GUTSCHEIN
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Greenwood was not simply burned. It was erased.
In 1921, Tulsa's Greenwood District, one of the most prosperous Black communities in America, was attacked, looted, and destroyed. Homes, churches, hotels, theaters, newspapers, law offices, doctors' offices, and family businesses vanished in less than twenty-four hours. Thousands of Black residents were left homeless. Survivors remembered bodies in the streets, armed men moving through smoke, families fleeing with children in their arms, and a city that soon began calling the massacre a "riot." Greenwood Burns tells the story of Black Wall Street before the fire, the rumor that turned Tulsa toward violence, the night the shooting started, and the invasion that destroyed a thriving community. But this book also follows what happened afterward: insurance claims denied, records narrowed or lost, official language used to soften responsibility, schools that avoided the subject, and survivors who carried the truth quietly for generations. Drawing on survivor testimony, historical records, public reports, legal aftermath, and the long struggle to recover the truth, Harvey L. Cox tells the story of the Tulsa Race Massacre as both a human tragedy and a warning about public memory.>It is the story of what America tried not to remember.Wie gefällt Ihnen unser Shop?