News 4 Buzz

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Comfort and Style: The Perfect Bean Bag Chairs for Kids!

    March 3, 2023

    Concert picks: Feb. 1 – 7

    February 1, 2023

    Azam Khan And Naseem Shah Involved In A Massive Fight In Bangladesh Premier League

    February 1, 2023
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    • Locate Us
    Facebook Twitter Instagram YouTube
    News 4 Buzz
    Demo
    • Home
    • Automotive
    • Business
    • CBD
    • Crypto
    • Education
    • Fashion
    • Finance
    • Health
    • More
      • Home Improvement
      • Entertainment
      • Law \ Legal
      • News
      • Shopping
      • Sports
      • Technology
      • Travel
    News 4 Buzz
    Home»News»Anniversary of Atlanta’s 1906 race massacre sparks new conversations
    News

    Anniversary of Atlanta’s 1906 race massacre sparks new conversations

    By No Comments5 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Reddit LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Reddit Email

    [ad_1]

    Thousands of Atlantans plan to mark the anniversary of the Atlanta Race Massacre this Sunday.

    The aim is to bring 5000 people together at 500 tables across the city with the theme of “Better Me, Better We, Better World” as part of the Equitable Dinners Atlanta initiative. 

    Participants will be encouraged to engage in conversations about systemic racism and ways to move forward as they pay remembrance to a 116-year-old event that many chose to forget.

    Learning from history

    As GPB’s Political Rewind remembered in a special show last year, a white mob began a four-day rampage through Black communities in Atlanta on Sept. 22, 1906. Twenty-five Black residents were murdered, hundreds more were terrorized, and buildings and businesses were destroyed. The mob’s anger was stoked by segregationist politicians and sensationalist reporting from the city’s two major newspapers at the time, The Atlanta Constitution and The Atlanta Journal.

    Despite its lasting damage, the Atlanta Race Massacre was largely ignored by city officials and many historians. It was not until 2006 that the city publicly recognized the event. The massacre was added to the Georgia’s social studies curriculum in 2007.

    Then and now

    Documentary filmmaker, journalist and author King Williams not only writes about the tragic nights in September of 1906, he takes college students, community leaders and others on a tour of the nondescript places where the events took place in downtown Atlanta.

    Peachtree Street looks nothing like it did back then.

    But at an address across from a shady park today, there once stood a prominent Black-owned business.

    “The Crystal Palace was the nicest barbershop in Atlanta, with four floors and crystal chandeliers,” Williams said. “All of the barbers wore all white and it was just meant to service an elite clientele.”

    It was the barbershop of Alonzo Herndon, a formerly enslaved man whose post-slavery entrepreneurship made him one of the wealthiest Black citizens of Atlanta.

    Then in September 1906 a series of newspaper lies about attacks on white women whipped the city’s white men into a frenzy and three nights of terror began.

    Everyone who moves through downtown Atlanta today passes by the places where Black men were chased through streets and beaten to death.

    “You see, all of a sudden, a mob of people just showing up,” Williams said. “You see torches. You hear gun shots. You hear people screaming.”

    Herndon’s barbershop windows were smashed but he survived.

    Others weren’t so lucky.

    The killings and destruction of Black-owned businesses and homes throughout the downtown area had a purpose, Williams says.

    He believes the intent was to hinder the economic success of Blacks like Herndon and thwart Black voting power amid a racist election campaign.

    But the massacre was buried in a pall of silence.

    Documentary filmmaker, journalist and author King Williams takes people to the places where the 1906 Atlanta race massacre took place, including Five Points, where Black men jumped into the path of trains to escape a white mob. (Credit: Orlando Montoya / GPB Photo)

    “A lot of Black leaders wanted to move past the event and not talk about it anymore,” Williams said.  “So, for the next century or so you have this version of Atlanta that people don’t really know about.”

    Challenging past narratives

    Williams says the 1906 Race Massacre doesn’t fit neatly into Atlanta’s narrative as a progressive city and the birthplace of the Civil Rights movement.

    That’s why Adria Kitchens of Out of Hand Theater is working with a coalition of groups to restore the massacre and its legacy to the city’s public memory.

    “A part of being able to do this is to really name the full history,” Kitchens said. “For us to be able to look at it collectively, look at it together and say, ‘What are the things that we are going to do differently, now?’”

    On Sunday, Sept. 18, 2022, groups large and small will gather, simultaneously, in homes, social halls, restaurants and other locations as part of an Equitable Dinners event. Actors will perform short, one-person plays about race and justice at the events, followed by the dinner and moderated discussions.

    Out of Hand Theater founder and artistic director Ariel Fristoe says they’ve done this format before for different issues over the last few years and it works because it’s direct and personal. This will be the theater’s largest such performance, dinner and discussion yet.

    “It does something wonderful to have it be that no guest at the dinner has to take on the burden of sharing something painful that has happened to them to start the conversation,” Fristoe said.  “Instead, we have a story that’s entertaining and vivid and emotionally engaging and makes it so that these conversations can go much deeper much more quickly than they would otherwise.”

    This story comes to Reporter Newspapers / Atlanta Intown through a reporting partnership with GPB News, a non-profit newsroom covering the state of Georgia.

    The post Anniversary of Atlanta’s 1906 race massacre sparks new conversations appeared first on Reporter Newspapers & Atlanta Intown.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Email
    Previous ArticleChicago Invitational, scoreboard, results, prize money, Will Zalatoris, Bryson DeChambeau
    Next Article Rumours around Sam Menegola missing Geelong Cats’ preliminary final win over Brisbane Lions, gastro, sick, latest

    Related Posts

    Concert picks: Feb. 1 – 7

    February 1, 2023

    Atlanta gets go-ahead to start building controversial public safety training center

    February 1, 2023

    ‘Surrogacy Soiree’ fundraiser will help a couple start or extend their family

    January 31, 2023

    Public comment sought on proposed Nancy Creek stormwater rules change

    January 31, 2023

    Dunwoody’s Spruill Center for the Arts hires new gallery director

    January 31, 2023

    Pop-up dining experience coming to Piedmont Park

    January 31, 2023
    Add A Comment

    Comments are closed.

    Editors Picks

    Comfort and Style: The Perfect Bean Bag Chairs for Kids!

    March 3, 2023

    Concert picks: Feb. 1 – 7

    February 1, 2023

    Azam Khan And Naseem Shah Involved In A Massive Fight In Bangladesh Premier League

    February 1, 2023

    Russian Soldier Says Frontline Is A ‘Meat Grinder’; Ukraine Is ‘Pummelling Us Non-Stop’

    February 1, 2023
    Recent Posts
    • Comfort and Style: The Perfect Bean Bag Chairs for Kids!
    • Concert picks: Feb. 1 – 7
    • Azam Khan And Naseem Shah Involved In A Massive Fight In Bangladesh Premier League
    • Russian Soldier Says Frontline Is A ‘Meat Grinder’; Ukraine Is ‘Pummelling Us Non-Stop’
    • Atlanta gets go-ahead to start building controversial public safety training center
    Archives
    • March 2023
    • February 2023
    • January 2023
    • December 2022
    • November 2022
    • October 2022
    • September 2022
    • August 2022
    • July 2022
    • June 2022
    • July 2021
    Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest
    • Locate Us
    © 2022 - News 4 Buzz - All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.