Blogs and Updates
Reflections on a Pilgrimage to Montgomery, Alabama
I tend to avoid sad movies, especially ones that highlight suffering children. The emotions that rise up are too intense, too raw, and hit too close to home.
Regardless, this past December, I traveled to Montgomery, Alabama, with leaders from the Wake County Community Remembrance Coalition to tour the Museum, Memorial, and Sculpture Park of the Equal Justice Initiative (EJI).
Young, Gifted, and black
Hallie Brew and Judith VanBoven (JuJu) participated in the 2024 pilgrimage to EJI in Montgomery, AL. This blog is their reflections. Ms. VanBoven is a recent college graduate, and Ms. Brew is a senior. They first started to research George Taylor’s story (the man subjected in 1918 to the only documented lynching in Wake County) in Matt Scialdone’s African American Studies class at Middle Creek High School. On this Martin Luther King Day their reflections are below.
Pilgrimage To EJI
According to WRAL the homeowner said, “we were disappointed to learn that our Halloween decorations offended someone.”
Don’t they know George Taylor was lynched just miles away in Rolesville? Hung by his feet, riddled with bullets on election night, Nov. 5, 1918?
Please join Wake County Community Remembrance Project’s next pilgrimage to EJI’s National Peace & Justice Memorial and Legacy Museum (Dec 5-6).
Historical Marker Installed
Wake County historical marker honors lynching victim more than 100 years later.
Remembrance Project News Mentions