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Tracing Kansas Cityâs Ties to the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre
Centennial Next Week Share this story Published 2 hours ago Above image credit: The ruins of Black Wall Street after the Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921. (Courtesy | Library of Congress)
Last October an Oklahoma forensic team found 12 unmarked coffins containing human remains in a Tulsa cemetery.
What investigators called a âmass graveâ represented evidence of what witnesses had described almost a century ago â that victims of what often is considered the worst incident of racial violence in American history had been buried together without any stone or memorial marking the spot.
The discovery also meant 21
Marie-Ange Moise | 5/27/2021, midnight
The data is disturbing: according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, four out of five Black women in the United States are overweight or obese. A common theory is that Black culture promotes larger than average female figures, and the acceptance of a fuller body has become its norm and serves to shield Black women from society’s ideal slender female body. The question is how did Black culture get to adopt a norm that’s so different from the main culture?
From the beginning of American cinema, on the one hand, Black women were portrayed as overweight housekeepers only capable of following simple instructions. That negative portrayal remained largely unchanged. That portrayal served as the lens through which society has judged Black women, a group deemed far below what they considered beautiful or even acceptable.