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Serious Effort Underway in Tulsa to Rebuild Black Wall Street

Despite being one of the biggest armed massacres on U.S. soil, the 1921 Race Riot in Tulsa, Oklahoma, is rarely ever discussed, taught, or acknowledged. The tragedy occurred when angry white mobs burned down a prosperous, self-sustained African American neighborhood called Greenwood that was occupied by black professionals and property owners. Over 300 black-owned businesses thrived in the community known as the “Black Wall Street” before they were destroyed and hundreds of African Americans were killed. Many Americans, however, are sadly unaware of one of the worst acts of concentrated racialized violence in history.

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In spite of the devastating loss of life and business that decimated the town, black Tulsans resurrected Greenwood in 1925 and the district reached an economic peak in 1941. However, that progress was short-lived due to discriminatory policies that crippled the community, including an urban removable program and a highway that was built over much of the area.

Today, city residents are keeping the spirit of Black Wall Street alive through a four-day initiative spearheaded by the George Kaiser Family Foundation called Dream Tulsa, which exposes outsiders to Tulsa’s rich history and aims to recruit black entrepreneurs and innovators from around the country in a push to rebuild Black Wall Street.

Black Wall Street Memorial at Greenwood Cultural Center in Tulsa, OK (Black Enterprise)

Dream Tulsa opened on Thursday with a welcome dinner held at the Greenwood Cultural Center, featuring Southern comfort food and Tulsan natives who talked about the legacy

of Black Wall Street and the aspirations to create a new movement for economic freedom in the city. One speaker was former NFL player Reuben Charles Gant. “I love Oklahoma,” he professed before delving into the obstacles that black Tulsans currently face in the city. “Not a county in Oklahoma voted for Barack Obama, so that tells you what kind of state Oklahoma is. We have challenges here.” He added, “but I look at challenges like opportunities [and] that’s why I’m still living here.”

One of the challenges is educating residents about Black Wall Street, which once redefined the realm of possibilities for African Americans. “I didn’t know about the 1921 race riots until after I graduated from college,” admitted Gant, who earned an undergraduate degree from Oklahoma State University in the 1970s.

He also recalled the wish of his great uncle, Wess Young, who survived the massacre, to keep the spirit of Black Wall Street alive. “He told me: ‘What’s important to me is that something is established in brick and mortar that memorializes not just the riot, but the victims, which will be here for generations to come to learn about so that we don’t repeat this atrocity again.'”

“Greenwood will never be more than what it was, but it can certainly be more than what it is [today,]” added Gant.

A photo of Wess Young, a survivor of the 1921 Race Riot in Tulsa, on display at the Greenwood Cultural Center (Black Enterprise)

The 1921 Tulsa Race Riot Centennial Commission

is one of the organizations working to preserve the history of Black Wall Street while creating a landscape of opportunity to build a new one. The organization aims to accomplish this through several initiatives, including a push to add a curriculum about the race riot into the state’s public school system and educating locals and visitors around Tulsa’s dark history through arts and culture. The organization is also working to memorialize the victims and descendants of survivors, foster sustainable entrepreneurship, push economic development, and encourage tourism within the Greenwood district.

“We as young African American men and women can revitalize that which we’ve lost,” Rev. Jamaal Dyer, the organization’s project manager, said at the ceremony.

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