It all began in ancient history when Noah, a mythological character. had a relative who "knew" his father which indicated incest. Bible scholars are aware that this story is still preached in pulpits by ignorant preachers saying descendants from this family originally living in Ethiopia (the first name for Africa) with dark complexion, are subhuman. Thus a history of Africans being persecuted is rarely known. Spanish Santayana who wrote The Life of Reason, said. "Those who don't know their history remain children all their lives." However, new museums are springing up to remember the lynching victims especially in the Reconstruction following the Civil War. One is in Mississippi. There are plenty others such as in Charleston, S.C., and Montgomery, A.L., the Legacy Museum and Memorial to remember lynched victims terrorized by fear. So-called "white purity" reigned over the negative term of "black people." There are many lynching trees of viral hatred provoked to this day by a minority of supremacists who don't believe the history of racist cultural terrorism. Racist violence and public torture of dark nationalities keep America from being great–even in a time when Jews, Italians, American Indians and American Africans were banned from private country clubs. The Equal Justice Initiative ( EJI) was formed to overcome this system of murder through lynching. South Carolina's last lynching was in 1947. When laws are enforced, the violence comes to an end. Laws are useless unless they're iron-strong. Again, Santayana wrote, "Those who forget their history are doomed to repeat it."
World Enlighten News, W.E.N.
H.C.S.