Happy Black Marriage Day!!! Why It’s Important To Recognize This Day!

Marriage rates in the United States have hit an all-time low, dropping from a 1960 high of 72 percent to just barely half. Leading family scholars are troubled. Studies show that children from cohabitating and single-parent households face increased risks for a wide range of social, emotional, and economic ills compared with their peers from intact, married households, whose numbers are rapidly dwindling. Black families fare far worse.

“The black community has the distinction of the lowest marriage rate in America,” says Nisa Muhammad, founder of the Wedded Bliss Foundation, the sponsor of Black Marriage Day. “When White America has a cold, Black America has pneumonia. And we don’t have the resources or history to rebound as quickly.”

In 1960, 61 percent of blacks were married; today the rate hovers at a dismal 31 percent. Seventy percent of black children are born out-of-wedlock. Their mothers are more often than not poor. Black children continue to have the highest rate of poverty. While the considerable gap in divorce rates between blacks and whites has narrowed (blacks still out-divorce whites), far fewer blacks are also marrying. Forty-four percent of them consider marriage obsolete.

Over ten years ago, Muhammad, a journalist raising her own five children, went searching for answers to the problems plaguing the African-American community. She found her way to a Smart Marriagesconference, and left “mesmerized” by all the information available about the benefits of marriage.

“Black married people make more money, their kids do better in school, marriage rescues blacks from poverty, their kids are less likely to go to jail, become teen parents and get divorced,” Muhammad says. “I started thinking, does anyone in the black community know this stuff?”

She asked around and nobody did. Even among the well-educated. She couldn’t find anyone promoting marriage within the black community either.

Mainstream cultural cues mostly excluded blacks. No black Bachelors or Bachelorettes. Muhammad thought “27 Dresses” was a cute movie, but notes that the average black woman doesn’t have 27 married friends, much less has attended 27 weddings. When Muhammad spoke at Morehouse College, a distinguished all-male black college in Atlanta, Georgia, she asked the young men in the audience to name a song where a black man says “I love you” to a woman in the lyrics.

“They look baffled,” she says. “They couldn’t name one song. College students being nursed on music that offers sex without responsibility.”

Relationship stories in the black community typically center on “somebody did me wrong” or “woe is me,” she points out.

When Muhammad couldn’t find anyone offering portraits of healthy marriages, she took on the task herself. “Our silence co-signs a lot of negative behavior. We say it’s not me, but then it becomes you. That bothered me.”

So she founded Black Marriage Day in order to shine a national spotlight on all the positives. Stories of black couples married 50, 60, 70 years. Relationship workshops, celebratory dinners, vow renewal ceremonies, inductions into a Black Marriage Day Hall of Fame. She praises President Obama’s example of regular date nights with the First Lady.

 

Reprint *3/25/12 @HuffingtonPost.com

3 replies
  1. Pat K.
    Pat K. says:

    My husband and I celebrated Black Marriage Day by attending a concert featuring our daughter performing on stage. My handsome husband and I sat in the front row, advertising what Black marriage looks like. We invited my husband's co-worker and his wife, and they sat beside us, promoting marriage by just existing. Our daughter's talent, beauty, poise, health, and well-being was apparent to all who saw her perform. She was dressed in a beautiful formal gown, and her hair was cornrowed into goddess braids with a rhinestone hair clip to accent her beautiful hair. She was introduced with the mention of her various musical accomplishments.

    I am convinced that it is the 20 year marriage of her parents that has blessed this child's life and allowed her to walk across the bridge that is our marriage and achieve so much at the tender age of 15.

    Both my husband and I did not come from privileged backgrounds. We started our marriage with nothing except the determination to turn away from the mistakes of our parents. There is no way that our daughter could be doing so well if we had not maintained our marriage! She would have lost the income and sustained emotional support of her father that has been necessary for her to accomplish all that she has.

    She is proof that marriage in the Black community can make all the difference in the success or failure of a child.

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