8-Year-Old Girl Dressed Up as Michelle Obama for Cultural Heroes Day and Our Lives Will Never Be the Same Again

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For Cultural Heroes Day, 8-year-old Ella-Lorraine Brown decided to tap into our forever first lady Michelle Obamaโ€™s formative years as a freshman at Princeton University. And weโ€™re all better for it.

โ€œShe was really in awe of the idea that with hard work you could become anything,โ€ Ella-Lorraineโ€™s mother Karlyn Johnson Brown told Makers. Karlyn is also a Princeton alum.

The decision to portray Obama as a college student was deliberate as well. Which Ella-Lorraine insisted upon.

โ€œI loved it because by choosing to portray her hero as a college student, the focus was on Michelleโ€™s accomplishments as an individual, not just as an attachment,โ€ Karyln continued. โ€œElla-Lorraine has never known a time when Black women werenโ€™t publicly honored and โ€˜Black girl magicโ€™ wasnโ€™t a highly celebrated thing. Thatโ€™s awesome.โ€

Ella-Lorraineโ€™s father, Eugene Brown, added, โ€œWe try to surround Ella-Lorraine with women who are go-getters like Michelle, women who are independent and smart, level-headed and loving. We make sure she knows about those who have gone before and have passed on.โ€

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But youโ€™re in for a rude awakening if you believe this is the only time Ella-Lorraine has served up melanin magic.

As sheโ€™s previously reintroduced trailblazers such as civil aviator Bessie Coleman and Ruby Bridgesโ€”who was the first black child to desegregate an elementary school in the Southโ€”to a new generation.

But for the Brown family, the goal is to raise their children to empower others.

โ€œElla-Lorraine (whoโ€™s named after the iconic Ella Fitzgerald) has been taught from an early age about the women for whom sheโ€™s named and how they used their voices,โ€ says Brown. โ€œShe knows that folks came before her that allowed her to be where and who she is today, and weโ€™ve encouraged her to not back away from embracing that history.โ€

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