Descendants of Africans on slave ship on reconciliation with family of Alabama enslaver

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  • Опубліковано 25 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 4,2 тис.

  • @Badlighter
    @Badlighter Рік тому +984

    @7:32 “They didn’t come with empty heads, they came with empty hands-so they found a way to make a way…” To survive the horror of being kidnapped and enslaved, but then thrive is amazing.

    • @TheCanalZone
      @TheCanalZone 11 місяців тому +35

      They weren't kidnapped and enslaved. They were enslaved in the Kingdom of Dahomey and then sold to the Portugese and then sold to the Captain of the Clotilda.

    • @Badlighter
      @Badlighter 11 місяців тому +52

      Ok … they were enslaved first … as if that makes any of this any less terrible and remarkable …

    • @jenh9361
      @jenh9361 10 місяців тому

      Slavery did NOT begin in America... African ancestors sold their people into slavery, these people were already slaves to the African people!!! But, it was more profitable to sell them to the English colonists... sad but true

    • @diggee172
      @diggee172 10 місяців тому +42

      @@TheCanalZone they were enslaved this country and their descendants were never allowed to prosper from their work. That is the critical factor

    • @lindabb7064
      @lindabb7064 10 місяців тому +31

      @@diggee172 Thank you for recentering the conversation highjacked by the deflector.

  • @oofboi8712
    @oofboi8712 11 місяців тому +964

    This is insane. The darkness of what humans did to humans is just horrible. Thank you for sharing this.

    • @stepho4201
      @stepho4201 11 місяців тому +39

      *do

    • @patb-d2264
      @patb-d2264 11 місяців тому +26

      'humans did to humans'...DID?
      Please look at what has predominated the news from October 7th 2023 through the response to what happened.
      'DID'????...more like 'DO'!!

    • @pamelaoliver8442
      @pamelaoliver8442 11 місяців тому +20

      What we still do you mean

    • @far06c
      @far06c 10 місяців тому

      See Gaza genocide

    • @smit1807
      @smit1807 10 місяців тому +9

      DO*

  • @linthexplorer814
    @linthexplorer814 Рік тому +2364

    15:57 was deep “they can’t be responsible for what their four fathers did many years ago however that behavior benefited them and worked to the disadvantage of us.” Very powerful conversation

    • @MR.Drowsy158
      @MR.Drowsy158 11 місяців тому +116

      The recognition I don't have an issue with, but they can't ask for them to pay reparations for 4+ generations ago, those impacted had their chance to do better over the last 158+ years. And now they are benefitting from the taxes paid and it being redistributed, and property taxes go straight to public schools, which is what they were asking for, almost, they requested they pay for every descendant of their ancestor's slaves to have equal education that the current living relatives had.

    • @jayd87ram
      @jayd87ram 11 місяців тому +1

      Not true due to the lack of 4+ generations of wealth that they didnt have that the Maher descendants did the chance/opportunities to prosper were not there for them. Along with Jim Crow laws, segregation laws etc….

    • @denamariyusuf5771
      @denamariyusuf5771 11 місяців тому +1

      & it's STILL working toward the "advantage" of them...they're selling somethings...& donating the funds elsewhere instead of breaking everyone off so they can build they're own community...w/the reperations...not sure I mentioned this earlier on, yet I am Cape Verde American 2cnd gen. born here in the US...& if you will research "Campo de Morta Taraffel, Cape Verde...where is the original via the Portuguese capturing, storing & selling slaves whence 1st began. We won our Independence from Portugal on July 5, 1975...so what I'm saying is...Go get/take back what is rightfully YOURS...get your ancestory DNA done, bcz Ghana & recently a few other countries are wanting you back home, just imagine how much more they could do between 2 continents w/duo citizenship 😆 just saying/talking business & generational wealth

    • @kiznkel
      @kiznkel 11 місяців тому +288

      You ever ask your grand or great grand why they couldn’t build America themselves and why did they have to go purchase people and disrupt their lives to build this place .?????

    • @Shineynsparkles
      @Shineynsparkles 11 місяців тому +187

      @@MR.Drowsy158but u pay 2/3 of the countries on earth and foreign countries
      Pay the blacks what they are owed
      God will judge your nation

  • @soniatriana9091
    @soniatriana9091 7 місяців тому +157

    Please continue to do “Updates” about this developing story.
    I was blown away by the genuineness eloquence, composure, sensitivity, & conversations by all these people. I think I would’ve had difficulty staying calm bc it’s such an enormous emotional experience. Kudos to the Meaher family’s descendants at this meeting, I was happy to see them at this meeting, because they were seriously listening & understanding towards the conversations that took place. Anderson Cooper is as exceptional as always!!

    • @SlickArmor
      @SlickArmor 6 місяців тому +3

      Enough with the updates and embellishments. I'm getting dizzy with all the give me give me.

    • @clareshaughnessy2745
      @clareshaughnessy2745 6 місяців тому +4

      Well, they did listen, but they said pretty much nothing

    • @clareshaughnessy2745
      @clareshaughnessy2745 6 місяців тому

      @@SlickArmorwow, you’re not dizzy with the ‘this is mine!’

    • @SlickArmor
      @SlickArmor 6 місяців тому +1

      @clareshaughnessy2745 Heck no, we love stacking chips and putting our names on them.

    • @hedykarim3614
      @hedykarim3614 5 місяців тому +3

      @@clareshaughnessy2745nothing they say is going to satisfy anyone or anything.

  • @darleneschneck
    @darleneschneck 10 місяців тому +695

    I applaud the courage of these people meeting together like this for the first time. Their openness and respectful attitude towards one another is the only way forward. May we elect leaders in our country who have the same spirit as these folks.

    • @ocean440
      @ocean440 9 місяців тому +22

      the Meyers seems like they gonna justify their grandfathers actions. And the fact that they were talking through their lawyers is disrespectful. I dont know if i would forgive them.

    • @Dee-bg5qy
      @Dee-bg5qy 9 місяців тому +22

      Of course this "way forward" would be considered "the only way", as I see no recompense in sight. This isn't respect, but just a way to have these people move on without receiving recompense for atrocities spanning half a millenia. Disgusting

    • @zackiej89
      @zackiej89 8 місяців тому +8

      ​@@ocean440They didn't do anything wrong, so they couldn't care less if you don't forgive them

    • @oldboygeorge7688
      @oldboygeorge7688 8 місяців тому

      If you profit from a crime you are part of it @@zackiej89

    • @Pyewackett444
      @Pyewackett444 8 місяців тому +28

      @@ocean440 I agree with you Ocean, I am white/ English and I thought how dare these millionaires say that they have to think about giving small parcels of land to these families, land that wouldn't be theirs if the enslaved hadn't been worked to death to make profits for the whites. It should have been an instant, 'Yes, of course we can give land, we can start to repay', I couldn't live with myself knowing what my ancestors had done. Those Mayhers should be ashamed.

  • @reginasmith6276
    @reginasmith6276 Рік тому +1026

    That is so disrespectful to build a highway in their thriving community and factories of chemicals!!!!!!

    • @meaux-kneaux
      @meaux-kneaux Рік тому +232

      They did it to many many many black communities. They've even made parks and lakes over black communities

    • @Facebook-sb3eo
      @Facebook-sb3eo Рік тому +111

      European men did this in every black communities in America not just this case put black Americans in proverty up to this very day 2023 shame on European men biggest thrives in American history.

    • @tonjamarshall4842
      @tonjamarshall4842 Рік тому +86

      It happens all over America's black neighborhoods.

    • @tonjamarshall4842
      @tonjamarshall4842 Рік тому +77

      ​@@meaux-kneauxCentral Park in New York City.

    • @reginasmith6276
      @reginasmith6276 Рік тому +27

      @@tonjamarshall4842 now that I'm witnessing it's more prevalent now 😭

  • @Charlenedoesstuff
    @Charlenedoesstuff 11 місяців тому +571

    one of my friends is a descendent and grew up in near AfricaTown. What was not said that many don't realize (that needs to be part of the reconciliation conversation) is the medical impact those factories had and continues to have on these residents (cancers, chronic migraines, organ failure, in addition to the mental health stuff he mentioned). They are suffering more than ppl realize (and they are good humble ppl who don't complain about it), but the air, water, and land needs to be tested because something in all of that industrial development is causing health problems for the descendants/residents.

    • @MilaJo-vr8zn
      @MilaJo-vr8zn 9 місяців тому +5

      Yep

    • @Littlething41
      @Littlething41 9 місяців тому +15

      Yeah, those 2 individual women shouldn't be blamed or held responsible but this is similar to someone suing a Hospital or Doctor for malpractice. It's the "Meaher Institution" or companies developed by Meaher that's responsible.

    • @bmccombs7
      @bmccombs7 9 місяців тому +15

      Are those factories owned by the Meaher's? If it is true that factories are the cause of health issues, it is a pretty clear lawsuit that thousands of lawyers in this country would take up in a heartbeat.

    • @0pct-Zscrop2-bcue7im9a.4space
      @0pct-Zscrop2-bcue7im9a.4space 9 місяців тому +14

      None of those people should have ANY BILLS WHATSOEVER!!!! The horror of this is incomprehensible and ineffable.

    • @paulajones5660
      @paulajones5660 8 місяців тому +28

      Environmental racism.

  • @Mpirefilms
    @Mpirefilms 8 місяців тому +415

    Can you imagine all of those ancestors in the 1800's seeing their descendants fight for them more than 150 years later. This is such an impressive documentary.

