're Dead to Me is a BBC Studios audio production for BBC Radio 4.
Join me, Rachel Burden, inside Café Hope. Thank you so much.
Thank you.
Radio 4's virtual coffee shop, where guests pop in to tell us what they're doing to make
the world a better place.
I really believe that food waste and food poverty shouldn't co-exist.
From those helping feed people, to those helping them get out and about.
We've now created a scheduled bus service running six days a week.
Hear about the plans, the struggles and the triumphs.
We've had a really supportive local community here.
A home for people who've dedicated their lives
to helping others.
The new series of Cafe Hope with me, Rachel Burden
from BBC Radio 4.
Listen now on BBC Sounds.
I want to talk to you about an undercover mission. I need two officers to infiltrate
a gang dealing drugs. Hate to break it to you Clinton but we ain't street. We're just
doing a spot drug dealing now. You got this? What? Take this sh** of the bank. This sounds
dangerous. It is. There was drugs, nudity. This goes all the way to the top.
God, I've always wanted to say that.
I need you to bury this body.
No!
Black Hots, all episodes now streaming on Hulu.