Rediscovering Paul Robeson
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Start with a game-day laugh, end with a name they tried to erase. The Gospel Twins move from Super Bowl banter and Detroit fandom therapy into a deep dive on Paul Robeson—the scholar-athlete-artist-activist whose voice once shook the world and whose story America tried to quiet. Along the way, they unpack how erasure works: from House committees and passport bans to media frames that diminish Black excellence while borrowing its shine.
The brothers explore Robeson’s sweeping résumé—Rutgers All-American and valedictorian, Columbia law grad, NFL player, Broadway’s longest-running Othello, a bass-baritone whose concerts sold out worldwide—and the machinery that blacklisted him when his influence met his convictions. The thread runs through Jackie Robinson, too: owners who funded the Negro Leagues to stall integration, the calculated pressure to make a hero testify against a friend, and that chilling line from Howard Bryant about how power wanted “your benevolence and not your equality.” It’s a mirror of today’s culture wars, where representation sparks backlash and the wealth gap and public impatience pass for progress.
Through a kingdom lens, the G.T.s argue that faith isn’t a retreat from hard history but a mandate to engage it with truth, empathy, and righteous governance. They own their emotions, aim for clarity over comfort, and insist that remembrance is not grievance—it’s strategy. They also get practical: fasting, juicing, and the small wins that rebuild confidence, because dignity lives in both policy and the mirror. If you’ve ever wondered why you didn’t learn about Paul Robeson—or why some voices get turned down right when they matter most—this conversation connects the dots and hands you names, books, and questions to pursue.
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