    • @guesswhat-chickenbutt
      @guesswhat-chickenbutt 8 місяців тому +17

      Lol. They do not care. They want that money. PERIOD

    • @KingSlat730
      @KingSlat730 6 місяців тому +1

      @@guesswhat-chickenbuttperiod

    • @KingSlat730
      @KingSlat730 6 місяців тому

      @@guesswhat-chickenbutt5 comments on your channel all on the same video...

    • @publicuser2534
      @publicuser2534 6 місяців тому +5

      @@KingSlat730If they want money, I feel it’s there money to be had. This wasn’t something that affected the enslaved folks only, it affected the generations after, and some to come. Heartfelt apologies are fine and well, but we’re talking about a community that was still getting rear-ended in the nineties after a highway chopped it up. The two women who spoke on the slaveholders behalf are old enough to know and been apart of what happened when that highway got built.

    • @Laynenelson320
      @Laynenelson320 5 місяців тому +3

      @@publicuser2534lmao their first response after the maiher apology was “what does reconciliation look like” they just looking for money. Not for moral reasons or any other reason other than money

  • @sabrinawilliams5938
    @sabrinawilliams5938 11 місяців тому +680

    Seeing that boat and those “imaginary” people stacked up knowing those were actual people is absolutely horrifying

    • @nealandersen4867
      @nealandersen4867 10 місяців тому +9

      Now think about who sold them into slavery to start with

    • @craigjohnson4011
      @craigjohnson4011 10 місяців тому +3

      Then think where you would be if slavery had never happened. 🚇In an intellectual level, You really can’t rail against something if not wishing it had never been allowed to occur. That would be hypocritical to say the least, self serving at its best….
      It’s is right to remember history and what occurred, wrong and “good”, but eleven you can’t get past it, the never will be healing
      Look at the Palestinian’s….

    • @toyab3437
      @toyab3437 10 місяців тому +15

      I went to the African American museum in dc and it was horrible things

    • @lawtraf8008
      @lawtraf8008 10 місяців тому +37

      @@nealandersen4867 Here you go with the nonsense

    • @nealandersen4867
      @nealandersen4867 10 місяців тому +3

      @@lawtraf8008 you mean established history

  • @cheskanno9908
    @cheskanno9908 Рік тому +421

    I'm half Asian whose white father was born in Mobile, Alabama in 1947 and I have been visiting Mobile off and on since 1976. As expected, Alabama lives up to its reputation when it comes to black and white/segregated relations. I first heard of Coltida in 2020. My 100 year old grandmother knew of the place. She first moved to Mobile in the late 1930s and knew lived nearby in Prichard. I decided to visit Africatown in 2021. It's crazy to think how close the town is to downtown Mobile, yet I never 'stumbled' upon it, in all the times I visited Mobile as it's really in an obscure part of central Mobile, totally surrounded by industrial/factories. The town was sad, nothing but crumpling/empty and dilapidated businesses with plumes of smoke from chemical factories, surrounded by the sound of speeding cars from the nearby highway. The residential town is nothing but a couple streets with rundown homes next to a cemetery. It's nice to know their is a museum now, but ultimately, the reconciliation is what needs to happen at a community level. It's true, the Mahers have streets named after them close by. I think if an example can be set in Mobile, other cities can hold national reconciliation at a local level. We really need to have these conversations and stop passing the buck to our children and grandchildren.

    • @jrg5315
      @jrg5315 Рік тому +13

      Well Segregation was 60 years ago. The effects are still seen to this day. The entire state of Alabama isn’t racist and has tons of black and white relations everywhere in the state. The whole south in general really is actually the best place for blacks in this country.

    • @rurome2151
      @rurome2151 Рік тому

      ​@@jrg5315 Alabama fighting against SCOTUS direct order to redraw racially gerrymandered electoral maps that disadvantaged black voters... but you think things are fine in Alabama for black people. The arrogance in your thinking which area of the US is "best" for black people is telling.

    • @toddtodd7395
      @toddtodd7395 Рік тому +81

      ​@jrg5315, please stop speaking for black people!!

    • @SueUTube
      @SueUTube Рік тому +21

      ​@@toddtodd7395Nope.
      You can't have an honest dialogue if one side gets hair trigger attacked for merely commenting.
      Shame on you.

    • @kibbles2780
      @kibbles2780 Рік тому +15

      I love and live by the words of Morgan Freeman. When asked about racism/ slavery. He said just stop talking about it. Never forget what has passed so we dont repeat just stop talking about it. Stop pointing it out, stop opening a wound that shouldve been healed along time ago. Im irish and my families origins were slaves/ indentured servants here around the same time. How come we arent taught that in schools, how come entire news specials dont show that? Cause it doesnt fit the agenda to keep people divided. We atone by never letting something so horrible happen again anywhere, we look at eachother as individual fellow human beings with something to offer and not defined by stereo types and groups, we stop pointing out what makes us different and for the love of god let the past stay where its at the past. To me, constantly talking about it is just poking at a bear going hey, hey, look what happened, hey, hey look what happened you should be mad, you should be a victom, hey, hey see those pale people over there, they dont care, they did this to you look, look. Even tho by looking at me you would never know my ancestors were enlaved and brought over here as well. But i dont let that define me or hold me back. Im fully capable of making my own decisions, i know right from wrong and i am fully aware i am responsible for my own actions. Believe me i want nothing more than for my fellow country men amd women to heal and live a happy life but ifbwe dont start moving forward instead of staying stuck in the past all we are going to accomplish is more segregation and hate.

  • @sabrinawilliams5938
    @sabrinawilliams5938 11 місяців тому +267

    I’m soooooo glad they were so open to so many changes I know this was a super hard conversation. Applause to them

    • @nzuix
      @nzuix 11 місяців тому

      This is the history that Ron DeSantis wants to take away from our children.

    • @queenmommie100
      @queenmommie100 10 місяців тому +3

      You must pay for your for father's sin and yours these are the words of YAH APTTMHGY acknowledge Mother Wisdom.

    • @jenh9361
      @jenh9361 10 місяців тому +7

      ​@@queenmommie100Sorry, that's not what's happening here... IF, what you're saying is the goal here, then these people would be seeking "reparations" from their ancestors who sold them into slavery in the first place! Slavery did not originate in America...

    • @matt3024
      @matt3024 10 місяців тому +4

      What do you mean so many changes? Where in 2024 they really don't have much of a choice!😂😂😂😂

    • @matt3024
      @matt3024 10 місяців тому +1

      Rather defensive, aren't we?

  • @buffalonewyorker257
    @buffalonewyorker257 5 місяців тому +59

    How fortunate they are to know their African ancestors. Most Black Americans could only dream of such.

    • @Tytrades
      @Tytrades Місяць тому

      Insane.. I’m sure they can trace family in Africa

  • @StevenSmith-br5tb
    @StevenSmith-br5tb Рік тому +387

    As a native of Mobile, I’ve been following this fascinating story for years. I hope this 60 minutes piece fosters a great deal of study and analysis. Knowledge of the entire history of slavery, including this particular story, is essential if we are to destroy slavery of all kinds forever.

    • @PeachyPreachie
      @PeachyPreachie Рік тому +21

      Don't be fooled! Not all of us came over here on African Ships .......this story applied to this family and their lineage only, not me , or mine , anyone else's.........

    • @lynns4426
      @lynns4426 Рік тому +30

      ​@Hibiscusseedate, that's nice. It's okay to cover the history of those who did. That's NOT being fooled, lol. Wow

    • @lynns4426
      @lynns4426 Рік тому +9

      Well said.

    • @dorothyosborne9421
      @dorothyosborne9421 Рік тому +35

      ​@@PeachyPreachieSpeak for yourself. you apparently don't know your history. our people perish for the lack of knowledge.

    • @PeachyPreachie
      @PeachyPreachie Рік тому +12

      My point is every is family is individual. They do these shows wanting to group all blacks as the same and we' re not. So if this applies to you then Amen.

  • @meberatubelay4487
    @meberatubelay4487 Рік тому +642

    Notice the maehers had an accountant and lawyer. That was by design. They did not want to meet with them originally because they were scared of losing money.

    • @dee6524
      @dee6524 Рік тому +87

      THAT PART 🤨🧐🤔🙄🤬

    • @Sam-gl6bm
      @Sam-gl6bm 11 місяців тому +45

      spot on

    • @dontbmadjusbcareful
      @dontbmadjusbcareful 11 місяців тому +174

      They want to apologize but not pay for it.

    • @tremekaalexander-murph1724
      @tremekaalexander-murph1724 11 місяців тому +108

      And was ever so careful with their words

    • @retha1875
      @retha1875 11 місяців тому

      ​@@dontbmadjusbcarefulwhy should they? The people that should pay are their fellow countrymen that captured them and sold them into slavery or traded them. Not just to white people.

  • @skatulle
    @skatulle Рік тому +484

    This is honestly very difficult to watch. I shed a tear seeing that cane, wondering how many times it hit the back of innocent people, forced to work, and robbed of everything they had. I appreciate both sides coming to the table and wanting to get the conversation started. Oh black People, your resilience , tenacity is unmatched.

    • @NTJedi
      @NTJedi Рік тому +1

      The tribes from Africa are the ones who sold blacks to the Portuguese Traders which then sold them to many different countries. Funny how mainstream news media ignores the root causes of slavery. It's the equivalent of having your family tools stolen from your home which the criminal sells to a pawn shop which is then purchased by a mechanic visiting the pawn shop.... yet only learning about how the mechanic has become wealthy using the tools.

