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Daily Inspiration Quote by Anna Julia Cooper

"The cause of freedom is not the cause of a race or a sect, a party or a class-it is the cause of human kind, the very birthright of humanity"

About this Quote

Freedom, Cooper insists, is not a boutique cause - not a banner to be waved by whichever group can claim the most injury or the purest politics. The sentence is engineered to pry liberty loose from the cramped ownership models that dominate public debate: race, sect, party, class. She lists these categories like a set of narrowing rooms, then kicks out the wall. The dash before "it is the cause of human kind" works like a moral reset button, forcing the reader to feel how small our usual factions are compared to the claim she’s making.

The subtext is pointed: movements fracture when they mistake representation for liberation, or when freedom becomes a credential distributed only to the deserving. Cooper, a Black woman educator speaking across the post-Reconstruction era into Jim Crow, knew exactly how often "freedom" was rhetorically promised and practically rationed. Her universal language isn’t naïve; it’s strategic. By framing freedom as "birthright", she borrows the authority of founding-era ideals while indicting a nation that treats those ideals as selective inheritance.

Context matters here: Cooper lived in a United States that loved abstract liberty and feared its concrete implications - voting rights, education, economic autonomy, safety. As an educator, she anchors freedom not in sentimental uplift but in entitlement: something owed, not begged for. The line doubles as coalition politics and moral trap. If freedom belongs to humankind, then any system that denies it to some is not merely unjust - it’s counterfeit.

Quote Details

TopicFreedom
Source
Verified source: A Voice from the South (Anna Julia Cooper, 1892)
Text match: 99.28%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
The cause of freedom is not the cause of a race or a sect, a party or a class,, it is the cause of human kind, the very birthright of humanity. (Chapter: "Woman Versus the Indian" (pp. 80–126 in the DocSouth edition; the quote appears around p. 121 in the Project Gutenberg HTML)). This line appears in Anna Julia Cooper’s essay/chapter "Woman Versus the Indian" within her 1892 book A Voice from the South (Xenia, Ohio: The Aldine Printing House, 1892). The University of North Carolina’s Documenting the American South (DocSouth) hosts a transcription of the 1892 text and locates "Woman versus the Indian" on pp. 80–126; the quoted sentence is followed immediately by: "Now unless we are greatly mistaken the Reform of our day, known as the Woman’s Movement, is essentially such an embodiment..." A widely circulated modern attribution (e.g., U.S. passport quote) traces back to this passage; I did not find reliable evidence in this search that it was published earlier than the 1892 book in another primary source.
Other candidates (1)
The Cause of Freedom (Jonathan Scott Holloway, 2021) compilation95.0%
... Anna Julia Cooper, the educator and feminist who wrote the landmark 1892 book A Voice ... The cause of freedom is...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Cooper, Anna Julia. (2026, February 8). The cause of freedom is not the cause of a race or a sect, a party or a class-it is the cause of human kind, the very birthright of humanity. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-cause-of-freedom-is-not-the-cause-of-a-race-36098/

Chicago Style
Cooper, Anna Julia. "The cause of freedom is not the cause of a race or a sect, a party or a class-it is the cause of human kind, the very birthright of humanity." FixQuotes. February 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-cause-of-freedom-is-not-the-cause-of-a-race-36098/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The cause of freedom is not the cause of a race or a sect, a party or a class-it is the cause of human kind, the very birthright of humanity." FixQuotes, 8 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-cause-of-freedom-is-not-the-cause-of-a-race-36098/. Accessed 8 Feb. 2026.

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Freedom is the Birthright of Humanity: Anna Julia Cooper
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Anna Julia Cooper (August 10, 1858 - February 27, 1964) was a Educator from USA.

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