President Biden marks Tulsa race massacre in emotional speech

2 June 2021, 06:04

Biden Tulsa Massacre
Biden Tulsa Massacre. Picture: PA

Mr Biden’s commemoration of the deaths of hundreds of black people killed by a white mob came amid the current national reckoning on racial justice.

An emotional President Joe Biden marked the 100th anniversary of the massacre that destroyed a thriving black community in Tulsa, declaring he had “come to fill the silence” about one of the nation’s darkest moments of racial violence.

“Some injustices are so heinous, so horrific, so grievous, they cannot be buried, no matter how hard people try,” Mr Biden said. “Only with truth can come healing.”

Mr Biden’s commemoration of the deaths of hundreds of black people killed by a white mob a century ago came amid the current national reckoning on racial justice.

“Just because history is silent, it does not mean that it did not take place,” Mr Biden said. He said that “hell was unleashed. literal hell was unleashed.” And now, he said, the nation must come to grips with the following sin of denial.

“We can’t just choose what we want to know, and not what we should know,” said Mr Biden. “I come here to help fill the silence, because in silence wounds deepen.”

In 1921 — on May 31 and June 1 — a white mob, including some people hastily deputized by authorities, looted and burned Tulsa’s Greenwood district, which was known as “Black Wall Street”.

Biden
President Joe Biden during a tour of the Greenwood Cultural Centre (Evan Vucci/AP)

On Tuesday, the president, joined by top black advisers, met privately with three surviving members of the Greenwood community who lived through the violence, the White House said.

Viola “Mother” Fletcher, Hughes “Uncle Red” Van Ellis and Lessie “Mother Randle” Benningfield Randle are all between the ages of 101 and 107.

Mr Biden said their experience had been “a story seen in the mirror dimly”.

“But no longer,” the president told the survivors. “Now your story will be known in full view.”

Outside, Latasha Sanders, 33, of Tulsa, brought her five children and a nephew in hopes of spotting Biden.

“It’s been 100 years, and this is the first we’ve heard from any US president,” she said. “I brought my kids here today just so they could be a part of history and not just hear about it, and so they can teach generations to come.”

Biden
President Joe Biden looks at a photograph during a tour of the Greenwood Cultural Centre (Evan Vucci/AP)

As many as 300 black Tulsans were killed, and thousands of survivors were forced for a time into internment camps overseen by the National Guard.

Burned bricks and a fragment of a church basement are about all that survive today of the more than 30-block historically black district.

Several hundred people milled around Greenwood Avenue in front of the historic Vernon African Methodist Episcopal Church awaiting Mr Biden’s arrival at the nearby Greenwood Cultural Centre.

Some vendors were selling memorabilia, including Black Lives Matter hats, shirts and flags under a bridge of the interstate that cuts through the district.

The names and pictures of black men killed by police hung on a chain-link fence next to the church, including Eric Harris and Terrence Crutcher in Tulsa.

Mr Biden briefly toured an exhibit at the centre, at times stepping closer to peer at framed historic photographs, before he was escorted into a private meeting with the three survivors.

America’s continuing struggle over race will continue to test Mr Biden, whose presidency would have been impossible without overwhelming support from black voters, both in the Democratic primaries and the general election.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

The Juscelino Kubitschek Bridge in Brazil after part of it collapsed

Brazil bridge collapse death toll rises to nine, with eight people still missing

Fire crews at the Morrison Hotel fire

Morrison Hotel in Los Angeles made famous by The Doors goes up in flames

The wreckage of Azerbaijan Airlines Embraer 190

Azerbaijani minister suggests plane that crashed was hit by weapon

Sebastian Zapeta

Man indicted in burning death of woman on New York City subway train

Fani Willis close-up

Court rules DA Fani Willis can be subpoenaed over Trump election case

Tributes outside the Zhuhai People’s Fitness Plaza after the crash (Ng Han Guan/AP)

Chinese man sentenced to death for killing 35 people by driving into a crowd

Israel Palestinians Gaza

Israeli troops burn Gaza hospital after forcibly removing staff and patients

Ousmane Sonko

Senegal to close all foreign military bases as it cuts ties with France

Nato secretary-general Mark Rutte close-up

Nato steps up Baltic Sea patrols amid probe into damaged undersea power cable

Migrants stand in line to board a bus after being deported from the US back to Mexico

Mexico tests app allowing migrants to send alert if detention in US imminent

Azerbaijan Airlines has blamed 'external interference'

Azerbaijan Airlines blames 'external interference' for plane crash that killed 38 people

Kamal Adwan hospital following airstrikes on Thursday

Israel raids and burns one of Gaza’s last remaining hospitals, forcing patients and staff to remove clothes

Ex-Suzuki Motor Corp chairman Osamu Suzuki (Shizuo Kambayashi/AP)

Former Japanese car company boss Osamu Suzuki dies aged 94

Kazakhstan Azerbaijan Airliner Crash

Azerbaijan’s flag carrier suspends flights to more Russian cities after crash

Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu

Netanyahu says Israeli air strikes on Yemen to continue 'until the job is done' despite injury to WHO crew member

Yemen Israel

Houthi rebels fire missile at Israel hours after airstrikes on Yemen airport