    • @tino6846
      @tino6846 11 місяців тому +8

      No it isn’t 😂

    • @tammyjones9756
      @tammyjones9756 11 місяців тому

      ​@@tino6846 🤡🤡

    • @tanelise4673
      @tanelise4673 11 місяців тому +16

      @skatulle I wondered the same thing when I saw that cane.

    • @Incogn3gr0e
      @Incogn3gr0e 11 місяців тому +6

      Amen ❤🙏🏾

  • @kristintrisha2616
    @kristintrisha2616 10 місяців тому +61

    It brings much relief to know that there are people willing to step up and face their families role in oppression. May these types of conversations be brought to light in order to work through trauma and systems of oppression that linger today. We do not heal from blaming others but through the willingness to open our hearts and acknowledge the shadow.

    • @SlickArmor
      @SlickArmor 6 місяців тому +2

      Shouldn't they be at work?

    • @Jsarmy87124
      @Jsarmy87124 5 місяців тому +3

      I wouldn't this is not their fault and responsibility 🙄

    • @yodaddy6586
      @yodaddy6586 5 місяців тому

      All these beneficiary are still hiding till this day. The Hayes I saw here were compassionate and understanding.

  • @resilientred1699
    @resilientred1699 11 місяців тому +271

    If it isn’t scary to benefit from the horror, how is it scary to reconcile what is owed from that benefit? I’m happy to witness this meeting. Great 1st step.👏🏽👏🏽

    • @johnwebb2442
      @johnwebb2442 11 місяців тому +13

      Great point.

    • @MsDezB1
      @MsDezB1 11 місяців тому +30

      Because sooooo much is owed! Centuries!! It's still not as scary as what they did to our ancestors during enslavement.

    • @LadyRae-k1v
      @LadyRae-k1v 11 місяців тому +14

      Absolutely. While I understand . There has to be an acknowledgment. Every generation has to pay for their ancestors choices.

    • @craigjohnson4011
      @craigjohnson4011 10 місяців тому

      And what do you think the “second” step should be?

    • @craigjohnson4011
      @craigjohnson4011 10 місяців тому +2

      What do you mean by “pay”? That can come in many forms…

  • @stacyjpoliticscommunityfai359
    @stacyjpoliticscommunityfai359 Рік тому +475

    This episode alone deserves an Emmy. This is what Reconciliation looks like for descendants of Slavery in America.

    • @MCLottotv
      @MCLottotv Рік тому +1

      No it doesn't! Where's the reperations payment to repair black Americans?

    • @buffalogal2871
      @buffalogal2871 Рік тому +101

      Reconciliation is only complete when Reparations is paid. If your truly regretful then prove it by paying Reparations for ill gotten gains.

    • @ijamierule
      @ijamierule Рік тому +3

      it’s just unsatisfying that we have to be meek and ask; when they took without thinking twice

    • @earlofmar7987
      @earlofmar7987 11 місяців тому +15

      @@buffalogal2871 Wow, can you imagine, if the Irish got reparations too? I've always thought that all the Republicans that fought in the Civil War should get more than just a Wounded War pension or a Widow's pension. Nothing can replace what they lost. I love to see all the accounts settled up by the Democrat Party. They didn't pay one damn dime for a War they started.

    • @ljmorris6496
      @ljmorris6496 11 місяців тому +35

      Reconciliation is cutting the check ✔️✅

  • @Msbossup
    @Msbossup Рік тому +573

    “I want them to recognize how that behavior benefited them and work to the disadvantage of us.” 💯🎯

    • @earlofmar7987
      @earlofmar7987 11 місяців тому

      That's what Democrats have always done. Not just in this country but in all their Colonies and Plantations back when they were called The Whig Party, origins England. They desecrated Ireland. The Irish were the first slaves to The 13 Colonies.

    • @kiznkel
      @kiznkel 11 місяців тому +19

      We came with knowledge. That’s why your relatives bought us

    • @keturaequalizer
      @keturaequalizer 11 місяців тому +82

      They never will. They feel justified. I live in Europe and this woman sat next to me and she just started a conversation. I was polite and reciprocated. The conversation took a different turn and she then told me that her great, great grandfather owned slaves at one time and then she proceeded to tell me that that`s how things were and were done at that time for the better of humankind. She then told me that I wouldn`t have been where I am today if it wasn`t for the great thinking of her ancestors.
      Needless to say, the conversation took a drastic turn as I really gave it to her and left her in tears. She had absolutely no remorse telling me all this. She really thought what her ancestors did was the right thing and she proudly stated this to me without fear or even thinking of how it would impact me. Well, she came to the right one that day coz I layed it down on her. I bet she would think ten times before ever saying something like that to another black person ever again. The nerve. SMDH. 😞😓

    • @OneofthemJonesGirls55
      @OneofthemJonesGirls55 11 місяців тому +17

      ​@@keturaequalizer Thank you! 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾

    • @riaa8689
      @riaa8689 11 місяців тому +14

      ​@@keturaequalizer🤎✊🏾

  • @bigharp0949
    @bigharp0949 7 місяців тому +87

    I just visited Africatown this past weekend. The entire place STILL looks dilapidated and run down. I haven’t seen any economic development there or any semblance of construction except for the Africatown Heritage House. I met with Mr. Charlie L. Keeby, a direct descendant of the Keeby’s who were enslaved on the Clotilda, and learned a great deal. Much work is yet to be done there. On the other hand, I did feel a sense of great pride in the descendants who still live on the Plateau/Magazine Point as more people are being made aware of the rich history of that place and learning about the sheer determination and resilience of their ancestors. I hope to return soon, to learn more, and contribute in any way I can. The area should be a national historic site as well as a thriving community. I also hope that the Meaher family, and the city of Mobile will keep its word in helping to solidify relationships with the people there and bring about real socioeconomic change in Africatown. 🙏🏾✊🏾🖤

    • @toyarivera1585
      @toyarivera1585 2 місяці тому +2

      All the money we give to other countries for wars etc. but can’t contribute to rectifying the wrongs done right here is really insane.

    • @anna.m8167
      @anna.m8167 2 місяці тому

      @@toyarivera1585absolutely insane

  • @cryssie-et5tl
    @cryssie-et5tl Рік тому +348

    So many waves of emotion come to me hearing this story. My family is also direct descendants of those enslaved on the Clotilde. I hope they keep their word

    • @aaaaaaaa1655
      @aaaaaaaa1655 Рік тому +34

      I send blessings to you and honor to your ancestors. Unfortunately people who are in a position of power rarely keep their word unless it is on paper in the form of a contract or treaty and make no doubt that’s what we are witnessing here in this video… a treaty conference even if the two sides do not realize it. The Mayers should give up that 14 percent of land… it’s the only thing that makes sense and shouldn’t even have to be asked.

    • @jackiesmith1325
      @jackiesmith1325 Рік тому +44

      @@aaaaaaaa1655I know the American Indians had to fight for their land but America blocks black people from getting what is supposed to be theirs. I don’t understand the hate that exists for black people.

    • @tiawebber9507
      @tiawebber9507 Рік тому +8

      I pray they do I also pray that when they do that other people can make these same steps and that we can rebuild this country to what is capable

    • @MsTeelove07
      @MsTeelove07 Рік тому +26

      I agree with you my ancestors came in on the cotilda and the ships before that last one. As my uncle tells the story. My great grandmother was born in georgiana Alabama in 1904 her mother was brought to Alabama on one of those ships. I have all the records of my family's lineage in Alabama all the way back to the late 1700's I would love to go to Alabama to find my family's burial site. And see where they use to share crop and live

    • @MallieTerry
      @MallieTerry Рік тому

      ​@@MsTeelove07uh

  • @MissHumanity1016
    @MissHumanity1016 11 місяців тому +77

    My mother is from Tuskegee and I wish they shared with me their history. I will however confirm I am a natural born fighter and warrior. I'll embrace it as being the spirits of my granny and ancestors living within me. God bless everyone. History can't be erased only repeated if not learned and healed. 🙏🏾❤️

    • @janetphillips2875
      @janetphillips2875 9 місяців тому +2

      I visited Tuskegee back in 2008 when my aunt died. Why are alot of businesses boarded up?

    • @MissHumanity1016
      @MissHumanity1016 9 місяців тому +2

      @@janetphillips2875 They went out of business. I was there September 2022 and it's like a ghost town. I went by the Commodore's Studio (Museum) it was closed.
      Tuskegee is a historical small town with rich soil, but the history speaks for itself. I still have family there, and my granny house is along the lake.
      It's sad to see that the powers to be are letting it go as if it's not worthy of being kept.
      Opelika is the next closest town for shopping, dining and I guess socializing.
      Did you go to the Tuskegee Airmen Museum?

    • @MissHumanity1016
      @MissHumanity1016 9 місяців тому +1

      @@janetphillips2875 I forgot to mention Tuskegee University is the only action there when school is in session. Other than that it's people doing the best they can. 🙏🏾❤️

    • @ThatJew305
      @ThatJew305 9 місяців тому

      Well they didn’t

    • @TishToshSlots
      @TishToshSlots 8 місяців тому

      My grandmother and grandfather’s side of the family is from Tuskegee. I know I still have cousins there. I have often wanted to visit.

  • @latoyagordon7907
    @latoyagordon7907 Рік тому +125

    When she held that cane and the way she thanked them n gave it back TEARS😢😢😢❤❤

    • @kameshathompson7413
      @kameshathompson7413 11 місяців тому +23

      I yelled break that bihhhh. But forgive my Ego!! But i was hurting for Auntie😢

    • @sallyspoonsdell9526
      @sallyspoonsdell9526 11 місяців тому +37

      That was a test to see if the descendants were angry black people. The nerve of that lady to actually bring that cane is disgusting.

