“The people of the city of Savannah within their collective conscience could follow previous examples in history and forgive the atrocities of actual slavery committed against slaves themselves. But what was it [the city] to do with the knowledge that children completely unaware of the greater ramifications of slavery were led to the Civil War slaughter in its name? How does one acknowledge with forgiveness such an unforgiving mutilation of one’s own mind, body, soul, and legacy?” African AmericansMulticulturalismAmerican Civil WarHuman TraffickingReparationsSlavery In AmericaDifferent GenerationsNational History DaySavannah GeorgiaMaking Peace With The Past Book:Dreams of the Immortal City Savannah Source: Dreams of the Immortal City Savannah
“When you bury a parent, you lower his or her casket into the ground, but the history between you lives on. The funeral is an ending, yes, but it is also a beginning - the start of a true reckoning with those hurts between you that must be laid to rest. When we buried my mother, I mourned her then and in the years that followed. As I grieved, I thought I'd long since come to terms with my father - with how he'd both delighted and failed me, with the ways in which he'd unknowingly bruised me just as all parents do, despite their best intentions.” Parents And ChildrenOrphansMaking Peace With The PastDeath Of Parents Book:Just as I Am Source: Just as I Am