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  1. an allusion to the Biblical story in which Jesus raised Lazarus from the dead. Sojourner Truth was an African American women's rights activist. Read her famous speech, Ain't I a Woman, which she delivered without preparation in 1851.

  2. Nov 17, 2017 · At the 1851 Women’s Rights Convention held in Akron, Ohio, Sojourner Truth delivered what is now recognized as one of the most famous abolitionist and women’s rights speeches in American history, “Ain’t I a Woman?”

  3. Speech Transcript – Sojourner Truth. Full transcript of Sojourner Truth’s famous “Ain’t I a Woman” speech from May 29, 1851. Sojourner Truth: (00:14) Well children …. Well there is so much racket there must be something out of kilter.

  4. ‘Ain’t I a Woman?’ – sometimes known as ‘Ar’n’t I a Woman?’ – is the title of a speech which Sojourner Truth, a freed African slave living in the United States, delivered in 1851 at the Women’s Convention in Akron, Ohio.

  5. "Ain't I a Woman?" is a speech, generally considered to have been delivered extemporaneously, by Sojourner Truth (1797–1883), born into slavery in the state of New York. Some time after gaining her freedom in 1827, she became a well known anti-slavery speaker.

  6. May 4, 2021 · At the Ohio Women’s Rights Convention, on May 29, 1851, the formerly enslaved woman Sojourner Truth rises to speak and assert her right to equality as a woman, as well as a Black American.

  7. Oct 11, 2019 · Sojourner Truth (c. 1797-1883) was arguably the most famous of the 19th Century black women orators. Born into slavery in New York and freed in 1827 under the state’s gradual emancipation law, she dedicated her life to abolition and equal rights for women and men.