Blood on Black Wall Street: Excavating the Past

100 years ago this week, a white mob burned down Tulsa's Greenwood District, a bustling business district. For decades, the government refused to acknowledge the Tulsa Race Massacre ever happened. Only now, 100 years later, is an effort is underway to identify mass graves in Tulsa. Trymaine Lee visits a mass grave site with Kavin Ross, a local journalist, activist, and descendent of victims of the massacre.  But even as Black Tulsa has fought to unearth the truth and recover the remains of their ancestors, those efforts have been met with resistance and silence from many white Tulsans. Ruth Sigler Avery is one of the few white Tulsans who did not remain silent, after witnessing some of the horrific aftermath of the massacre as a child. Ruth dedicated her life to documenting the massacre, but even members of her own family did not believe her story. Trymaine speaks to Ruth’s daughter, Joy Avery, about the shame and guilt that has kept this history buried in white families for so long. At All Souls Unitarian, a historically white church in Tulsa, Reverend Marlin Lavanhar is working to get his congregation to wrestle with its role in the massacre. Many white members, including those who are descended from people involved, have chosen to leave the church rather than confront the past. Young Tulsa residents, like Bailey McBride, are ready and willing to acknowledge what happened and help take responsibility for the past. But even the most informed white Tulsans are still learning things they didn’t know about their connections to the massacre. We want to know more about you, our Into America listeners. Text AMERICA to 66866, and we’ll text you a link to a short survey. You can tell us what you like about the podcast, and what you'd like to change, and help us make a better show for you. Standard text messaging rates apply. For a transcript, please visit https://www.msnbc.com/intoamerica Thoughts? Feedback? Story ideas? Write to us at intoamerica@nbcuni.com Further Reading and Listening:  Blood on Black Wall Street: What Was Stolen Blood on Black Wall Street: The Legacy of the Tulsa Race Massacre Tulsa Race Massacre, 100 years later: Why it happened and why it's still relevant today

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