Four white women attacked Solange at a concert she was attending with her son Juelz and husband Alan Ferguson last night. And now, she’s spilling truth serum on why black women don’t feel safe in “white spaces.” Get the details inside…
Solange Knowles Ferguson perfectly explains why black women don’t feel safe in “white spaces.”Black people have been saying this for years and white people continue to be oblivious to the fact.
After hitting up a few shows at NYFW, Solange Knowles Ferguson jetted to New Orleans to attend a Kraftwerk concert (one of her favorite bands) with her 11-year-old son Juelz, one of his friends, and her husband Alan Ferguson Friday night.
Ish went all the way left when four white women started verbally attacking her for dancing and having fun at the electronic concert. Solo said the women demanded she sit down and then proceeded to THROW something at her back! She said Juelz later confirmed it was a lime that was thrown at her.
“But in this moment, I'm just going to share my experience... So that maybe someone will understand, why many of us don't feel safe...,” she said.
She continued, “...in many white spaces... We don't "bring the drama".... Fix yourself. Nobody goes to the Kraftwerk show with their kid "looking for "drama" But that's how u guys like to spin this.”
Beyonce’s sister went on to say she and her family made up about 4 of the 20 black concertgoers in the predominately white audience of about 1,500 people. She explained that she did not go to the concert “looking for drama” and that she was simply there to have a good time.
She eventually brushed the haters off, posting a short video of herself and her husband still enjoying themselves despite the racist women trying to ruin her night out with her family.
Peep her tweets (read from the bottom up):
Bye haters pic.twitter.com/YPCRu75AFL
— solange knowles (@solangeknowles) September 10, 2016
After she posted her rant on Twitter, she received negative and racist backlash from certain folks who can't handle the truth. And she shared some of what was said to her followers:
Sighs...
Why is that black women are rarely allowed to be themselves in certain spaces?
Photos: Getty