    • @keturaequalizer
      @keturaequalizer 11 місяців тому +20

      @@sallyspoonsdell9526 Exactly what I thought. I think it was very distasteful. Merciful God. 😏😔

    • @LukePoljak
      @LukePoljak 9 місяців тому +1

      Same.

    • @christinanielsen1917
      @christinanielsen1917 6 місяців тому +4

      They were asked to bring something of their ancestors past. They didn't bring it to cause pain. It was a relic.

  • @melwright5170
    @melwright5170 6 місяців тому +22

    A beautiful example of education, civility, and reconciliation.

  • @ReginaJune
    @ReginaJune Рік тому +168

    14:12 NO that would not be good to put the largest minimum wage employer in your town - You would be requesting financial enslavement because 75% of Walmarts employees relies on some form of social services to live. You might want to use your land trust to take advantage of river access for the community to own and operate like a co- op.

    • @mamarobyn
      @mamarobyn Рік тому +10

      ABSOLUTELY!!!!

    • @andyroo9381
      @andyroo9381 Рік тому +9

      I don't like WalMart!

    • @ajs7210
      @ajs7210 Рік тому +3

      They're terrible but that percentage according to DOL says otherwise nowadays. Hopefully they find some other partners in business though

    • @fl7107
      @fl7107 Рік тому +6

      Exactly!!! Why is he the manager? Why go back to a plantation. Those women are like with these solutions why should we take these folks serious. If the shoe was on the other foot they are coming for everything!

    • @Prowoman-ck4zg
      @Prowoman-ck4zg 11 місяців тому +10

      Exactly.....Walmart No!!!.....Land Trusts and community based co-op ownership models across industry. Have economists calculate the dollar amount of wages withheld and underpayment of wages....Put that dollar amount in the present value of money and devise a plan to get that amount created and distributed to the descendants.....Not easy but doable.....

  • @pennydink72
    @pennydink72 11 місяців тому +150

    Imagine being face to face with the descendants of those who enslaved your ancestors. You know the spirits of both ancestors were also in that room. America has been so cruel to it's African descendant citizens. 😢😢😢

    • @TheCanalZone
      @TheCanalZone 10 місяців тому +20

      Penny, wrong! The USA has been extremely compassionate. We fought a war to free the slaves. Why isn't dying for the emancipation of slaves enough? We have also provided Civil Rights and Affirmative Action to atone for the transgressions of the plantation owners. When is enough, enough? For all the opportunities provided to the descendants of slaves, we have cesspools of crime and poverty in black majority cities. When are the descendants going to rise up and show the country what wonderful productive members of society they are?

    • @kamulegeyakim
      @kamulegeyakim 7 місяців тому

      Your comment is organic

    • @jonathangomez7324
      @jonathangomez7324 7 місяців тому +26

      @@TheCanalZonethe war wasn’t to free the slaves and you know it compassion toward Africans American would be to give them part of the land they worked on. Africans American weren’t able to get a good education up into the 1960s.How do you not expect crime with a group of people that been held back and cheated ever since theirs existence in the united states

    • @Melior_Traiano
      @Melior_Traiano 7 місяців тому +10

      @@jonathangomez7324 How anyone can say that the US Civil War wasn't fought to free the slaves is beyond me. From the US President to the Generals who fought the war for the Union, the goal was obviously to end slavery. But I guess its more convenient to frame yourself as the victim, even though countless men died to fight for your freedom.

    • @Kenny-bu4uv
      @Kenny-bu4uv 7 місяців тому +7

      @@Melior_Traianothat makes America feel good to say that but that war wasn’t really about slavery and you know it .

  • @sharonkaysnowton
    @sharonkaysnowton Рік тому +132

    This was one of the best 60 minutes yall have ever done. I really enjoyed listening to their stories. Blessings of God to all of the descendants.

  • @smoothiehog2952
    @smoothiehog2952 9 місяців тому +42

    i called the interstate being built through the center of town, absolutely heartbreaking

    • @publicuser2534
      @publicuser2534 6 місяців тому +6

      I think that was one of the worst parts of this story. The community finally starts doing well, and it gets chopped up because the family sold the land rights. The family didn’t want to see these people do well deep into the 1990’s. That’s only two decades old.

    • @Raja-bz4yw
      @Raja-bz4yw 5 місяців тому

      This was on purpose. The US purposely built highways through historically black towns and neighborhoods. They didn't build them through white areas. These highways destroyed black areas creating poverty and displacement.

    • @2much4uok
      @2much4uok 4 місяці тому

      ​@@publicuser2534That very thing is what happened in every thriving black community across the country. Freeways were built to split up these communities

  • @kukuakukua
    @kukuakukua Рік тому +160

    It takes a level of maturity to watch this and not get emotional

    • @ToughTitty
      @ToughTitty Рік тому +34

      Maturity does not equate emotionality

    • @mariarod6998
      @mariarod6998 Рік тому +12

      I’m in tears may the lord rest their souls

    • @mariarod6998
      @mariarod6998 Рік тому +3

      Repretriation is reconciliation

    • @mariarod6998
      @mariarod6998 Рік тому +9

      No words ur correct. Apology accepted but pay up

    • @mariarod6998
      @mariarod6998 Рік тому +2

      I’m getting goosebumps

  • @Gambit22003
    @Gambit22003 Рік тому +194

    God bless these 2 women, they're not hiding from what their Ancestors did, but tackling it head on. They truly exhibit real character, and maturity. Keep doing what's right, ladies. America is watching, and can be proud of your example.

    • @dianemitchell5883
      @dianemitchell5883 Рік тому +25

      My heart goes out to them to have to carry the weight of my ancestors

    • @Originalman144
      @Originalman144 Рік тому

      Everyone has ancestors that did people wrong at some point. This is documented throughout human history. Making this people sit there and be guilty is evil. When is 60 minutes going to West Africa to sit with the people who are descendants of those who sold other black africans to the white european slavers?

    • @fl7107
      @fl7107 Рік тому

      What about the generational weight that blacks have carried. I don’t concern myself with that. You all are still living off the programming of making sure they are comfortable. STOP IT ALREADY!!! My goodness.

    • @deus_vult8111
      @deus_vult8111 Рік тому

      What about the ancestors of Africans who enslaved other Africans ?

    • @earlofmar7987
      @earlofmar7987 Рік тому

      The Democrat Party will be puckered. That's for sure.

  • @east_coast_ceo1070
    @east_coast_ceo1070 Рік тому +127

    I pray one day USA and Africa start to work together more to bring these families back together respectfully and this needs to be worked on together ❤️

    • @ngalahansel6066
      @ngalahansel6066 11 місяців тому +13

      As a West African, I couldn't agree more

    • @earlofmar7987
      @earlofmar7987 11 місяців тому +15

      That's a wonderful idea. People need those connections. They need to see and understand where they came from. It can give a persona a sense of pride. 🙏✍

    • @east_coast_ceo1070
      @east_coast_ceo1070 11 місяців тому +10

      @@earlofmar7987 ofcourse and they have families that deserve to know if other relatives still exist today

    • @earlofmar7987
      @earlofmar7987 11 місяців тому

      @@east_coast_ceo1070 That would be wonderful. I think with all the technology and record keeping, they could get really close. They kept some really good records at the Gold Coast Museum.

    • @LVH1972
      @LVH1972 11 місяців тому +11

      I'm waiting for The Heavenly Father to bring His Justice to the World 🌍🌍🌍 Amen!!! One Great Thing He Is Always Working!!! He sees it all and He is Able!!! Amen!!!

  • @Sydcidy1205
    @Sydcidy1205 5 місяців тому +20

    Wow! God bless them, removing the markers was a small but heartfelt gesture. ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @choosehope8729
    @choosehope8729 11 місяців тому +171

    Walmart is probably not a good partner to revitalize the community

    • @ItsMyOpinion-sd2iz
      @ItsMyOpinion-sd2iz 7 місяців тому +7

      U can drop the word probably. The originator of Walmart is no better

    • @valerieturrentine
      @valerieturrentine 6 місяців тому +9

      Yeah I was thinking “we do we have to bring Walmart into this?!” 😢

    • @SlickArmor
      @SlickArmor 6 місяців тому +5

      We need to give them a place to shop lift from.

  • @nadirahtherealtor5173
    @nadirahtherealtor5173 11 місяців тому +73

    I'm so glad he touched on the mental health aspect of what reparations would mean. Slavery and oppression is TRAUMA and that gets passed down. Not that we are still victims but that trauma takes away from a healthy mindset and caused repeated cyclic trauma that has potential to go through generations. Mental health and healing as a people is so important because a lot of identity has been lost in the transitions. Most communities don't have this rich history of even having an idea of where they come from

  • @Shaleqa_Adenan
    @Shaleqa_Adenan 11 місяців тому +213

    As African Americans this is the story should be told over and over again! It should been front page of every newspaper. We should move on from past mistakes by acknowledging the mistakes and reconciling! Otherwise we are making the same mistakes as the people we blamed and leave it to our children.

    • @zoeelauren4649
      @zoeelauren4649 11 місяців тому +28

      It should be taught in school it should be made mandatory. This is american history

    • @billmorrison9068
      @billmorrison9068 11 місяців тому +14

      Imagine a person like this stuck in a past that they never lived in and demanding guilt from people who had nothing to that and expecting money from people who never did them any harm.

    • @kingangel4301
      @kingangel4301 10 місяців тому +10

      reparations the only answer. Anything else a lie

    • @wealthyscientist3197
      @wealthyscientist3197 10 місяців тому

      You african?

