(NPR) A Century After The Race Massacre, Tulsa Confronts Its Bloody Past

A Century After The Race Massacre, Tulsa Confronts Its Bloody Past




class="imagewrap has-source-dimensions"
data-crop-type="wide"
style="
--source-width: 1602;
--source-height: 901;
"
>




A Century After The Race Massacre, Tulsa Confronts Its Bloody Past







Anneliese M. Bruner's great-grandmother Mary E. Jones Parrish, a teacher and journalist, survived and documented the massacre in her self-published memoir, Events of the Tulsa Disaster.



Nate Palmer for NPR


hide caption





toggle caption




Nate Palmer for NPR












A Century After The Race Massacre, Tulsa Confronts Its Bloody Past






Survivors and their descendants say facing the truth about the Tulsa Race Massacre is essential in the nation's struggle to confront racial injustice and violence against Black people.





Comments

Popular posts from this blog

(NPR) Watch: Biden Delivers First Speech To Joint Session Of Congress

(newsmax) Police, Witnesses: Recording Warned of Imminent Blast Before Nashville Blast