Description
In this Christmas episode, we explore Christmas in the Black South a tradition shaped by food, faith, memory, and the enduring pull of home. Looking beyond commercial narratives, this episode traces how Christmas became a moment of rest, gathering, and continuity in Black Southern life. From the historical roots of holiday pauses during slavery to the lasting significance of Watch Night services, Southern foodways, and returning home, we examine how culture transformed constraint into tradition. This is a story about kitchens and churches, sound and memory, migration and return, and the quiet meaning of belonging. Designed for Christmas week listening, this episode is reflective, historical, and grounded in lived experience. If this episode resonates with you, consider sharing it with someone who might appreciate this story. All sources and references are listed below. Follow the show on Instagram: @AmandaPaints1214 Tictok: beyondthetablepod Email: beyondthetablecast@gmail.com SOURCES & REFERENCES National Museum of African American History and Culture — Religion in African American History — African American Foodways and Cultural Memory Library of Congress — Federal Writers' Project: Slave Narratives Collection National Park Service — Watch Night and the Emancipation Proclamation Isabel Wilkerson, The Warmth of Other Suns Henry Louis Gates Jr., The African Americans: Many Rivers to Cross James Oliver Horton and Lois E. Horton, Slavery and the Making of America Pew Research Center — Religion and African American Communities Southern Foodways Alliance — Oral histories on Southern food traditions and holiday cooking