    • @nealandersen4867
      @nealandersen4867 10 місяців тому

      Start by admitting who made the first transactions, and it wasn't white people

  • @D_in_DC
    @D_in_DC 8 місяців тому +71

    This was a very authentic, and much needed, conversation. Very interesting. I'm black, 56 years old, and I've always thought about my last name, which was given to my family by a slaveholder. I still carry that slaveholder's name to this day.

    • @clareshaughnessy2745
      @clareshaughnessy2745 6 місяців тому +5

      What a horrible mixture of abhorrence at holding the enslaver’s name, mixed with the complication that it’s YOUR name and that of your relatives and predecessors, with whom, maybe, you want to stand shoulder to shoulder and of course the sheer awkwardness and difficulty of changing your name to something else.
      I couldn’t even imagine how you feel about it or what I would want to do about it

    • @bloombloom271
      @bloombloom271 6 місяців тому +5

      What's in a name?
      Change it or keep it.
      This is also Freedom.

    • @D_in_DC
      @D_in_DC 6 місяців тому +6

      @@bloombloom271 Thank you for your in-depth analysis of four centuries of American history.

    • @bri5155
      @bri5155 6 місяців тому +4

      Do you happen to know what your African ancestors name was before he had his new name forced on him? It might feel powerful for you to change your last name to that or some variation of it. Then all of the people who come after you will carry their true name. Just a thought... My husband did something similar and it was as if a weight he had been carrying his whole life had been lifted.

    • @D_in_DC
      @D_in_DC 6 місяців тому +1

      @@bri5155 Yes, that's exactly what I've considered. I have to research it. Thank you.

  • @kayalcorn9569
    @kayalcorn9569 Рік тому +296

    Really great story. Loved the respect on both sides. Loved Anderson's questions. And most of all, I loved that this story was told, on national tv on a well-respected, reputable show. I'm irritated that I have lived for many, many moons and this is the first time to learn about this history. This should be taught in school/university. The first I ever learned about the Black Wall Street massacre was 2 years ago ~ 100 years after it happened. Would be great to have an online course, for credit, that delved deeper into Black American experiences. It would be even better if it was a mandatory GE course.

    • @debraway4263
      @debraway4263 Рік тому +25

      I'm in the same boat. At 32, I graduated with a bachelors of science and have since learned so many things that were taught to me Wrong or completely left out!
      I MAJORED in SOCIOLOGY!
      There's a lot to get caught up on with the way we teach.

    • @HISBestLifeCoach
      @HISBestLifeCoach Рік тому +5

      💯

    • @rubberbiscuit99
      @rubberbiscuit99 Рік тому

      Humans may try to hide and lie about the horrors of our history, but when we do this, it destroys us.

    • @brownbagz
      @brownbagz Рік тому +11

      ​@user-Mimi622 I wish I had of. I graduated from the UofM, Flint. I'm 57 and was able to have 2 living sets of great grand parents from B'ham, Alabama and Watervalley, MS. I remember learning about this via my paternal great grandparents....

    • @earlofmar7987
      @earlofmar7987 Рік тому +6

      What was your take-away from what happened in Tulsa, Oklahoma in the Greenwood area? I ask, b/c I was surprised to see Joe Biden at the 100 year ceremony talking about White Supremacy.

  • @SuzyTodd-j6l
    @SuzyTodd-j6l 11 місяців тому +150

    Can’t listen to this for 2 minutes without tears, chills, and an intense emotional response. I do feel shame as an American for the fact this country was built on evil, horrendous, behaviors of slavery. I also look at this as an opportunity to learn, not to shy away from the truth, to build connections like these 2 families are doing, and to try to make things right in some way instead of continuing to ignore, deny, and allow the same abusive behaviors to continue for yet one more generation.

    • @gloriarobinson1869
      @gloriarobinson1869 11 місяців тому +9

      @user-j3 the ones responsible for committing those atrocities along with their offsprings should repent earnestly before God returns to collect His people, and deal with the wicked. Asking for reparation will not work because those who are benefitting from the sinful proceeds do not want to surrender their gains, listen to them talking about how long it will take to correct the wrongs, they have no intention of giving back anything. Talk, talk talk until Kingdom comes, that's their aim.

    • @pamelaoliver8442
      @pamelaoliver8442 11 місяців тому +22

      Some of my ancestors owned slaves. I can't repent for something I didn't do.
      Their sin isn't mine...but it becomes just that if I refuse to acknowledge it.

    • @OllieMissouri-is6ei
      @OllieMissouri-is6ei 11 місяців тому +5

      Push for reparations. There was a time when Sitting Bull (indigenous) knew what was bout to happen when ( too many) Europeans came to visit.

    • @TEBREW-rv4qi
      @TEBREW-rv4qi 11 місяців тому +7

      @user. do you read the bible? we are the israelites. europeans will have to pay for the mistreatment of Gods chosen people

    • @gloriarobinson1869
      @gloriarobinson1869 11 місяців тому +8

      ​@@pamelaoliver8442The sins of the mother and father follows the children, therefore whether you was responsible or not you need to repent, and ask for forgiveness on behalf of your parents and your repentance will be considered. Peace.

  • @denamariyusuf5771
    @denamariyusuf5771 Рік тому +238

    Whats even SCARIER is that the Mayher family is selling the land back to the city INSTEAD of just GIVING it to the decendants....HELLA SCHETCHY

    • @TwoDopeSons
      @TwoDopeSons Рік тому

      Go look at that family in Huntington Beach, Ca. They truly screws the family over in gong back the land.

    • @HowieHoward-ti3dx
      @HowieHoward-ti3dx Рік тому

      No reparations. If they weren't brought to America, these people wouldn't be born or be living in some hut in Africa. They have it good.

    • @2ndstreetmedia171
      @2ndstreetmedia171 11 місяців тому +46

      Remember their kind TAKE, THEY DO NOT GIVE!!

    • @minazalnasky9134
      @minazalnasky9134 10 місяців тому +10

      What’s sketchy about it?

    • @ratashaharris1742
      @ratashaharris1742 10 місяців тому +22

      Give them the land back…

  • @bkzone8
    @bkzone8 8 місяців тому +13

    I think every person involved in this meeting is a hero. Very few people these days could take on a discussion like this and remain calm without blaming others. It was like a meeting between people rather than adversaries.

    • @MontiRock
      @MontiRock 6 місяців тому +2

      oh, there's blame and you know it.

    • @publicuser2534
      @publicuser2534 6 місяців тому

      @@MontiRockOf course there is. But, honest discourse closes people off too fast in society today. Bending the knee on both sides tends to move the needle.

    • @MontiRock
      @MontiRock 5 місяців тому +2

      @@publicuser2534 I call BS. if that were the truth, we would've had reparations a long time ago. This is performative, because when it comes down to it no white person/family that got rich from slavery ever made anything right in form of actual reparations.
      "But, honest discourse closes people off too fast in society today. "
      Nah. For centuries when it comes to race and slavery (and Jim Crow and the end of reconstruction) Majority of white society have refused to even think about reparations, instead they get even more racist against Black people who demand reparations. In fact, they use the "lazy" stereotype which is ironic, considering.... enslaving Africans because they were too lazy to work.
      Talk is cheap.

  • @amandajarboe1131
    @amandajarboe1131 Рік тому +304

    When the granddaughter held the cane of the man who enslaved her grandmother, my heart just broke. The crushing weight of that suffering is incomprehensible. If we are the country we want to believe ourselves to be, it is past time for turning from uncomfortable truths, it is time to start listening and collaborating the building up of families that have had so much stolen from them.

    • @NubianQueen100
      @NubianQueen100 Рік тому

      The problem is they don't want to listen or collaborate with blacks, but are somehow able to make SOME progress with jews and natives of the land..w jews being the only real priority bc they are white..

    • @mfax1000
      @mfax1000 Рік тому +62

      You said everything except the word reparations. I will say it for American Descendants of Slavery ADOS demands slavery reparations for a debt owed for free labor

    • @LegacyByT
      @LegacyByT Рік тому +8

      Thank you for putting this into words for me.😢😢😢😢😢

    • @ndo533
      @ndo533 Рік тому

      ​@mfax1000 agreed. We wouldn't be in this civil unrest if America had actually apologized for slavery and made amends for their transgressions against blk ppl. Instead we get gaslit and accused of wanting handouts by the same pll they're trying to eradicate our history so that future generations will be blind and dumb 🙄

    • @brownbagz
      @brownbagz Рік тому +11

      ​@@mfax1000Yes!!!

  • @maclac48
    @maclac48 Рік тому +17

    I salute both sides of the table for sitting down, & just talking to one another. 🙏🏿

  • @Softdrama978
    @Softdrama978 11 місяців тому +79

    "no financial commitments were made"

    • @t8075
      @t8075 8 місяців тому +8

      Typical

    • @latishatomblin8944
      @latishatomblin8944 6 місяців тому +4

      Of course.

    • @SlickArmor
      @SlickArmor 6 місяців тому

      ​@@latishatomblin8944So go away.

    • @latishatomblin8944
      @latishatomblin8944 6 місяців тому +1

      @@SlickArmor yes, YOU should go away.

    • @SlickArmor
      @SlickArmor 6 місяців тому +2

      @@latishatomblin8944 I'm not barking up some tree demanding money.

  • @patricklandor47
    @patricklandor47 8 місяців тому +30

    To many smiles at this convo. Don’t think people understand how serious these conversations are.

