Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Tulsa Race Massacre a long buried chapter of U.S. history

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When the smoke cleared in June 1921, the toll from the massacre in Tulsa, Okla., was catastroph­ic — scores of lives lost, homes and businesses burned to the ground, a thriving Black community gutted by a white mob.

The nightmare cried out for attention, as something to be investigat­ed and memorializ­ed, with speeches and statues and anniversar­y commemorat­ions.

But the horror and violence visited upon Tulsa’s Black community didn’t become part of the American story. Instead, it was pushed down, unremember­ed and untaught until efforts decades later started bringing it into the light. And even this year, with the 100th anniversar­y of the massacre being recognized, it’s still an unfamiliar history to many — something historians say has broader repercussi­ons.

“The consequenc­es of that is a sort of a lie that we tell ourselves collective­ly about who we are as a society, who we have been historical­ly, that’s set some of these things up as aberration­s, as exceptions of what we understand society to be rather than endemic or intrinsic parts of American history,” said Joshua Guild, an associate professor of history and African American studies at Princeton University.

Indeed, U.S. history is filled with dark events — often involving racism and racial violence — that haven’t been made part of the national fabric. Many involved Black Americans, of which the Tulsa Race Massacre is considered among the most egregious in its absolute destructio­n, but other racial and ethnic communitie­s have been impacted as well.

Americans not knowing about these events or not recognizin­g the full scope of the country’s conflict-ridden history has impacts that continue to reverberat­e, Guild said.

“If we don’t understand the nature of the harm … we can’t really have a full reckoning with the possibilit­y of any kind of redress,“he said.

Manisha Sinha, a professor of American history at the University of Connecticu­t, agreed.

“It’s really important for Americans to learn from the past, because you really cannot even understand some of our current-day political divisions and ideas unless you realize that this conversati­on over both the nature and the parameters of American democracy is an ongoing and a really long one,“she said.

Terrible events that many Americans don’t know about include long-ago history, such as the Snake River attack in Oregon in 1887, where as many as 34 Chinese gold miners were killed, and the 1864 Sand Creek massacre of around 230 Cheyenne and Arapaho people by U.S. soldiers in Colorado. Others are within the lifetimes of many Americans living today, like the 1985 bombing by Philadelph­ia police of the house that headquarte­red the Black organizati­on MOVE, killing 11 people.

As odd as it may sound, the mere fact that

something happened isn’t enough for it to be remembered, said Robin Wagner-Pacifici, a professor teaching sociology at the New School for Social Research, who has written about the MOVE bombing.

“You can never assume, no matter how huge an event may be in terms of its literal impact on numbers of people, that it’s going to be framed and recognized and move forward in time, in memory, by future publics or state apparatuse­s or political forces,“she said.

In Oklahoma, the massacre largely wasn’t discussed until a commission was formed in

1997 to investigat­e the violence. For decades, the state’s public schools called it the Tulsa race riot, when it was discussed at all. Students now are urged to consider the difference­s between calling it a “massacre” or a “riot.”

How an event is presented can make a difference, Wagner-Pacifici said. That could include whether it’s connected to other historical moments and what parts are emphasized or downplayed.

“All sorts of political forces and actors will kind of move in, to try to name it and claim it, in order either to tamp it down in its impact or to elaborate it in its impact,” she said.

She pointed to a current example: the deadly Jan. 6 insurrecti­on by a predominan­tly white mob at the U.S. Capitol. Democrats in Congress are pushing for a commission to take a deeper look and how to prevent it from happening again, while a small number of Republican­s have taken to downplayin­g it.

In Tulsa, word of unrest that started on May 31, 1921, and ran through the night and the next day made it to news outlets. Frontpage stories and accounts from The Associated Press spoke of a “race clash” and “armed conflict.” But the aftermath — of a community shattered —- was relegated to inside pages at best before being swept under the rug.

In one example, a story weeks later well inside the pages of The New York Times reported in passing that a grand jury in Oklahoma had determined the catastroph­e was due to the actions of armed Black people and the white people who got involved were not at fault.

It just shows that rememberin­g is never just actually about rememberin­g, WagnerPaci­fici said.

“It’s always motivated,” she said. “Who remembers what about the past, who allows a past to be remembered, to be brought back to life and and in what ways … it’s absolutely fundamenta­l to who you decide you want to be in the present.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? In this photo provided by the Department of Special Collection­s of McFarlin Library at the University of Tulsa, two armed men walk away from burning buildings as others walk in the opposite direction during the June 1, 1921, Tulsa Race Massacre in Tulsa, Okla.
Associated Press In this photo provided by the Department of Special Collection­s of McFarlin Library at the University of Tulsa, two armed men walk away from burning buildings as others walk in the opposite direction during the June 1, 1921, Tulsa Race Massacre in Tulsa, Okla.
 ?? Sue Ogrocki / Associated Press ?? Viola Fletcher, center, the oldest living survivor of the Tulsa race massacre, holds a rose she received as she arrives for a luncheon honoring survivors Saturday in Tulsa, Okla.
Sue Ogrocki / Associated Press Viola Fletcher, center, the oldest living survivor of the Tulsa race massacre, holds a rose she received as she arrives for a luncheon honoring survivors Saturday in Tulsa, Okla.

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