Greenwood Rising Black History Museum
Introduction
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Planned to officially open in July of 2021, the Greenwood Rising Black History Museum is the legacy project of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre Centennial Commission, which began under the leadership of Sen. Kevin Mathews in 2015, and which included input from prominent Greenwood District organizations like the Greenwood Cultural Center, the Greenwood Chamber of Commerce, and the John Hope Franklin Center for Reconciliation.
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Greenwood Rising Black History Museum
Backstory and Context
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"Greenwood Rising is the specific story of the dignity of a people who turned trials, tribulations, and tragedy into a triumph of the human spirit." Centennial Commission members, when defining their story early on in the beginning stages of this project's development, collectively identified five key areas of focus, for this projects and others: (1) education; (2) arts and culture; (3) cultural tourism; (4) commemoration; and (5) economic development. Believing the first step in the process of reconciliation is knowledge and acknowledgment of the past, this museum serves to meet all five of those criteria in order to provide a jumping off point for people of today to learn about, and from, the past.
Sources
Greenwood Rising. Accessed July 1st 2021. https://www.greenwoodrising.org/.
https://www.greenwoodrising.org/