  • @mcclendonreport
    @mcclendonreport Рік тому +140

    America has not dealt with these issues adequately .

    • @suezcontours6653
      @suezcontours6653 Рік тому +1

      This is amazing

    • @MrJm323
      @MrJm323 Рік тому

      How many white Americans died to end slavery after the Southern States seceded to try and keep it going? How much money did the North expend in prosecuting that bloody war? How much did they spend on the Freedmans' Bureau and all of the welfare programs since then set up to specifically help black Americans? How many decades have they implemented Affirmative Action to discriminate against whites and Asians on behalf of black job applicants, black loan applicants, applicants to colleges, etc.?

    • @itsdogpaw
      @itsdogpaw 9 місяців тому +4

      They won’t. If the US were to even visit the idea of reparations or something similar to reconciliation, the US would be in debt like Hell! The USD would be worth mere pennies

    • @MrJm323
      @MrJm323 9 місяців тому

      @@itsdogpaw No, it would be the beneficiaries of Westernization (including those whose ancestors were enslaved -- originally by other Africans, mind you) that would be indebted to such a degree that they'd be penniless if they attempted to repay it.
      In any event, the idea that the United States hasn't "dealt with these issues adequately" is absurd. The Civil War was the costliest war in blood and treasure to the United States. Then there was all of the welfare efforts specially targeting the former slaves (from the Freedmans' Bureau onward) and the half century of pretty much official reverse racism (since the Johnson Administration).

    • @mcclendonreport
      @mcclendonreport 9 місяців тому

      @@itsdogpaw Not actually. Automation will eventually provide a surplus for the economy. There will at least be a Universal Basic Income because of the expendability of human labor. The idea of reparations on top of UBI will be revisited at that time. Study this.

  • @frankiebanks
    @frankiebanks Рік тому +62

    Weather or not this family is held accountable for the actions of their ancestors, they certainly will continue to enjoy the financial gains, status and opportunities, derived from labor at the expense of the suffering of those enslaved people and their descendants.

    • @NTJedi
      @NTJedi Рік тому +15

      African tribes are the ones who sold blacks to the Portuguese Traders which then sold them to many different countries. Do you equally care about the descendants of African tribes to also be held accountable? Do you equally care about the descendants of Portuguese Traders to also be held accountable? You should because they are definitely more responsible for the root cause of this slavery.

    • @fframer1
      @fframer1 Рік тому

      You've been watching to much CNN.

    • @NTJedi
      @NTJedi 11 місяців тому +3

      @ShawnWest-gi9yq United States was only one of many countries with slaves and the USA was one of the first to end slavery. Sure you want to focus only on the USA because actually holding the people accountable which was the source of slavery means facing the truth.

    • @NTJedi
      @NTJedi 11 місяців тому

      @ShawnWest-gi9yq The black slaves came from Africa... they did not pop out of thin air.

    • @bookiedaleo1694
      @bookiedaleo1694 11 місяців тому

      @@NTJedi they went to Africa. Africans didn’t got them and Why did they go to Africa looking for a come up? They should have stayed in their home land and this would have never happened.

  • @marycollins1631
    @marycollins1631 Рік тому +133

    God bless all their souls. No person should ever have to endure such inhuman circumstances and journeys. It is such a disgrace!

    • @emt0714
      @emt0714 Рік тому +4

      Yes and we have learned from history.

    • @judd442009
      @judd442009 Рік тому +16

      Amen. The inhumane treatment of their ancestors is one of the many chapters of history that millions of white Americans would prefer to ignore, or at least revise.

    • @earlofmar7987
      @earlofmar7987 Рік тому +8

      @@judd442009 I'd like to see you correct your statement. You are blaming a slavery on America. It was not America. America never legalized slavery. Only one political group owned Slaves. That was The Whig Party. These were rich elitist friends of King George 2nd & 3rd of England. But he was a German King. The English people hated them. The Whigs, turned into the Anti-Federalist's, then the Democrat Party of today.

    • @lewstone5430
      @lewstone5430 Рік тому +16

      @earlofmar7987 you need to brush up on your history. Slavery WAS legal North and South until Northern states began outlawing it before the Civil War. This means at one point members of different parties owned slaves until it died out up North. Slavery was legal in Southern states until outlawed by the 13 Amendment. During the life of the Confederacy slavery was also legal and was included in many southern states articles of secession as a reason for leaving the Union. Pertaining to the Whig party there was a Northern faction which gradually became anti-slavery, and a southern faction that was pro slavery. When the Whig party was dissolving in the 1850’s the northern faction gradually joined the Republican Party, which was the liberal party at that time, and the southern Whigs joined the Democratic Party which was conservative at that time. The Whig party ceased to exist at the beginning of the Civil War. Southern Democrats remained conservative until the mid-twentieth century when Southern Democrats began leaving the party to become Republicans because of the National Democratic Party’s taking more liberal stances on national issues such as Harry Truman’s desegregation of the military after WWII and civil rights reforms. Strom Thurmond, from my home state of SC, was a Southern Democratic segregationist who broke from the Democratic Party in the 1948 presidential nominating convention and formed the Dixiecrats, a party that believed in segregation and upholding Jim Crow laws. Thurmond eventually became the first Senator to leave the Democratic Party to join the Republican Party and he was followed by every other conservative Southern Democrat. Eventually the Republican Party became conservative and the Democratic Party became liberal, which is the way it stands today.

    • @earlofmar7987
      @earlofmar7987 Рік тому +4

      @@lewstone5430 Don't forget this was a English Colony for 163 years. So, what you are speaking about slavery, it is an institution, that is practically excepted world wide, except in Scotland. The Founding Father's did everything they could to legislate and tax slavery out of existence. You may call it "legal", but it was fought on the Floor of Congress, every year, trying to wipe out the English Plantation owner's old ways. Yes, states have "States Rights". And they were the ones, fighting against our Federal Gov't. I know ppl love to use these terms "Liberal" and "Conservative" to try and confuse and boost their argument. That would fool some, that don't know the deeper meaning of the terms. But in my estimation, they don't apply when discussing Slavery. How can you even call someone who owns slaves a "Conservative"? These are a group of people that derive their wealth from forced labor? Your post was doing pretty well, until you tried to float that BS about the Dixiecrat's leaving the Democrat Party. After the Republicans, drug the 1964 Civil Rights Bill over the line and Codified it, two Dixiecrat switched. One Senator Thurmond and one Representative. The REST remained Democrats and voted Democrat. Vice President Hubert Humphrey, who was a friend of mine, ran for President after the 1964 Civil Rights Bill was passed. Gov. George Wallace, ran as an Independent. He got 48% of the Southern vote. Nixon won by a hair. The Democrats are the most evil organization on the face of this earth. They are more Communistic in every since of the word. As for my knowledge of Slavery. One of my great grandfathers was an Abolitionist. And a Great Uncle, was Lincoln's Chief Spy Master. Just a wee bit of history.

  • @tomeikabush2490
    @tomeikabush2490 8 місяців тому +11

    This is such an eye-opening program. 😢 Sad but such a good conversation.

  • @gabbysgospel
    @gabbysgospel Рік тому +30

    I love Anderson he has such a gift to meditate these type of difficult things. These two Ladies must be so nervous because they could lose a lot of their wealth that they inherited. There are so many unknown and known stories like this that have accumulated wealth that will never admit to share wealth with the descendants of slaves. Some will give a verbal apology thinking that is a reasonable solution. But if the shoe were on the other foot they would fight tooth and nail to get the assets they felt belonged to them because in reality the generational wealth has added quality to the lives of the families who benefited from slavery. This is a very difficult situation to be in no doubt. God Bless the men and women who can be brave enough to make amends of the complexities of the past. Thank You For Sharing.

    • @Wordsareprayers
      @Wordsareprayers Рік тому +1

      Not really that difficult. If I came to U with millions of stolen dollars and U know I killed, wrecked and ruined 100 souls for U to have it…would U still take the money? 😳

    • @gabbysgospel
      @gabbysgospel Рік тому +2

      The difficult part is admitting the wrong that was done and taking the responsibility of being vulnerable to try to make amends. I do understand what you mean though, people should feel conviction and want to correct error but in reality most won’t because most are more concerned about their own welfare not others.

    • @Wordsareprayers
      @Wordsareprayers Рік тому

      @@gabbysgospel Yes, I hear U. The wrong is part of public record now, it’s a well known fact. Struggling to deny the truth then will become the present day crime.

    • @johnsecord8539
      @johnsecord8539 Рік тому

      Anderson is a Vanderbilt. The Commador most likely did some bad things making his millions

  • @feliciabarrett8577
    @feliciabarrett8577 Рік тому +114

    They benefited from the acts of the grandfather.

    • @ronnie2699
      @ronnie2699 11 місяців тому +34

      And still benefiting

    • @CONNAITRELAUSTRALIE
      @CONNAITRELAUSTRALIE 8 місяців тому +5

      They are not responsible for what happened. Slavery was normal at that time.

    • @jerickzane
      @jerickzane 8 місяців тому +2

      The truth will set you free. Please look into who was driving the ships and who owned them that brought your people to this land. You might find out it's not who you think it is. That is all. Have A Blessed Day~

    • @Coulddietoday15
      @Coulddietoday15 8 місяців тому

      @@ronnie2699he must’ve been doing some great work if his family still benefiting today. You mad? 😂

    • @jeanettaminton4630
      @jeanettaminton4630 8 місяців тому +1

      ​@@jerickzaneYou've said this on EVERY COMMENT!!! WTF does THAT HAVE TO DO WITH IT?!? NOTHING!!

