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Black Wall Street - The worst tragedy in Modern American History
- By Karanja Gaçuça
- Published 05/17/2007
- Black History
-
Rating:




Karanja Gaçuça
Educated at the prestigious London School of Economics, where I pursued graduate studies in New Media & Management, & NYU where I studied film, I have lived in Nairobi, London, Paris and Atlanta, and currently live and work in New York City as a freelance filmmaker, writer, blogger and Political Consultant. Politics is my first love, inspired by my passion to fight against ignorance as concerns my people in all their various shades and expressions, with the aim of improving our quality of life, and gain greater access to equality and justice through access to quality education, health care, fair judicial process as well as economic opportunities wherever we are.
Remembering Black Wallstreet - courtesy of GBN (Global Black News)

The night's carnage left some 3,000 African Americans dead and over 600 successful businesses lost. Among these were 21 churches, 21 restaurants, 30 grocery stores and two movie theaters, plus a hospital, a bank, a post office, libraries, schools, law offices, a half dozen private airplanes and even a bus system. As could have been expected, the impetus behind it all was the infamous Ku Klux Klan, working in consort with ranking city officials and many other sympathizers.
In their self-published book, BLACK WALLSTREET: A Lost Dream and its companion video documentary, BLACK WALLSTREET: A BLACK Holocaust in America! the authors have chronicled for the very first time in the words of area historians and elderly survivors what really happened there on that fateful summer day in 1921 and why it happened. Wallace similarly explained why this bloody event from the turn of the century seems to have had a recurring affect that is being felt in predominately BLACK neighborhoods even to this day.
http://www.globalblacknews.com/BlackWallstreet.html
Whole black families were wiped out, by bombings from the air, razing to the ground by fire but also shot by white neighbors, law enforcement along with the KKK, so in fact, this would then account for the worst shooting case in American history.
Why is it important to bring this negative past up, I hear you say? Well, because this sort of shameful American history is part of what ails Black America today, and needs to be acknowledged and dealt with by apologies and any other fitting means. Ignoring the shameful past of America will never succeed to keep it hidden, as it will continue to rear its ugly head time and again. The other use of acknowledging America's ugly past is the fact that it serves to demonstrate to African Americans and indeed to Africans all over some of the reasons that hold African progress back in the USA. "And what is the purpose of this?" again I hear you say.
Well, as long as there are clear reasons for what ails Africans in America, we are able to understand that there are very real, very solid outside factors that have served and continue to serve to contribute to this, and it is necessary to understand that there is nothing so inherently wrong with our community to stop us succeeding. It is a reminder that we have to somehow find a way to circumvent and mitigate these external factors, and reach into our inner selves for inner strength, and if indeed there could exist a black wall street during Jim Crow, imagine what we can re-create with the resources and the advances made in legislation to outlaw practices that have existed in the past to legally hinder black progress – (I point out specifically the legal advances made not to be confused with a suggestion that there doesn’t still exist the many various racist hindrances of access, access to economic advantage and so forth).
Remembering Black Wall Street, furthermore, not only serves to recall the morbidity of this tragedy, but rather, it serves to remind and make aware to those that weren't already, that we as a people come from greatness, and if we can recreate greatness in the most unfavorable of circumstances such as Jim Crow, then we certainly can recreate greatness given today’s slightly improved circumstances.
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1 Response to "Black Wall Street - The worst tragedy in Modern American History" 
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said this on 04 Jun 2007 9:24:39 PM CDT
Beautifully written and c
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