triumph in the people of north tulsa, because this isn t black history, this is american history. and, in fact, it s not even history at all. it s just another chapter in a story that s still being written.
it s just it s land that owned by the massacre or through other government programs like urban removal. we call it negro removal down here. on the corner of archery and greenwood avenues, the corner of black wall street, tulsa is building a museum that will tell the story of greenwood. some are skeptical. this museum. yeah. offia. greenwood rising. i think recall if the content in the walls is irrelevant recall. depicts american history and said black history because all of the things that the black people have indoors is done right here in america. it should be american history taught in all the schools all of
our family not only continues the history, but they make their own. we re in a relay. it s like a relay race. the torch has to be passed. my great-grandparents who built black wall street, that legacy of the race is gone. that s why it s important for me to teach my son and train him well and tell him the story, so when it s time for me to lay it down like the rest of them, and i can t run no more, i can pass the baton and he can run the race for us. walking into the future. walking into the future. say it out loud. walking into the future. walking into the future. i like that. i like it, too, man. twelve days before the centennial commemoration, the three remaining survivors of the tulsa race massacre, joined by
someone got shot by a cop and i m that was tryinged me to he will the groups. you know your stuff and what s you know, everybody make mistakes, but that s a fatal mistake. that s a mistake you can t just have going on. the more information we can get through our youth and to our kids, then they can transfer that on to their generations, you know? that s one thing i think that the older elders need to start doing is transferring that information. before it s too late. yeah, before it s too late. get with a young person and share that information. talk to them. give them the history so they ll know. they ll know not just unpredictable relapses. all these other things too.
this is buty salon. it s been almost a little bit of everything. i wonder when you were coming up, when did you first hear about the massacre? i didn t hear about the massacre until i got grown. why. they didn t talk about it. it was not discussed in the school systems, in the community, in the neighborhoods. tulsa, black tulsa has been traumatized and with that trauma and urban renewal moving out the history, the young youth grow up never knowing the history. they don t know the history of what existed over here. all they see is empty lots and things like that, so i don t think it s been a good thing for us at all. all throughout our childhood we heard the chicken coop story, you know. your grandmother hid in the chicken coop. you know, momma hid in the