Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Westbrook project on massacre in Tulsa to air

- By Victoria Hernandez

Russell Westbrook made NBA history this month when he passed Oscar Robertson with his 182nd triple-double, the most of all time. History has been on the mind of the 32-year-old star, one of sports’ most intellectu­ally curious minds, and not merely basketball history. On Sunday, “Tulsa Burning: The 1921 Race Massacre,” a documentar­y of which the Washington Wizards guard is an executive producer, will air on the History Channel.

Westbrook, who grew up in Southern California and played at Lawndale Leuzinger and UCLA, first heard about the massacre, which marks its centennial this weekend, as an adult after being drafted by the Oklahoma City Thunder.

“The Tulsa Race Massacre was not something I was taught about in school or in any of my history books,” he said in a statement when the documentar­y was announced in February. “It was only after spending 11 years in Oklahoma that I learned of this deeply troubling and heartbreak­ing event. This is one of many overlooked stories of African Americans in this country that deserves to be told. These are the stories we must honor and amplify so we can learn from the past and create a better future.”

The two-hour documentar­y is helmed by awardwinni­ng directors Stanley Nelson (“Freedom Riders,” “Freedom Summer”) and Marco Williams (“Two Towns of Jasper,” “Crafting an Echo”) and utilizes more than a dozen interviews, historical photograph­s and reenactmen­ts to tell the story of Black Wall Street, the name that Booker T. Washington bestowed on the Greenwood District of Tulsa for the economic opportunit­y created by the city’s Black community. The film traces the community’s origins, from politician Edwin McCabe rallying Black people to move to Oklahoma with the vision of having an allBlack state to local businesses run by John and Loula Williams, the Black couple who bought the first car in Greenwood.

The dream of an economical­ly and politicall­y empowered, self-run Black community came to an end on May 31, 1921, when, sparked by a report that a young Black man tried to sexually assault a white teenage girl, white mobs burned Greenwood to the ground. An estimated 100 to 300 Black men, women and children were killed and thousands more were displaced. Only much later would the tragedy — which for much of the last century was glossed over in the state’s school curricula — acquire a name: the Tulsa race massacre.

Nobody was charged for any of the crimes committed, a fact that lies at the heart of the film. The narrative follows the recent excavation of a mass grave at Oaklawn Cemetery, which historians and community activists hope will provide more answers to the tragedy.

Marco Naprin grew up in his grandmothe­r’s house in the neighborho­ods that currently occupy the Greenwood District. He heard stories of the race massacre growing up.

“It might not ever be no closure, but the awareness is there,” he says in the documentar­y while overlookin­g the cemetery, “and that’s almost enough for me.”

The documentar­y reminds viewers that the injustices of 100 years ago still hang over both the city and country. The 2016 death of Terence Crutcher at the hands of Tulsa police is examined, as is last summer’s racial reckoning in the aftermath of the murder of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s. Westbrook has been a longtime activist for social change through his Why Not? Foundation, which he founded in 2012, and he marched with local leaders in Compton last summer.

“I challenge all you guys to continue to stick together through thick and thin,” he said last summer. “Continue to fight for one another. Continue to lift one another up. Continue to support businesses. Continue to protect your own. Protect your team. Protect your family.”

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