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Event
International Reparations Reception
National Black United Front
International Reparations Reception
Uniting Africans throughout the Diaspora for One Common Cause
Special Guests Include:
Dr. Ray Winbush Dr. Conrad Worrill Abiodun Oyewole of the Last Poets
#40Acres
Friday September 11 6pm African American Civil War Memorial & Museum 1925 Vermont Ave. NW Washington DC Advance tickets $25
For tickets or vending contact: NationalBlackUnitedFront.org
Why are African Descendants entitled to reparations?
The Trans-Atlantic Slave "Trade" and chattel slavery, more appropriately called the Holocaust of Enslavement or Maafa, was a crime against humanity.
Maafa is a Swahili term meaning disaster that has been used for a number of years to describe these conditions and has been used most notably in the writings and presentations of Marimba Ani, Ph.D., noted African-centered anthropologist and activist.
Millions of Africans were brutalized, murdered, raped and tortured. They were torn from their families in Africa, kidnapped and lost family and community associations. African peoples in the United States and the prior colonies were denied the right to maintain their language, spiritual practices and normal family relations, always under the threat of being torn from newly created families at the whim of the "slave owner." Chattel slavery lasted officially from 1619 to 1865. It was followed by 100 years of government led and supported denial of equal and humane treatment including Black Codes, convict lease, sharecropping, peonage, and Jim Crow practices of separate and unequal accommodations. African descendants continue to be denied rights of self-determination, inheritance, and full participation in the United States government and society. The laws and practices in the United States continue to treat African peoples in a manner similar to slavery - maintaining dual systems in virtually every area of life including punishment, health care, education and wealth, maintaining the myths of White superiority and African and African descendants' inferiority.
Is an apology necessary?
A necessary requirement of all forms of reparations is an acknowledgment by the government or corporation that it committed acts that violated the human rights of those making the claim for reparations. Some groups may want an explicit apology; however, neither the acknowledgement nor apology is sufficient - there must be material forms of reparations that accompany the acknowledgment or apology.
What forms should reparations take?
Reparations can be in as many forms as necessary to equitably (fairly) address the many forms of injury caused by chattel slavery and its continuing vestiges. The material forms of reparations include
301 836 1826 blackunitedfront@gmail.com
Sponsored by: Cameroon American Council Friends of the Congo National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America Revival of Pan Africanism Forum UjamaaMarket.net
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LocationAfrican American Civil War Memorial and Museum (View)
1925 Vermont Ave NW
washington, DC 20001
United States
Categories
Kid Friendly: Yes! |
Dog Friendly: No |
Non-Smoking: Yes! |
Wheelchair Accessible: Yes! |
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