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| Thursday, May31, 27,2017 2021 |21 Thursday Vol. 57 Vol. No.6135 No. August
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Cannot be Heard”
Serving San Diego County’s African & African American Communities 61 Years Serving San Diego County’s African & African American Communities 57 Years
SEE LATEST
COUNTY PUBLIC HEALTH ORDER &
COVID-19 YOUTH BACK ON TRACK –
see page 9
SAN DIEGANS KNEEL FOR GEORGE FLOYD – see page 4
MEMORIAL DAY:
UPDATES
see pages 6-7 and 12
COVID-19
A Creation of African Americans
CASES IN SOUTHEAST
6,013 7,030 4,313
92115
92105
92102 7,441
7,500
92114
92113
TULSA MASSACRE: THE SURVIVORS! – 3,596
92139
By Staff Writer
Voice & Viewpoint
Source: County of San Diego a/o 5/25/21
In spite of a number of people and locations who seek to take the credit, the first Memorial Day was held by former slaves in Charleston, South Carolina. During the Civil War, Union Army soldiers who were prisoners of war were held at the Charleston Race Course. It is reported that at least 257 Union prisoners died there and were quickly buried in unmarked graves. The bodies had been buried under the bleachers of the race track. After the war, a group of black workmen dug up the bodies and reburied them to properly honor the fallen.
Education in the Segregated South:
100 years after Tulsa Race Massacre,
the damage remains
A Determined
On May 1, 1865, over 10,000 people -- recently freed slaves, black schoolchildren, colored soldiers and their allies - -held what was the first
African
See MEMORIAL page 18
A Year After George Floyd’s Death, CA Police Reform Efforts Still Face Resistance
American
Culture
With the Historic Vernon African Methodist Episcopal Church at foreground left, Interstate 244 cuts through the middle of the historic Greenwood neighborhood of Tulsa, Okla., on Monday, May 24, 2021. Over 18 hours, between May 31 and June 1, 1921 whites vastly outnumbering the Black militia carried out a scorchedearth campaign against the Greenwood neighborhood. Nearly every structure in Greenwood, the fabled Black Wall Street, was f lattened - aside from Vernon AME. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki)
By Manny Otiko
California Black Media
By Aaron Morrison
A year ago this week, the world watched in disbelief the cellphone video that captured Minnesota police officer Derek Chauvin kneeling on the neck of George Floyd for more than 9 minutes, leading to the African American man’s horrific death -- and triggering widespread protests and some incidents of rioting around the world.
On a recent Sunday, Ernestine Alpha Gibbs returned to Vernon African Methodist Episcopal Church.
In California, members of the California Legislative Black Caucus (CLBC) are reflecting on Floyd’s brutal murder, the progress the state and the country have made since it happened and taking stock of their own racial equity and police reform efforts in the Legislature, vowing to never give up their fight for fairness and justice. “One year after the murder of George Floyd, we continue to be met with resistance at any attempt to answer the calls for meaningful police reform,” said Sen. Steve Bradford (D-Gardena), chair of the CLBC.
Shutterstock
see page 10-11
Associated Press “There are ways in which some Black schools during that era served as both fugitive and liberation spaces and opportunities,” Dr. Derrick R. Brooms wrote on Twitter. (Photo: iStockphoto / NNPA)
By Stacy M. Brown NNPA Newswire Correspondent
During segregation, Black schools in the South focused on building an environment of success for community children.
Bradford pointed out that California has always been on the leading edge of progressive change in America, but the state, he says, has been dragging its feet on rooting out some of
Educator, activist and youth worker Derrick R. Brooms said those schools served multiple purposes – particularly during
See FLOYD page 2
See EDUCATION page 2
Not her body. She had left this Earth 18 years ago, at age 100. But on this day, three generations of her family brought Ernestine’s keepsakes back to this place which meant so much to her. A place that was, like their matriarch, a survivor of a long-ago atrocity. Albums containing blackand-white photos of the grocery business that has employed generations of Gibbses. VHS cassette tapes of Ernestine reflecting on her life. Ernestine’s high school and college diplomas, displayed
FROM THE DESK OF THE EDITOR
w/Rev. Dr. John E. Warren TUNE IN WEDNESDAY'S 7-8PM Call in your experiences at #858-251-6111
in not-so-well-aged leather covers. The diplomas were a point of pride. After her community was leveled by white rioters in 1921 -- after the gunfire, the arson, the pillaging -- the high school sophomore temporarily fled Tulsa with her family. “I thought I would never, ever, ever come back,” she said in a 1994 home video. But she did, and somehow found a happy ending. “Even though the riot took away a lot, we still graduated,” she said, a smile spreading across her face. “So, we must have stayed here and we must have done all right after that.” Not that the Gibbs family had it easy. And not that Black Tulsa ever really recovered from the See TULSA page 16
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