5/25 Weekend Edition

Mapping school segregation by state, the murder of Roger Fortson, and anti-DEI lawsuit against Citigroup.

ANTI-RACISM DAILY

May 25, 2024

Weekend Edition

Hello and happy Saturday! I wanted to send you this weekend’s edition early in case your Memorial Day plans give you extra time for reading.

By popular demand, we finally have two new workshops next month – one on religious inclusion and another on neurodivergence. I’m so inspired by our facilitators and can’t wait to hold that space with you!

If you’re looking for more ways to engage with the community, consider joining our virtual book club discussion on May 30 and our free workshop on Civic Engagement at the Workplace.

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In solidarity,
Nicole

One of the earliest Memorial Day ceremonies was held by freed Black people.

The Battle of Fort Wagner on Morris Island was the Union attack on July 18, 1863, led by the 54th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry. The infantry was one of the first major American military units made up of black soldiers.

May 30 marks Memorial Day, a day of remembrance for those who have died in service to the United States. The federal holiday, originally called Decoration Day, was created to honor and remember Union soldiers who died in the Civil War. In May of 1868, Gen. John Logan declared the holiday "for the purpose of strewing with flowers, or otherwise decorating the graves of comrades who died in defense of their country during the late rebellion, and whose bodies now lie in almost every city, village and hamlet churchyard in the land" (Logan Museum). It would later be recognized as a day to commemorate all U.S. troops and soldiers (military.com). However, Memorial Day's origins and earliest known tributes have been forgotten.

Since its creation, many cities have claimed to be the holiday's birthplace. Groups of women in the South decorating the graves of Confederate, and sometimes Union, soldiers during 1886 were commonplace (Veteran Affairs). Twenty-five regions have been linked to the tradition, though the first recorded tribute was held by recently emancipated Black people in the year prior, 1865. 

In Charleston, South Carolina, the Confederate army held Union soldiers in prison camps, including a converted country club and race track (History). It's estimated that more than 200 Union soldiers died there and were buried in a mass, unmarked grave. Following the end of the Civil War in April of that year, freed Black people in Charleston exhumed the mass grave of Union soldiers and gave them a proper burial. They reinterred each soldier into a new cemetery that they built with a 10-foot-tall white fence surrounding the graves with "Martyrs of the Race Course" marked on the archway.

On May 1, 1865, around 10,000 people visited the site and held a parade at the race track. The group consisted of recently emancipated Black people and white missionaries. News reports from The New York Tribune and The Charleston Courier reported that "three thousand Black schoolchildren carried bouquets of flowers and sang 'John Brown's Body.' Members of the famed 54th Massachusetts and other Black Union regiments were in attendance and performed double-time marches. Black ministers recited verses from the Bible." 

A reporter for the New York Tribune described it as "a procession of friends and mourners as South Carolina and the United States never saw before" (TIME).

While the first official commemoration wouldn't be for another three years, this event organized by recently freed Black people would be one of the first observances of Memorial Day. However, like many contributions of Black people, enslaved or otherwise, to this country, the reburial and subsequent tribute to the soldiers were lost to history. The cemetery would later be replaced by Hampton Park, named after Confederate General Wade Hampton, and the Martyrs of the Race Course were reburied at a national cemetery in Beaufort, South Carolina.

"This was a story that had really been suppressed both in the local memory and certainly the national memory," Professor and 2019 Pulitzer Prize winner in history David Blight said. "But nobody who had witnessed it could ever have forgotten it."

Take Action

Racial Justice Conference 2024

SPONSORED: Join our friends, RE-Center Race & Equity in Education, to #AntagonizeInjustice at their second annual Racial Justice Conference (RJC24) in Hartford, CT, and VIRTUALLY on June 7, 2024, with a livestream keynote from Dr. Bettina L. Love!

New Workshops

Our upcoming workshops put the lessons in this newsletter into practice. Flexible enrollment, group plans, and discounts for cause-centric organizations are available.

Religious Inclusion at Work
Facilitated by Ciarra Jones
Wednesday, June 26 | 3pm–5pm EST
Create environments where individuals can bring their whole selves to work, promoting mental health and job satisfaction. Learn how to create religious inclusion at your workplace and explore the multifaceted benefits of religious diversity.
Enroll >

The Power of Neurodiversity
Facilitated by Jezz Chung
Thursday, June 27 | 3pm–5pm EST
Learn the foundations of neurodiversity, ableism and how to create more inclusive spaces for neurodiverse people to thrive.
Enroll >

Effective Facilitation Series
Facilitated by Nicole Cardoza
Starts Monday, June 17 | 3-4p EST
In this three-week series, we will discuss facilitation techniques for equity and inclusion that can help promote these values by providing participants with practical tools and strategies to create an inclusive and equitable workplace.
Enroll >

In the News

A photo of a pair of Black hands resting atop an old, yellowed map on a table. Photo Source: Olivia Joan Galli for The Atlantic to accompany the first linked story below.

The lynching that sent my family North. Writer Ko Bragg shares their heartfelt perspective on rediscovering the tragedy in Mississippi that ushered their family into the Great Migration. The Atlantic >

Henrietta Lacks family can proceed with lawsuit over use of HeLa cells after ‘milestone’ ruling. The family of Henrietta Lacks can pursue compensation from a pharmaceutical company over its use of her cells, which have been influential in modern medicine after being taken without her consent decades ago. Baltimore Banner >

Today, ‘disability justice is reproductive justice’ — but that hasn’t always been the case. The new Disability Reproductive Equity Act marks a new chapter in disability history, where more organizations are willing to work together on reproductive rights and justice issues. 19th News >

For many American Jews protesting for Palestinians, activism is a journey rooted in their Jewish values. How Jewish communities are standing in solidarity against the violence in Gaza. The Conversation >

A love letter to the student encampments for Palestine. The participants in the student encampments “have rejuvenated us after months of militant protest, taking bold action for our transgenerational, collective vision of liberated peoples and lands across the world.” Convergence >

Here’s how some states are responding to the worst attack on voting rights in decades. Legislatures are increasingly crafting their own laws to protect the power of the ballot box. Capital B News >

Racial disparities in mental health care persist, according to latest study. Among adults who report fair or poor mental health, White adults (50%) are more likely to say they received mental health services in the past three years compared with Black (39%) and Hispanic adults (36%). KFF >

The Christian nationalist playbook to usurp democracy. Organizations like the Alliance Defending Freedom and Convention of States publicly share their plans to implement theocracy, but are we paying attention? Prism >

New York care workers’ fight to end the 24-hour workday highlights the cracks within the progressive movement. Workers’ efforts to improve their employment conditions put them at odds with their union and progressive organizations in the state. Prism >

Join our May Book Club!

Join our current book club on “The Hundred Years’ War on Palestine” by Dr. Rashid Khalidi! We’re discussing the book all month long on Patreon and gathering virtually on Thursday, May 30.

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