Loading...

Alheri Grace Paul @Alheripee   

13
Posts
16
Reactions
8
Followers
8
Following

Title: Beneath the Cotton Sky


In the heart of Georgia, 1864, a whisper ran through the cotton fields like a breeze stirring the soil: Freedom is coming.
Twelve-year-old Ella Mae had never known anything but the endless stretch of white cotton and the harsh crack of overseer lashes. Her mother, Missy, often sang low spirituals while they worked not just for comfort, but as messages, hidden maps of hope. Ella didn’t understand them at first, but now, she was beginning to listen closely.
One night, Missy gathered a small group in the slave quarters. A quiet man named Josiah, who walked with a limp and spoke rarely, unfurled a tattered paper a map leading to the Union lines.

“Tomorrow night,” he whispered, “we go north.”
Ella's heart raced. Fear pulsed through her chest, but so did something else the spark of possibility. They moved under the veil of darkness, guided by the North Star and the songs Ella now knew by heart:
“Follow the drinking gourd…”
They crept past patrols, slept in hollowed tree trunks, and accepted food from brave allies free Black farmers and abolitionist Quakers. Along the way, Ella saw her mother’s resilience, Josiah’s silent courage, and the burning determination in her own chest to make it.


After two grueling weeks, they crossed into Tennessee and stumbled upon a Union encampment. Soldiers in blue coats welcomed them, offering water and warmth.
Ella looked at the sky no longer just a canopy of oppression, but now a canvas of freedom. She reached for her mother’s hand.
“We made it,” she whispered.
And beneath that vast cotton sky, Ella Mae knew this was just the beginning of her story.
0
  
   0
   5
  

Topic Lives

Empowering Music

Featured

Businesses

Videos

Music

Marketplace Items

Photos

Podcast/radio Shows

Featured

Challenge: Trivias

Funding Requests

Book Suggestions

News/opinions

Help Us Grow: Invite Friends

Blaqsbi was created as a space where our voices, our stories, and our sovereignty are protected. No racist algorithms, no data mining, no exploitation—just a platform built for us, by us, with dignity at the center.

Keeping Blaqsbi online is not just about maintaining a platform. It’s about preserving a digital home where we can connect, build, learn, and empower one another without outside interference. Every month we keep this platform alive is another month we protect our independence and strengthen our collective future.

If Blaqsbi has added value to your life, your voice, or your sense of community, we invite you to help us keep it going by inviting others to join. Every new voice strengthens our movement—and sparks real-world impact. Together, we can make sure this platform continues to grow, evolve, and serve our people with purpose.

Share your referral link across social media, blogs, or chats. Let’s grow together.

To start inviting your friends, copy the referral link below and paste it in your Facebook, X(Twitter), LinkedIn, favorite chat, blog posts or email messages.




Invite friends from other platforms

The Digital Sovereignty for Black and Brown People.

Alheri Grace Paul @Alheripee   

13
Posts
16
Reactions
8
Followers
8
Following

Follow Alheri Grace Paul on Blaqsbi.

Enter your email address then click on the 'Sign Up' button.


Get the App
Load more