The Asian Age

President Joe Biden

speaks as he commemorat­es the 100th anniversar­y of the Tulsa race massacre at the Greenwood Cultural Centre in Oklahoma on Tuesday.

- — AP

Tulsa, June 2: An emotional President Joe Biden marked the 100th anniversar­y of the massacre that destroyed a thriving Black community in Tulsa, declaring Tuesday that he had “come to fill the silence” about one of the nation''s darkest — and long suppressed — moments of racial violence. “Some injustices are so heinous, so horrific, so grievous, they cannot be buried, no matter how hard people try," Biden said.

“Only with truth can come healing.”

Biden''s commemorat­ion of the deaths of hundreds of Black people killed by a white mob a century ago came amid the current national reckoning on racial justice.

“Just because history is silent, it does not mean that it did not take place," Biden said. He said that "hell was unleashed, literal hell was unleashed.” And now, he said, the nation must come to grips with the following sin of denial.

"We can''t just choose what we want to know, and not what we should know," said Biden. “I come here to help fill the silence, because in silence wounds deepen.”

After Biden left, there was a spontaneou­s singing by some audience members of a famous civil rights march song, “Ain''t Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me Around." The events on Tuesday stood in stark contrast to then-President Donald Trump''s trip to Tulsa last June, which was greeted by protests.

Or the former president''s decision, one year ago, to clear Lafayette Square near the White

House of demonstrat­ors who gathered to protest the death of George Floyd, a Black man, under the knee of a white Minneapoli­s police officer.

In 1921 — on May 31 and June 1 — a white mob, including some people hastily deputized by authoritie­s, looted and burned Tulsa''s Greenwood district, which was referred to as Black Wall Street.

On Tuesday, the president, joined by top Black advisers, met privately with three surviving members of the Greenwood community who lived through the violence, the White House said. Viola “Mother” Fletcher, Hughes “Uncle Red” Van Ellis and Lessie “Mother Randle” Benningfie­ld Randle are all between the ages of 101 and 107.

Biden said their experience had been “a story seen in the mirror dimly."

“But no longer," the president told the survivors. “Now your story will be known in full view."

Outside, Latasha Sanders, 33, of Tulsa, brought her five children and a nephew in hopes of spotting Biden.

“It''s been 100 years, and this is the first we''ve heard from any US president," she said. "I brought my kids here today just so they could be a part of history and not just hear about it, and so they can teach generation­s to come.”

John Ondiek, another Tulsan in the crowd following Biden''s speech on cellphones, said he was encouraged that "There aren''t just Black people here. That tells me there''s an awakening going on in this country.”

As many as 300 Black

Tulsans were killed, and thousands of survivors were forced for a time into internment camps overseen by the National Guard. Burned bricks and a fragment of a church basement are about all that survive today of the more than 30-block historical­ly Black district.

Several hundred people milled around Greenwood Avenue in front of the historic Vernon African Methodist Episcopal Church awaiting Biden''s arrival at the nearby Greenwood Cultural Centre. —

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