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Surviving Destruction of ‘Black Wall Street’

look like a war zone. Nobody denies that the event takes place, but for about 70 years nobody really talked about it.”

To make matters worse, after the riots, black Tulsans filed more than 100 lawsuits in 1921, but the opinion of a grand jury ruled that the victims caused the riot so whatever destruction occurred was their fault. As a result, insurance claims were all denied, and the victims were told they brought it upon themselves.

John Rogers, CEO of Ariel Capital Management, was a significant financial contributor to the film and appeared in the movie. His great-grand father owned the Stratford Hotel, which was destroyed after the riots in Greenwood. “I can imagine he was never quite the same,” says Rogers. “[I think] he lost some of his confidence and his entrepreneurial spirit.”

Today, Hooker says she thinks it is important for people to know that in the United States, these kinds of things can happen. “The people who were supposed to protect [us] did not,” Hooker says.

Otis Clark, who was 18 at the time, hopes that the film will “help us realize that we can do better now than we did then.” That hope has yet to be fulfilled.

In 1999, the Tulsa Race Riot Commission looked at tens of thousands of documents related to the riot to verify stories and gather information that had not been revealed since 1921. In 2001, they issued findings that the survivors should get reparations and that there should be a memorial and a scholarship set up for the descendants for the survivors.

So far, in addition to not receiving any reparations, the survivors have not received an apology from the State of Oklahoma or any U.S. president. The movie has helped raise $100,000 at a screening in Oklahoma, and garner an apology from the current Tulsa mayor, Kathy Taylor, but the U.S. Supreme Court refused to review the case in 2005.

“The movie is necessary for the rest of the world to see what the great American flag stand for,” says 92-year-old Wess Young, who was 4 years old when the riot took place. “It does not protect all.”

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12 Responses to “Surviving Destruction of ‘Black Wall Street’”

  1. Kindly return any and all information at your disposal on the massacre of Black Wall Street.

    If their are historical periodicals that I can research, please let me know.

    Hope to hear from you soon.

    Reply

  2. deborah burke on November 22nd, 2008 at 12:09 am
  3. how can i get a copy of the movie

    Reply

  4. william parrish on November 22nd, 2008 at 11:34 am
  5. I am so glad that this story is being put on film.
    My Grandmother came out of Tulsa,OK but, she never talked about the “riot”, too painful I guess.
    “What’s done in the dark, shall come to the light”
    How can I get a copy of the film?

    Reply

  6. Larry Ray on November 22nd, 2008 at 7:45 pm
  7. The film can be purchased and donations to the Tulsa Project Inc.
    the fund for the survivors can be made at http://www.beforetheydiemovie.com
    You can also finds numerous links to documentation and information regarding the riot and the survivors Journey To Justice. A schedule of screenings dates is also available. Please sign our guest book and join our movement to pass the pending Congressional legislation on the survivors behalf….Before They Die!

    Reggie Turner Director Producer Before They Die!

    Reply

  8. Reggie Turner on November 23rd, 2008 at 2:27 am
  9. [...] Bash 1st Black Woman to Earn a Doctorate in Math from FAMU MTV Holds Its First African Music Awards Surviving Destruction of ‘Black Wall Street’ Top Republican Says Obama ‘Off to a Good Start’ Pastors Boycott NAACP Banquet Over Prop [...]

  10. Daily News Feed 11.25.08 | Clutch Magazine: fashion.beauty.life.culture on November 24th, 2008 at 9:48 am
  11. [...] Within moments, however, it and its residents, some 10,000 were attacked, lynched, and burned by an angry white mob apparently escalated over a dispute of an alleged assault of a white girl by a Black boy. Although an entire town was up in ablaze, nearly 80 years later, its story is still left out of the history books and justice unserved. Wess Young and Dr. Olivia Hooker, survivors of the Tulsa Race Riot of 1921 (Source: Marcia Wade & BE) [...]

  12. Remembering Black Wall Street | Young Black Professional Guide on November 24th, 2008 at 1:40 pm
  13. I’m glad this film has been produced. There is another film about the riot that I rented from a public library many years ago. Sorry, I do not know the name of the film. Also, the History Channel did a piece called “The Night Tulsa Burned” back in 1999.

    Reply

  14. David College on November 24th, 2008 at 4:28 pm
  15. I’m a student at an HBCU. I’ve ordered my copy of the film and I can’t wait to get it. I’ve heard bits and pieces about this story and I’ve always wanted to know more. Hopefully we can get this shown on campus!

    Reply

  16. Sam on November 24th, 2008 at 11:12 pm
  17. I am doing a current event for a Eng Class and I would like to read more about The Black Wall St.; if possible. I would like to know if the movie is out and where could I find it? IF the movie is not ready when will it become public so I can include it in my report

    Reply

  18. Joyce O'Leary on January 17th, 2009 at 6:13 pm
  19. I just wanted to say that I love this site

    Reply

  20. Hunter on March 18th, 2009 at 6:29 pm
  21. [...] to testify in a hearing urging Congress to pass legislation that would allow survivors of the Tulsa race riots to sue for reparations. The riots left 300 black residents dead or missing and scattered 10,000 [...]

  22. BLACK ENTERPRISE » Historian John Hope Franklin Dead at Age 94 on March 25th, 2009 at 6:03 pm
  23. [...] to testify in a hearing urging Congress to pass legislation that would allow survivors of the Tulsa race riots to sue for reparations. The riots left 300 black residents dead or missing and scattered 10,000 [...]

  24. BLACK ENTERPRISE » John Hope Franklin Dead at Age 94 on March 25th, 2009 at 6:18 pm

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