  • @dawnwitherspoon4788
    @dawnwitherspoon4788 Рік тому +39

    Mind-blowing….how many thousands of other families all across this country have a similar story, have been similarly impacted. One can try to look away, but it is what it is…x thousands upon thousands. But this was 1 step, & the longest of journeys begins with 1 step….

    • @dontbmadjusbcareful
      @dontbmadjusbcareful 11 місяців тому

      And don't know it. I don't think white ppl understand what it's like not knowing where you came from, who you belong to.

  • @JesusAlways1st
    @JesusAlways1st 7 місяців тому +7

    It’s pleasing to the heart to see people come to the table and have a discussion without malice. I just don’t understand why some people have an issue with Black American who are descendants of slaves receiving reparations. Black Americans have tried for a long time concerning this issue, but have been ignored for a long time. This country has given reparations to other groups except for Black American. No one complained about the Native Indians receiving reparations!! President Biden wanted to give $500,000 reparations to families that were separated at the border during Trump’s administration! That was a major slap in the face of every Black American.. We all see how this government jump over hurdles giving Venezuelans and those who come across the borders everything which the taxpayers have to foot the bill for. That placed them in the Black communities first!! There are other groups being affected negatively by President Biden’s choices. But it will hurt the Black Americans far greater!

  • @5995Jiol
    @5995Jiol Рік тому +48

    The echoes of slavery and apartheid still linger today, those on the receiving end of the negative ramifications of these systems, I.e. black people, vicariously experience slavery and apartheid through the systemic structures that still oppress black people

  • @andyroo9381
    @andyroo9381 Рік тому +56

    For the Meaher family to give/donate the rest of the land, which they own in Africatown, would be a huge thing! Land has value in, both, monetary value and family roots value. If I heard right, the Meaher family still owns 14 percent of the land in Africatown. I don't know if the rest of the Meaher family would agree, but giving back the land would be a wonderful thing. I guess Anderson needs to do a follow up on this story. We all want to know how this will turn out. This was a VERY interesting story.

    • @brownbagz
      @brownbagz Рік тому +11

      They're still making money from the property, they ain't gonna give it up!

    • @czogg99
      @czogg99 7 місяців тому +1

      What’s the purpose of giving back the land. Without resources, the land will not be developed. Most of the population has moved out to a better life . Scholarship and educational opportunities will be much better

    • @hotsh20t74
      @hotsh20t74 4 місяці тому

      ⁠@@czogg99no it wouldn’t land can bring you more money and generational wealth the same thing meaher benefited off of from their grandfather

    • @netraflo
      @netraflo Місяць тому

      If I heard correctly, there’s a battle going on within the Maeher family. A lawsuit within their own family These 2 ladies are on the side to make things right. I think they just want to make sure they do things right. It’s not gonna happen overnight. I believe they’re trying but be real they’re human….theyre not gonna go broke for this either.

    • @Antonio98-m1u
      @Antonio98-m1u 8 днів тому

      The city going get that land

  • @LunnaJannah
    @LunnaJannah Рік тому +29

    I’m proud of the new generation and the defendants of the beautiful slaves who treated horrifically

  • @banditbabyyy
    @banditbabyyy 9 місяців тому +13

    Wonderful conversation. I’m looking forward to hearing more about this story.

  • @Tabatha2023-u6t
    @Tabatha2023-u6t 11 місяців тому +57

    How many Highways, Chemical plants, Lakes etc... broke up "African Towns." all over America.

    • @jaquanpowell4605
      @jaquanpowell4605 7 місяців тому +4

      Exactly that’s how they get us sicker and sicker.

    • @truthlikesojourner
      @truthlikesojourner 6 місяців тому +3

      Or Central Parks and Wall Streets.

    • @publicuser2534
      @publicuser2534 6 місяців тому +3

      The most visible would be South Central LA. They found that the black community was rising in that part of Southern Cali and decided that would be the best place for the highway system.

    • @whatsinaname33
      @whatsinaname33 2 місяці тому

      with explicit intent

  • @erniewilliams1502
    @erniewilliams1502 Рік тому +57

    Although horrific and hurtful, let's not forget our history or we'll be doomed to repeat it God rest the souls of our Ancestors 😢🙏✌️💐🙏❤️🙏

  • @brianag9726
    @brianag9726 Рік тому +117

    This seemed like a hard conversation, but the descendants had it. They are role models for others to have similar conversations. We will all be stronger when we face these truths.

    • @MR.Drowsy158
      @MR.Drowsy158 Рік тому +8

      I mean the difference was they were asking for money and land from the great, great, great grand daughter of someone, for an act that no one witnessed is alive today. The list of demands grew rather long after recognition of ancestors and their actions. You can't tell me to pay my dad's debt that I saw him sign much less ask my grandkids too. It's also, give or take 100 years hundred years, past the statute of limitations, the estates have been finalized legally, Makes sense doesn't it? My great grandpa was beat at 8 for telling the police where he put sugar (for moonshine during prohibition) as a child but..... I have no effect from it.... The American dream is to shape your own life, not blaming others a century later. There was a time for this talk when everyone was living, now no one alive is responsible or should be blamed.

    • @twolegs6045
      @twolegs6045 Рік тому +3

      ​@@MR.Drowsy158 , thank u for having common sense!👍🏼

    • @emt0714
      @emt0714 Рік тому +4

      Speak for your self my family never had slaves. They didn’t migrate to US til 1905!

    • @jessiejoseph1093
      @jessiejoseph1093 Рік тому

      All good people, everyone's heart is right.

    • @sd247
      @sd247 Рік тому +12

      ​​@@MR.Drowsy158 That's easier said, but descendants of Diaspora Enslaved Africans are still experiencing system racism as we talk. Also, the descendants of enslavers are still benefiting from Blood, Sweat, tears and pain from Enslaved Africans as we talk (via systemic racism).

  • @MakemeupMentor
    @MakemeupMentor 6 місяців тому +9

    I dislike when people add words to a persons sentence they didn’t use. However I love when people see that and respond correctly

  • @BlahblahblahblahblahblahblahFU
    @BlahblahblahblahblahblahblahFU Рік тому +56

    The dang highway runs right through Africa Town… and they say racism is NOT systemic! I don’t know whether to laugh or fight! The people who deny facts like this just hate their history! I’m tired of stupid people saying CRT isn’t real!
    The family actually starting the process of healing… shocks me! It’s a wonderful surprise ! I hope theirs healing and support. They should receive education & healthcare.

  • @trentonhuntley9966
    @trentonhuntley9966 Рік тому +110

    What about economic restitution? An accountant and lawyer sitting on family wealth built on the backs of slaves says a lot.

    • @tyoung3509
      @tyoung3509 11 місяців тому +18

      I was thinking this the entire time. 🎯🎯🎯🎯I believe this is the main reason this conversation is not had nationwide. Too many don’t want the wealth disturbed while still benefiting from it.

    • @elizabethwilk9615
      @elizabethwilk9615 11 місяців тому +16

      There’s no way I would pay for one of my great grandfathers sins who stole my great grandmothers money, cheated on her and others. My dad grew up without much and I paid my college. You don’t know if these two women went through their own hardships. You can judge them. Give them credit for trying to do something - they can choose to do nothing. The people that sold the slaves to the American criminal that owned them are the guilty ones - they were the evil culprits not these women or the next generations. Never look back or feel like a victim - work and build on your own and wait for no one to give you anything or you will get crumbs or nothing.

    • @TheCanalZone
      @TheCanalZone 10 місяців тому +6

      Trenton Huntley, what if the Maeher family lost money on bringing the slaves over? Do the descendents owe them restitution? I documented that the Maehers lost money on this particular boat of slaves in an earlier post. In any case, people who have never owned slaves don't owe anything to people who have never been slaves.

    • @trentonhuntley9966
      @trentonhuntley9966 10 місяців тому +9

      @@TheCanalZone what I need you to do is read your comment out loud. Then, if it still doesn’t trigger a eureka moment, find and impartial acquaintance and read it aloud to them.

    • @braddavid902
      @braddavid902 10 місяців тому +12

      @@trentonhuntley9966you make suck a great point. I’m a white man from upper class family. I now realize how privileged it is being white and especially having family wealth. Wealth just stays in the family while many African Americans never had that and are starting from scratch. I agree we need a national discussion about reparations.

  • @annerouyer7810
    @annerouyer7810 Рік тому +101

    This is the conversations we need to have as a nation

    • @ladda4175
      @ladda4175 Рік тому

      It’s too late, the slavery narrative has been completely hijacked. It’s completely dishonest.

    • @earlofmar7987
      @earlofmar7987 Рік тому

      I think most people realize that Democrats were the purveyor's of slavery and that they attacked the country.

    • @mars6541
      @mars6541 Рік тому +23

      No conversation can make up for the atrocious acts done to blk ppl in America or anywhere in the diaspora

    • @brownbagz
      @brownbagz Рік тому +7

      ​@@mars6541Yes! I say the same!

    • @brownbagz
      @brownbagz Рік тому +7

      ​@@mars6541I know I couldn't be there because I don't want their damn apologies!

  • @gregoryh3270
    @gregoryh3270 9 місяців тому +8

    Bravo, families, for taking these steps and for letting us into this dialog. I'd love to keep informed about how it all goes.

  • @sjwilloughby-greene8214
    @sjwilloughby-greene8214 Рік тому +36

    This is heartbreaking, but maybe something great will come from this. 🙏

    • @andyroo9381
      @andyroo9381 Рік тому +3

      Something great did come of it - they met at a small table. The rest will begin to sort itself out. Both sides seemed open to what may come.

