400 Years
About Blog Archive Feedback Dialogues
Historical Eras Black Achievment Individuals Themes
AboutBlog Archive Index Historical Eras Black Achievment Individuals Themes FeedbackDialogues
400 Years
Blog #21: Education and Liberation
Blog #21: Education and Liberation
Hugh Taft-MoralesMay 21, 2019 Comments
Blog #20: The Racist Legacy of Inmate Labor
Blog #20: The Racist Legacy of Inmate Labor
Hugh Taft-MoralesMay 16, 2019Comment
Blog #19: Incarceration and Toxic Environments 
Hugh Taft-MoralesMay 7, 2019 Comment
Blog #18: Rising Tides of Racism
Blog #18: Rising Tides of Racism
Hugh Taft-MoralesApril 30, 2019Comment
Blog #17: Schools, Cities, and Environmental Racism 
Blog #17: Schools, Cities, and Environmental Racism 
Hugh Taft-MoralesApril 25, 2019Comment
Blog #16: Breaking Through Silence and Shame
Blog #16: Breaking Through Silence and Shame
Hugh Taft-MoralesApril 16, 2019Comment
Blog #15: Remembering Lynching Victims at Memorial Square
Hugh Taft-MoralesApril 9, 2019Comment
Blog #14: Strange Fruit
Hugh Taft-MoralesApril 2, 2019Comment
Blog #13: Truth, Power, and Ida B. Wells
Hugh Taft-MoralesMarch 26, 2019Comment
Blog #12: The Courage of Harriet Tubman
Hugh Taft-MoralesMarch 19, 2019Comment
Blog #11: Zora Neale Hurston and the Last “Black cargo”
Hugh Taft-MoralesMarch 12, 2019Comment
Blog #10: Ain’t I a Woman? Sojourner Truth
Hugh Taft-MoralesMarch 5, 2019Comment
Blog #9: Douglass, Property, and Reparations
Hugh Taft-MoralesFebruary 26, 2019
Blog #8: Douglass on the Influence and Rights of Women
Hugh Taft-MoralesFebruary 19, 2019
Blog #7: Frederick Douglass’s Persistence and Strength 
Hugh Taft-MoralesFebruary 12, 2019
Blog #6: Frederick Douglass and White Fragility
Hugh Taft-MoralesFebruary 6, 2019
Blog #5: The Diversity and Resistance of the Enslaved
Hugh Taft-MoralesJanuary 30, 2019
Blog #4: The Creation of Chattel Slavery
Hugh Taft-MoralesJanuary 22, 2019
Blog #3: Gifts from Africa’s Past  
Hugh Taft-MoralesJanuary 15, 2019
Blog #2: Before the Mayflower
Blog #2: Before the Mayflower
Hugh Taft-MoralesJanuary 10, 2019 Comments
Newer Older

STAY INFORMED

|

STAY INFORMED | STAY INFORMED |

At the “National Memorial to Peace and Justice" in Montgomery, Stevenson managed to portray our darkest moments while simultaneously shedding light on our path forward.
Greeting us first in Montgomery, Alabama’s “National Memorial to Peace and Justice" are six chained figures created by Ghanaian sculptor Kwame Akoto-Bamfo conveying the horror of enslavement – agony, grief, despair, resignation
The Equal Justice Initiative’s “National Memorial to Peace and Justice" features 800 six-foot steel monuments, each representing a county where race-based murder occurred, each etched with the names of those tortured and killed. 

Th