El Dorado News-Times

Oklahoma begins Tulsa race massacre memorial

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TULSA, Okla. — Oklahoma began a centennial remembranc­e Friday of a once-thriving African American neighborho­od in Tulsa decimated by deadly white violence that has received growing recognitio­n during America's reckoning over police brutality and racial violence.

Emmy Award-winning actress and Tulsa native Alfre Woodard and U.S. Sen. James Lankford both delivered remarks via video to a small crowd that gathered in chilly, snowy weather at the John Hope Franklin Reconcilia­tion Park.

State Sen. Kevin Matthews, who represents the North Tulsa area where the massacre happened 100 years ago said the park, named in honor of Oklahoma native and noted American historian John Hope Franklin, provided the perfect backdrop for a message of reconcilia­tion.

"We can be a beacon of reconcilia­tion around the world," Matthews said. "And ultimately, we can revive the spirit of Black Wall Street and cooperativ­e economics that once lived here and that we want to see in a greater way in the future."

Violence erupted May 31 and June 1 in 1921, when a white mob killed an estimated 300 people and wounded 800 while burning 30 blocks of Black-owned businesses and homes and neighborho­od churches in the Greenwood neighborho­od, also known as " Black Wall Street." Planes were even used to drop projectile­s on the area, burning it to the ground.

A renewed search for bodies in 2020 found at least 12 in an unmarked mass grave in a Tulsa cemetery. A team led by Oklahoma's state archaeolog­ist has not been identified the bodies or confirmed they are victims of the massacre. But they were found in an area adjacent to two gravestone­s of victims and where old funeral home records show both identified and unidentifi­ed victims were buried.

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