Ida B. Wells knew that truth sitting in a drawer does nothing. In this episode of Knowledge Gumbo Podcast, we sit with her challenge to all of us: are you willing to turn the light on, even when it costs you?
Wells was a journalist, editor, and anti-lynching activist working in the South at the end of the 19th century. While the mainstream press ignored or justified racial violence, she documented it. She gathered names, dates, and locations. She published what others refused to print in the Free Speech, the newspaper she co-owned, because owning the press meant no one could stop her from telling the truth. Her investigative pamphlet, Southern Horrors, documented over 700 lynchings and demolished the lie that lynching existed to protect white women. The data proved that most victims were killed for economic competition, for refusing to accept social order, or for daring to be successful.
This is not just history. This is a roadmap.
Key Takeaways
Ida B. Wells understood that speaking truth is not the same as exposing it. The word "turn" in her famous quote is deliberate — like repositioning a lamp, she actively pointed the light of truth at injustice until it could no longer be ignored. Black women's history is full of this kind of intentional, strategic courage.
Wells built a factual record rather than writing opinion pieces. She documented over 700 lynchings in Southern Horrors, showing with names and dates that most victims were killed for economic competition or for daring to succeed — dismantling a narrative the white press had used to justify violence.
Owning your platform is not incidental — it is strategic. Wells co-owned the Free Speech because borrowed platforms can be silenced. When they burned her press, she moved and kept writing. Narrative control and economic independence, for Wells, were the same fight.
The cost of turning on the light is real. This episode explores what it costs to speak truth publicly: comfort, approval, sometimes community. Ida B. Wells paid every one of those costs and did not stop. Her story asks us what we are keeping in the dark and what it is actually costing us to stay silent.
In This Episode
[00:00] Welcome and introduction
[00:26] Today's quote: Ida B. Wells
[00:36] Historical context: Wells as journalist and anti-lynching activist
[01:00] She documented the violence — names, dates, locations
[01:18] Reflection: What Alicia means by "turning the light"
[02:12] Photography and the power of light as a metaphor
[02:48] The Free Speech newspaper and owning the press
[03:02] They burned her press — and she kept writing
[03:34] The personal cost of speaking truth
[04:22] Wells used data, not opinion: the difference that mattered
[05:11] Southern Horrors and the 700 lynchings documented
[05:48] Narrative control: whoever tells the story shapes belief
[06:13] Owning your platform versus borrowing one
[06:44] Closing reflection question
[06:59] Outro and sign-off