Chris Riley

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Soon after Allen’s Without Sanctuary was published, the U.S. Senate issued a historic apology to the “families of more than 5,000 lynching victims across the country for its failure to enact an anti-lynching law first proposed 105 years ago.”[14] The House of Representatives passed the NAACP-initiated anti-lynching legislation several times, but it was always defeated in the Senate, whose members, especially in the South, insisted that lynching was a necessary tool to protect the purity of the white race. It is always “better late than never” to correct past injustices. But as the British ...more
The Cross and the Lynching Tree
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