Close Menu
TheHub.news

    Dining in Nova Scotia: Restaurants Give Diners a Taste of Africa and the Caribbean

    By Cuisine Noir

    Kevin Sumlin Returns As Head Coach of UFL’s Houston Gamblers

    By FirstandPen

    Did You Know the Founder of Black Enterprise, Earl Graves Sr., Was Born on This Day?

    By Shayla Farrow

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    TheHub.news
    Support Our Work
    • Home
    • Our Story
      • News & Views
        • Politics
        • Injustice
        • HBCUs
        • Watch
      • Food
        • Cuisine Noir
        • soulPhoodie
      • Passport Heavy
      • Travel
      • Diaspora
      • This Day
      • Entertainment
      • History
      • Art
      • Music
    • Healthy
    • Wealthy
      1. Copper2Cotton
      2. View All

      The Time to Buy a Home is Now…Maybe!

      September 11, 2023

      Focus Your Way to Wealth

      April 14, 2023

      What You Might Learn From a $300K Net Worth

      February 6, 2023

      How I built Wealth in a Bear Market

      January 13, 2023

      Black Women’s Unemployment Rate Drops: Here’s What the Latest Report Reveals

      January 13, 2025

      What Does Toxic Positivity Look Like in Personal Finances?

      April 12, 2024

      More Than Money: Cultivate More Flow to Unlock Your Financial Potential

      September 22, 2023

      Music Mogul Akon on How to “Stay Rich”

      September 12, 2023
    • Wise
    • Business
    • Sports
      1. First and Pen
      2. View All

      Kevin Sumlin Returns As Head Coach of UFL’s Houston Gamblers

      January 9, 2026

      If NFL Teams Want Real Change, Brian Flores Is the Man

      January 5, 2026

      Marcus Freeman Ain’t Going No Where After New Deal With Notre Dame

      December 30, 2025

      Malik Willis Is Proving He’s An NFL QB

      December 29, 2025

      Kevin Sumlin Returns As Head Coach of UFL’s Houston Gamblers

      January 9, 2026

      If NFL Teams Want Real Change, Brian Flores Is the Man

      January 5, 2026

      Marcus Freeman Ain’t Going No Where After New Deal With Notre Dame

      December 30, 2025

      Marcus Freeman Ain’t Going No Where After New Deal With Notre Dame

      December 30, 2025
    • Tech
    • Podcasts
      1. Coach Cass
      2. More Than Money
      3. This Is Lurie Daniel Favors
      4. This is Karen Hunter
      5. Welcome to Knubia
      6. View All

      Dining in Nova Scotia: Restaurants Give Diners a Taste of Africa and the Caribbean

      January 9, 2026

      Kevin Sumlin Returns As Head Coach of UFL’s Houston Gamblers

      January 9, 2026

      Did You Know the Founder of Black Enterprise, Earl Graves Sr., Was Born on This Day?

      January 9, 2026

      Liberation Narratives and the Art of Stretching the Constitution

      January 8, 2026

      Dining in Nova Scotia: Restaurants Give Diners a Taste of Africa and the Caribbean

      January 9, 2026

      Kevin Sumlin Returns As Head Coach of UFL’s Houston Gamblers

      January 9, 2026

      Did You Know the Founder of Black Enterprise, Earl Graves Sr., Was Born on This Day?

      January 9, 2026

      Liberation Narratives and the Art of Stretching the Constitution

      January 8, 2026

      Dining in Nova Scotia: Restaurants Give Diners a Taste of Africa and the Caribbean

      January 9, 2026

      Kevin Sumlin Returns As Head Coach of UFL’s Houston Gamblers

      January 9, 2026

      Did You Know the Founder of Black Enterprise, Earl Graves Sr., Was Born on This Day?

      January 9, 2026

      Liberation Narratives and the Art of Stretching the Constitution

      January 8, 2026

      Dining in Nova Scotia: Restaurants Give Diners a Taste of Africa and the Caribbean

      January 9, 2026

      Kevin Sumlin Returns As Head Coach of UFL’s Houston Gamblers

      January 9, 2026

      Did You Know the Founder of Black Enterprise, Earl Graves Sr., Was Born on This Day?

      January 9, 2026

      Liberation Narratives and the Art of Stretching the Constitution

      January 8, 2026

      Dining in Nova Scotia: Restaurants Give Diners a Taste of Africa and the Caribbean

      January 9, 2026

      Kevin Sumlin Returns As Head Coach of UFL’s Houston Gamblers

      January 9, 2026

      Did You Know the Founder of Black Enterprise, Earl Graves Sr., Was Born on This Day?

      January 9, 2026

      Liberation Narratives and the Art of Stretching the Constitution

      January 8, 2026

      Women in America: Move Over Lindsay Graham

      December 3, 2025

      In Class With Carr: Signal Failure

      December 2, 2025

      In Class with Carr: Victory Laps

      November 10, 2025

      In Class with Carr: Demolition Derby

      October 28, 2025
    TheHub.news
    Diaspora

    Manuel Querino, a Brazilian Historian Often Compared to W.E.B. DuBois

    By SedJuly 28, 202203 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Copy Link
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Copy Link

    Manuel Raimundo Querino was born on July 28, 1851, in Santo Amaro, Bahia, Brazil. He experienced tragedy early in life when at the age of four he lost both of his parents to an epidemic. He became the ward of a local teacher, Manoel Correia Garcia, who taught him to read.

