Assistant director Ramaa Mosley attends a special screening of 10x10’s film Girl Rising on March 7, 2013, in Los Angeles.
Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images |
Everyone from activists to celebrities has used #bringbackourgirls,
causing the hashtag to be retweeted nearly 2 million times. But earlier
this week, one random woman tried to lay claim to creating it.
In interviews with CNN and ABC, Ramaa Mosley (@marystrawberry),
a documentarian based out of Los Angeles, said that after hearing the
story of the girls, and noticing there was no social media outcry or
mentions of it, she decided to take matters into her own hands and do
something about it.
By do something about it, she actually means that she took a hashtag
that was being used already and claimed it as her own. Mosley
“Christopher Columbus'd” #bringbackourgirls, and unfortunately the media
outlets who interviewed her about the hashtag didn't do a very good job
of researching how #bringbackourgirls started.
So let’s take a look at the origins of #bringbackourgirls.
According to the Wall Street Journal
and Twitter’s own search tool, which was readily available for CNN and
ABC to use for research, #bringbackourgirls was first used by Ibrahim
Musa Abdullahi, a 35-year-old Nigerian attorney in the capital, Abuja.
Abdullahi said he first heard the chant while watching World Bank Vice
President Obiageli Ezekwesili give a speech during the celebration of
Port Harcourt’s year as the United Nations’ world book capital. During
the speech, Ezekwesili led the crowd into a chant of “bring back our
daughters.” And it was then that Abdullahi took to Twitter and formed the hashtag “bring back our girls” on April 23.
Ezekwesili then took the hashtag
and retweeted it to her 125,000 followers, “Lend your Voice to the
Cause of our Girls. Please All, use the hashtag #BringBackOurGirls to
keep the momentum UNTIL they are RESCUED.”
So who’s to blame when a movement is hijacked by some random person
on social media? Is it Mosley’s fault because she laid claim to it? Or
is it the fault of CNN and ABC not doing their due diligence when it
comes to simple research that could have pointed them in the white, I
mean right, direction?
Since Twitter accused Mosley of being a hashtag thief, the Twitter user Torchy Brown created a hashtag in honor of Mosley. Source: The Root
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