Many important events by key organizations are happening beginning the week before the centennial through Juneteenth. 1256 Movement plans to be there, listening, learning, growing, and interacting with the narratives of victims, survivors, and descendants of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre and also enjoying friendships with Black owned and led organizations.
The following event calendar represents a selection of the events 1256 Movement is planning to attend or have a presence in a small way. For full events of each organization, see the following sites:
https://www.jhfnationalsymposium.org/
https://www.blackwallstreetlegacyfest.com/
https://www.tulsa2021.org/events
Centennial Commission Calendar
https://www.tulsajuneteenth.org/
We want to emphasize that these events are about centering the victims, survivors, and descendants of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre and also about the resilience, power, joy, blessing of the Tulsa Black Community.
In spite of White Tulsans reign of terror and resistance, Black Tulsans have rebuilt Greenwood themselves the past 100 years. Black Tulsans are a 75,000 citizens strong in Tulsa today. May God bless Black Tulsans and prosper you in the next 100 years.
Fire in Little Africa is a multimedia hip-hop project inspired by Black Wall Street with an album set for release May 28, 2021 on the iconic Motown/Black Forum record label, in addition to a documentary, podcast and educational curriculum.
This panel features Fire in Little Africa executive producers and artists in conversation about the project, with emphasis on the intersection of hip-hop and activism and the powerful medium of music to fuel a movement for equity and justice.
322 N Greenwood Ave
In this discussion, we will examine why Hollywood has offered up Greenwood and Greenwood-inspired locations as an alternate universe — an unattainable, fictitious, and unrealistic hub that is mostly always destroyed by white violence in the end. Does Hollywood, already a place of make-believe, have a responsibility to handle the story of the Greenwood community and massacre with a seriousness that would never allow it to be considered “fantasy?” Will making the declaration that Greenwood was a real place help give us true vision for what Black America could be?
322 N Greenwood Ave
wall. This is an extension of Unity Faith Day
key speakers, musicians, and special guests.
Greenwood, Archer, and Elgin for a moment of silence as we
remember the victims of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre when
the first shot was fired which started the massacre at 10:30 pm
on May 31, 1921
inequality in access to capital from 10 a.m.- 2:30 p.m. Featuring
nationally renowned speakers including actor Hill Harper. Inperson at Cox Business Center as well as online. Register here:
https://www.tulsa2021.org/eed/register
Wall Street History Center at 11:29 a.m.
Wall Street History Center at 11:29 a.m.
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