    With only primary school education, at the age of 17, he joined the military for a brief stint.

    When he returned to Bahia, he began working as a painter and draftsman in 1882. He enrolled in an architecture course, where he excelled, earning several medals in contests and exhibitions. Querino improved his engineering knowledge so much that he went on to publish a drafting manual.

    Later in life, he developed a curiosity about politics. He was a liberal and abolitionist. He founded the journals, “A Província” and “O Trabalho”, where he promoted abolitionism.

    He quickly became a class leader, albeit restricted to humble civic positions due to his race.

    Querino began dedicating most of his time and energy to historical studies, in particular to researching and documenting the contributions of Africans to the development of Brazilian society. He sought to celebrate the contributions which Black people made to Brazil and to remind white Brazilians of the debt they owed to Africa and to the Afro-Brazilians.

    In 1906, he published Os Artistas Baianos (The Artists of Bahia), a 62-page article in the Revista do Instituto Histórico e Geográfico da Bahia.

    Through writing about history, he sought to correct the traditional emphasis on the European experience in Brazil. Until this moment, no other Afro-Brazilian had achieved a platform to share this perspective on the history of Brazil. Querino emerged as the first Brazilian – Black or white – to analyze, and present African contributions to Brazil. Most impressively, he presented his work in the face of hostile and racist opposition.

    By writing about the contributions of Afro-Brazilians, Querino also helped to create protections for many independent Black communities. His work alerted local lawmakers about the existing persecution of practitioners of Afro-Baianas religions. The police, labeling these religions as barbaric and pagan, frequently appeared at the places where the ceremonies took place, destroying property and injuring participants. Querino’s intervention defending this community with the local government revealed once again his original achievement in creating a bridge between different cultures and social classes.

    One of Querino’s greatest contributions to Brazilian historiography was his insistence that national history takes into account its African component, whose contribution was being minimized. He ratified these contributions in his controversial essay, O Colono Preto como Fator da Civilização Brasileira (The Importnace of the Black Settler in Brazilian Civilization) (Anais do 6º; Congresso Brasileiro de Geografia, 1918).

    This essay, was and still is, foundational for scholars on Brazil – so much so that it is difficult today to appreciate Querino’s importance.

    Afro Brazilians Manuel Querino Thehub.news
    Sed
    • Website
    • X (Twitter)
    • Instagram

    An expat now living in Northeast Brazil, Sed Miles works hand in hand with working-class, Afro-Brazilian artists, activists and intellectuals fighting against Brazil’s systematic racial and class barriers using a Pan-African, intersectional pedagogy. Each week they will present dispatches from the archives that will bridge communities and be a resource for the future. The mission of the Archives is to help unite the Black diaspora through documenting, preserving, and sharing stories that represent the shared themes and experiences of working class Black people. The series will focus on Brazil and the United States, societies built and held together by generations of Africa’s unshakable children.

    Related Posts

    Dining in Nova Scotia: Restaurants Give Diners a Taste of Africa and the Caribbean

    January 9, 2026

    This Day in History: January 8th

    January 8, 2026

    Flutterwave Acquires Mono to Expand Open Banking Across Africa

    January 6, 2026
    Add A Comment

    Comments are closed.

    Recent Posts
    • Dining in Nova Scotia: Restaurants Give Diners a Taste of Africa and the Caribbean
    • Kevin Sumlin Returns As Head Coach of UFL’s Houston Gamblers
    • Did You Know the Founder of Black Enterprise, Earl Graves Sr., Was Born on This Day?
    • Liberation Narratives and the Art of Stretching the Constitution
    • Decolonizing the Viewfinder: Photographers Course-correct Africa’s History in New MoMA Exhibit 

    5 Black Female Fitness Coaches to Inspire Your 2024

    By Jonah

    Philadelphia DA Sues Elon Musk Over Controversial $1m Giveaway to Swing State Registered Voters

    By TheHub.news Staff

    Is Trump 2.0 Our Fault?

    By TheHub.news Staff

    Beyoncé Breaks Another Record, Surpasses 1B Streams on Spotify

    By Veronika Lleshi

    Subscribe to Updates

    A free newsletter delivering stories that matter straight to your inbox.

    About
    About

    Celebrating US from one end of the land to the other. We record our acts, our accomplishments, our sufferings, and our temporary defeats throughout the diaspora. We bring content that is both unique and focused on showing the world our best unapologetically.

    X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube

    Dining in Nova Scotia: Restaurants Give Diners a Taste of Africa and the Caribbean

    By Cuisine Noir

    Kevin Sumlin Returns As Head Coach of UFL’s Houston Gamblers

    By FirstandPen

    Did You Know the Founder of Black Enterprise, Earl Graves Sr., Was Born on This Day?

    By Shayla Farrow

    Liberation Narratives and the Art of Stretching the Constitution

    By TheHub.news Staff

    Subscribe to Updates

    A free newsletter delivering stories that matter straight to your inbox.

    © 2026 TheHub.news A 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organization.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.