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- Demand justice for survivors of the Tulsa Race Massacre.
Demand justice for survivors of the Tulsa Race Massacre.
Yesterday's rejection underscores the injustice of our legal system to account for racial harm.
June 12, 2024
Demand justice for survivors of the Tulsa Race Massacre.
Good morning and happy Wednesday. In 1996, Congress passed the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act, which amended the Victims of Crime Act (VOCA) to give the Office for Victims of Crime (OVC) access to $50 million in emergency funds to help victims of terrorism and mass violence. This included the families of the victims of the Oklahoma City bombing, which killed 168 people, including 19 children, and injured hundreds more in 1995 (VOCA).
And yet, when prompted, state and federal agencies can’t seem to find the funding for reparations for acts of racial violence. And the Oklahoma Supreme Court’s choice to reject a lawsuit from the last survivors of the Tulsa Race Massacre underscores how much work we have to do to acknowledge violence against marginalized groups.
Today, learn more about the Tulsa Race Massacre and the ongoing fight toward justice.
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In solidarity,
Nicole
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Support the Viola Ford Fletcher Foundation, created by the eponymous survivor of the massacre.
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Get Educated
Yesterday, the Oklahoma Supreme Court rejected a lawsuit filed by Tulsa Race Massacre survivors seeking reparations from the city, affirming a lower court's dismissal. The suit was initiated in 2021 by Hughes Van Ellis, Viola Fletcher, and Lessie Benningfield Randle, then the last remaining survivors of the attack (Van Ellis passed away last October).
Despite acknowledging the legitimacy of grievances against the socio-economic aftermath of the massacre, the court ruled that the current public nuisance doctrine does not allow compensation for historical events in the manner sought by the plaintiffs (NBC News). This decision represents a significant setback in the survivors' quest for justice, and reflects the struggles for reparations in cities across the U.S.
In the early 20th century, the segregated Greenwood neighborhood of Tulsa, Oklahoma was one of the most prosperous Black communities in the United States. Known as Black Wall Street, Greenwood was built “for Black people, by Black people” leaving the South. There were hotels, luxury stores, movie theaters, and barbershops, served by an independent school system, hospital, and post office. White resentment at Black Wall Street grew as the second Ku Klux Klan organized across the U.S., fueled by the film The Birth of a Nation and the support of President Wildrow Wilson (Encyclopedia). When World War I ended in 1919, many Black veterans returned to the United States unwilling to remain second-class citizens. And many white returning veterans were convinced that their Black counterparts posed an unacceptable threat to the racial hierarchy.
As one public official wrote:
“As far back as the first movement of the American troops to France the negro publicists began to avail themselves of the argument that since the negro was fit to wear the uniform he was, therefore, fit for everything else” (History).
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In DC, recently returned white soldiers went on a “days-long drunken rampage, assaulting, and in some cases lynching, black people on the capitol’s streets.” The violence spread across the country in what would be known as the Red Summer of 1919. There were 25 riots across the United States and 97 recorded lynchings. Two hundred Black men, women, and children were killed in a multi-day massacre in Elaine, Arkansas. Around 1,000 Black families in Chicago lost their homes because of white arsonists. Instead of trying to calm the white rampage, the New York Times blamed Black communities under “Soviet influence” (History). As a result, Black veterans organized armed self-defense groups to protect Black communities.
As W.E.B. DuBois wrote:
“This is the country to which we Soldiers of Democracy return… We are cowards and jackasses if now that that war is over, we do not marshal every ounce of our brain and brawn to fight a sterner, longer, more unbending battle against the forces of hell in our own land” (History).
Across the United States, white men rioted and murdered with impunity. The stage was set for continued violence when, two years later, a Black teenager, Dick Rowland, entered an elevator, and the white female elevator operator screamed. When the teen’s arrest for sexual assault the following day made front-page news, a mob descended on the courthouse, forcing the sheriff to barricade the top floor to protect Rowland from being lynched. Seventy-five Black men went to the courthouse to be confronted by a white mob of 1,500. When they retreated to Greenwood, the mob followed.
By the next day, Black Wall Street was gutted. Over a thousand homes were burned down, hundreds more were looted, and up to 300 Black residents were executed in public. Many survivors reported Greenwood being bombed by airplanes (History). Nobody was charged for any of these crimes. For decades, the Tulsa Race Massacre was erased from history. Greenwood residents’ home insurance claims were denied (Black Wall St. Times). The Tulsa Tribune story about the massacre and police and state militia records were destroyed. A service for those killed would not happen until the 75th anniversary in 1996. New unmarked graves of murdered Greenwood residents were discovered as late as last year (NPR).
The charges against Dick Rowland, whose alleged sexual assault of Sarah Page sparked the violence, were dropped later that year. Page never pressed charges or accused Rowland of assault, and it’s thought that her scream inside the closed elevator car was due to Rowland bumping into her or accidentally stepping on her foot (NBC News).
The Tulsa Race Massacre was 103 years ago, but the legacy of the massacre lives on in Tulsa today. Like many U.S. cities, Tulsa remains segregated, and residents of the white area live 11 years longer than those in the Black portion (CBS News). The Black residents of Greenwood today face community destruction from economic gentrification (NPR). Though more indirect than a single massacre, gentrification also displaces Black communities and is accompanied by legal and extralegal violence, as in the murder of Jordan Neely (@AlexCatsoulis, n+1). Providing reparations to Greenwood survivors and demanding resources and survival for Black communities around the U.S. is the only way to partially heal the damage done in the Tulsa Race Massacre.
Key Takeaways
Tulsa’s Black Wall Street was destroyed and hundreds were killed in the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre.
Three survivors continue to fight to hold the government accountable.
The Tulsa Race Massacre was censored for decades and has only been acknowledged recently.
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