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100 Years Ago, Tulsa Was Home to the “Black Wall Street”; in 2022, Tulsa Is Home to 21-Year-Old Negro Spiritual Leading a March to Convince Blacks to Stop Shooting Other Blacks

100 Years Ago, Tulsa Was Home to the “Black Wall Street”; in 2022, Tulsa Is Home to 21-Year-Old Negro Spiritual Leading a March to Convince Blacks to Stop Shooting Other Blacks

But what does this have to do with Black Wall Street in Tulsa? Shouldn’t the heirs of this mighty empire be able to easily reproduce what their ancestors reportedly built? [Tulsans rally to stop Black-on-Black crime, KTUL.com, March 3, 2022]:

TULSA, Okla. (KTUL) — Hours after a man was shot and killed in north Tulsa, a group marched through the streets in protest of gun violence in their community.

Their route took them within a mile of that crime scene.

Data from the city shows Black Tulsans are three times more likely to become victims of a homicide than white Tulsans.

This march, organized by Negro Spiritual 21, is meant to change that.

Among those making the mile-long trek to Chamberlain Park was Lamar Norman Jr.

“I would want to be here for someone else’s son,” he said. “Or someone else’s mother.”


His 13-year-old son, Lamar Norman III, was shot and killed in December 2021.

Police say a teen was behind the gun.

“The cause is bigger than me, you know, and it’s bigger than him,” said Norman. “And that’s what I always told my boy, that is bigger than us.”

Co-organizer of the march, Richard Baxter, is tired of the violence, which is why he came up with the idea for the rally.

“When somebody Black is killed by somebody Black, it’s not business as usual,” he said. “We are the change. Enough is enough. No more gun violence in our community.”

While the group hopes this will spark a solution, they’re also remembering the lives lost to that problem.

“When it comes to your children, and when it comes to just the community, we need to all stick together,” said Xzaviere Chatman, who lost her son Xzavion to gun violence.

Organizers are working on putting together a youth mentorship program in the north Tulsa community.

100 years after the Tulsa Race Riots and the magisterial, mythical Black Wall Street in the city (which, suspiciously, never came back) ceased to exist, a black individual named Negro Spiritual is imploring black people not to kill one another.

One must ask, when carefully reading this story, if when someone white is killed by someone black, this action is justified and okay to the black community…

Best of luck to Negro Spiritual to convince blacks to stop shooting each other, especially in Tulsa, the home of the once vaunted Black Wall Street.

Courtesy of UNZ

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