From ‘Redneck Shop’ to racial reconciliation
UofSC alum works to replace hate with hope
Posted on: February 25, 2021; Updated on: February 25, 2021
It was the spring of 2018 and Regan Freeman was studying in one of the cubicles deep
inside Thomas Cooper Library when he stumbled upon a
60 Minutes story. Oprah Winfrey and attorney Bryan Stevenson were touring the National Memorial
for Peace and Justice in Montgomery, Alabama, a monument to the thousands of African
Americans who were lynched in the 70 years following the Civil War.
Freeman watched the screen as Winfrey and Stevenson paused and looked up at one of
the 800 weathered steel monuments, each representing a county in the United States