Answer:
1. This is reflected in how she exposed the hypocrisy between what the society thought of women and the realities that women like her (especially of African descent) actually experienced.
2. She noted the strength of a woman in single-handedly upturning the world and what could be achieved by many women joined together.
3. She stressed that women were not inferior for they were the vessel through which Christ came.
Step-by-step explanation:
Sojourner Truth an African American who was born into slavery in her address titled, "Ain't I a woman?", delivered at the Women's Right's Convention, Old Stone Church, Akron, Ohio, in 1851, noted the differences between what some men thought of women and what they actually passed through. While they believed that women were meant to be taken care of, and respected she highlighted that she had actually toiled all her life and even had to bear her children being sent off to slavery.
She pleaded that men should allow women to attain equal rights with them as they were not inferior.