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Remembering Chadwick Boseman


Via The New York Times

On August 28th 2020, Chadwick Boseman lost his four-year battle with Colon Cancer, the entire world stood still, honoring the actor.

Chadwick Boseman, a cultural icon, a gifted actor and a celebrated activist was snatched away from us last month. After a career spanning nearly two decades, Boseman has opened our eyes through his god-given talent.

Boseman was known prominently for his roles in the movie “42” playing Jackie Robinson and Thurgood Marshall in “Get on up”. But he will forever be remembered as King T’challa of Wakanda.

Boseman was the trailblazer of his generation, and a superhero both on and off the screen. Through his roles he has managed to bring attention to the black community and their importance. His acting career gave a voice to a community which begged to be heard. But still, words are unable to describe his impact on all our lives, but when we see somebody raise their hands in the “Wakanda Forever” salute and we simply understand it.

Through Boseman’s work in “Black Panther”, he has helped normalise black culture and given reasons for people to celebrate it. He normalised something that was considered “abnormal” in society. Boseman along with a handful of other artists like Beyoncé, have been able to uplift black heritage and show it off to the world, also showing at the same time there was nothing to be ashamed of.

He had decided to stay quiet about his disease, possibly to continue working and to extend a similar individual quality that his characters appeared. Thinking back, it appears as though his choice not to share his well being battles with the general population was a considerably more prominent demonstration of fortitude since it permitted individuals to keep up their picture of the characters he played and maintain the image of a hero. Obviously, that sacrificial decision makes him considerably more outstanding and chivalrous to us all.

The demise of somebody so youthful and imperative is consistently a blow since it breaks our own human loop with a dreadful snap. In any case, this is more terrible on the grounds that Boseman reliably played characters that gave the Black people group pride and expectation. We emerged from his motion pictures with straighter spines and more extensive grins. We would take a gander at one another and gesture, feeling like we were important for an option that could be greater than ourselves, something that returned ages to an entire distinctive landmass. We saw an entire history of our kin's battles and wins sparkling in according to one dauntless man.

In the end I would like to say that Boseman was a profoundly gifted entertainer who had the option to bring his one of a kind mix of force, appeal and energy to these symbols that made them important past the movies themselves. It is Boseman's. He was one of those uncommon entertainers whose work exemplified a delicate profoundness that attracted us to him.


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