Known as not only the president but the founder of TransAfrica organization, the organization that had an extreme impact on U.S. policies being enforced in the Caribbean and Africa, Randall Robinson, a Virginia Union University and Harvard Law School alumni, is a well known civil rights attorney in Boston, Massachusetts. Randall Robinson founded the TransAfrica organization in 1977. The TransAfrica organization one of the largest social justice groups in the United States aimed to achieve equal treatment for the people in Africa and the Caribbean. Robinson and the TransAfrica organization was against apartheid's. Robinson is known to have been a part of the anti-apartheid movement. He contributed to freeing Nelson Mandela. He also had a large contribution in the restoration of …show more content…
“No reference is made to blacks or slavery in any of the paintings. In the whole Rotunda, only a small bust of Martin Luther King Jr intrudes on an overall iconography of an America.” Robinson speaks on the miseducation of African Americans and how they are not taught about the Rotunda in the capital and how helped build slaves the White house, The United States Capitol and other government buildings. The content of the book can be closely related to culture appropriation. It goes back to the thought that Black people do not receive the rightful recognition that they deserve. Instead culture is being taken from them and turned into something that is seemingly “new.” The comparison between the two feed off of the distinct notion of inequality. In Robinson's previous book Defending the Spirit, he speaks on America’s racism. In The Debt America Owes to Black, he continues to speaking on racism but also tries to get America to acknowledge their wrongful actions and the extensive amount of financial debt they are in with the Black