    • @yogicdance240
      @yogicdance240 Рік тому +2

      Yeah not likely. 😢

    • @manyplanets
      @manyplanets Рік тому

      Just more blacks asking for free money. Thats what will come.

  • @latyshal.2286
    @latyshal.2286 11 місяців тому +22

    I love this. Reconciliation is a start. ❤ Hopefully, we will see more meetings of this nature throughout this country. It's overdue and it's needed.

  • @darlenedowie8042
    @darlenedowie8042 Рік тому +31

    I am glad to heard this history. I would interested see how these families are doing in 10 or 20 years.

  • @jeanieferretti4203
    @jeanieferretti4203 8 місяців тому +18

    I didn’t learn this in school. Good to know ❤ These stories need to be told!

    • @SlickArmor
      @SlickArmor 6 місяців тому +1

      No they don't. It just builds on the victimhood mentality.

    • @jeanieferretti4203
      @jeanieferretti4203 6 місяців тому +1

      @@SlickArmor seriously!

    • @SlickArmor
      @SlickArmor 6 місяців тому +1

      @@jeanieferretti4203 Yes unfortunately.

    • @jeanieferretti4203
      @jeanieferretti4203 5 місяців тому

      @@SlickArmor I don’t believe that.

    • @SlickArmor
      @SlickArmor 5 місяців тому

      @@jeanieferretti4203 @jeanieferretti4203 Well, I'm sorry, but it's true. I hope you can heal and get past these things that happened to other people hundreds of years ago. Have you ever seen Jessi Lee Peterson's ? If you have some free time, check him out.

  • @TheHarveyTruth
    @TheHarveyTruth Рік тому +50

    I love this for them. ❤ This is a good first step to reconciliation and acknowledging a responsibility to heal the bond with the enslavers and the enslaved.

    • @brownbagz
      @brownbagz Рік тому +15

      They need PAYMENT!!! 14% of the property in Africa Town STILL owned by that white family!

    • @manyplanets
      @manyplanets Рік тому

      @@brownbagzpayment for what, exactly? They never owned the land. You just want more welfare? Of course because grifting handouts is a black tradition, passed down from generation to generation. It’s revolting.

    • @sharongreen2152
      @sharongreen2152 Рік тому +3

      @@brownbagz Only the actual slaves and their children should have payment. They were the actual slaves and they are the ones that deserve payment. There were white indentured servants(slaves)that were suppose to be freed after a certain amount of time but were not. The people that owned the indentured servants never let them go. But, only the indentured servants and their children(yes, they were raped too) should be paid. It happened to them not us.

    • @iloveyou281000
      @iloveyou281000 11 місяців тому

      @@sharongreen2152Just as so many others who benefited from the many enslavers that were involved and the descendants of those slaves who should also be given reparations, it’s in the hundreds of thousands, if not millions.

  • @tammyalbertsen9522
    @tammyalbertsen9522 Рік тому +47

    Absolutely stunning, appalling, highly disturbing & also kind of uplifting, especially in the way these descendants have digested & kept the stories alive in current generations. OMG.

  • @cherylmurray7942
    @cherylmurray7942 Рік тому +21

    Very hard conversation. The descendants of the kidnapped people looked mostly to the interviewer and not the kidnapper descendants.

    • @HowieHoward-ti3dx
      @HowieHoward-ti3dx Рік тому

      No reparations. If they weren't brought to America, these people wouldn't be born or be living in some hut in Africa. They have it good.

  • @PoPah3
    @PoPah3 8 місяців тому +6

    Wow! Great show! The sincere approach to truth by both parties! I have always loved you Anderson! May God continue to guide you all! 🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽

  • @twinkletoes6290
    @twinkletoes6290 Рік тому +16

    5:48 the African welcoming song and dance around this time is something I learned years and years ago when I was a teenager. I still sing the song bc I found it so beautiful and loved that I got taught that little bit of history. It snapped my attention up right when I heard it!! I still know the whole song and dance to this very day and by the looks of me, you would be very surprised. An African dance teacher is the one who taught me, and many others, that song and dance, along with many other dances!!

  • @BooBoosPalace
    @BooBoosPalace Рік тому +11

    As a 51 year-old Mobilian, this is WONDERFUL to see!!! ❤❤❤

  • @Allergictocatstoo
    @Allergictocatstoo Рік тому +62

    Incredible poise, dignity and intelligence on behalf of the enslaved ancestors. I wish them every success in securing more of a future for their descendant’s. Hoping each person participating in the process gives 110% toward resolutions that can strengthen their bonds. ,

  • @pvtruestmusic
    @pvtruestmusic 8 місяців тому +11

    This makes me so livid.

    • @Sadiyyah314
      @Sadiyyah314 8 місяців тому +5

      Same! And so much was left unsaid. It was kinda frustrating to watch

  • @FatherOfDragonss
    @FatherOfDragonss 11 місяців тому +32

    The Meaher family needs to set up educational scholarship programs and neighborhood projects to give back to the people of Africatown.

  • @stephaniecannon410
    @stephaniecannon410 Рік тому +16

    Thank you for sharing this Documentary, it's much appreciated. ❤😢

  • @H4me7215
    @H4me7215 Рік тому +25

    What a great story on Africantown. I love the histories of the by gone years, and somehow i feel connected spiritually, even though i am not African. I just cant imagine, what life was like in those days..

  • @mannyfresh89
    @mannyfresh89 8 місяців тому +3

    As an immigrant, this is a very interesting conversation to hear. Past transgressions are still impacting the lineage of the perpetrators and victims. Good on these folks for choosing to meet with each other.

  • @mayoralcandidateangelaande6713
    @mayoralcandidateangelaande6713 Рік тому +65

    This round table, for each individual is definitely historical and very epic. Gives hope to other families of descendants who ancestors were kidnapped in Africa.

    • @unbreakable7633
      @unbreakable7633 Рік тому

      Kidnaped by other Africans and Muslims and sold to the Spanish and British. Let's get the history right.

    • @jrg5315
      @jrg5315 Рік тому

      They were sold off by other Africans who were enslaving them. They were not kidnapped lol. That’s a hoax

    • @unbreakable7633
      @unbreakable7633 Рік тому +6

      @@jrg5315 They were kidnapped or taken during intertribal wars and raids.

    • @catdooley4616
      @catdooley4616 Рік тому +17

      @@unbreakable7633 And yet it was these white Americans that kept them as slaves and oppressed for centuries. So your tirade that others of their own race were involved in that does not absolve what happened here in this country.

    • @kellygrace3247
      @kellygrace3247 Рік тому +9

      You do know that they were for sale as they were caught by other African tribes and put for sale correct? Please tell me you do know this… They were captured by other Africans hanging shiny trinkets in the trees. They were not kidnapped by white people. They were for sale.

  • @jojosaylor8996
    @jojosaylor8996 11 місяців тому +10

    This was very hard to watch and I hate that we have to come to the table being the better person being upset by horror our ancestors went through deserves more then this sit down

  • @thegrandmasabrina
    @thegrandmasabrina Рік тому +47

    Such a powerful program. I felt emotional while watching it. It's definitely a start in the right direction.

  • @SleepSounds-2023
    @SleepSounds-2023 8 місяців тому +2

    How is there reconciliation with no reparations? The only meeting taking place should be between lawyers....

    • @GStampedeIII
      @GStampedeIII 8 місяців тому

      That's exactly what they keep pushing! Forgive and forget

  • @tenacious1
    @tenacious1 11 місяців тому +32

    I'm so proud of them for trying to make things right. Putting some action to their words. Doing what their ancestors should have done.
    I'm also proud of... Extremely proud of my people here that spoke so eloquently passionately and it always amazes me how we don't speak with a lot of anger or hatred of the times. I thank them and continue to pray for them. I thank them for their continued great strength and dignity.

  • @moony_be4r
    @moony_be4r Рік тому +19

    BEAUTIFUL!! Let's gooo!! Bravo! This is the kind of news I want to see - Thank you for broadcasting it.
    It's about time acknowledgement, healing, and growth together started. Talk about it so you can understand one another better in helping each other! Well over due, both parties are setting a great example of how forgiveness, responsibility, healing and mutual growth can look like. No need to be fearful, no need to condemn or demonize, no need to be greedy, there is enough to go around for everyone as long as you are willing to find a way, sit down and talk about it, build towards it - together.
    This will ripple across the world and through time itself - because the farther you look back in history, the more you will realize humans have been hurting each other for far too long. It's 2023 now, let's be better, better not just to ourselves, but also to one another, the change starts with you (me, us, all of us here and now, and the people 100yrs+ from now can do the same).

    • @twolegs6045
      @twolegs6045 Рік тому

      It's puff puff PASS! (as in....I need some too!)🙏🏾😄

  • @susan6351
    @susan6351 10 місяців тому +9

    What an incredible story. I wish the entire Miller family love and peace. Peace now that they have found their ancestors and their roots. God bless them all.

  • @trysimmahdownk2060
    @trysimmahdownk2060 8 місяців тому +4

    Anything Anderson host, I’m watching. 💜 Thankyou Mr Cooper!!

  • @dwightthementor
    @dwightthementor 11 місяців тому +28

    Horrible. Thank you for this. The Maeher family had a 200yr head start with free labor

  • @loispoindexter757
    @loispoindexter757 Рік тому +77

    My heart bleeds for ALL of my Ancestors. Our Day Is Coming!!!

    • @belhar62
      @belhar62 11 місяців тому +1

      🙏🏾

    • @craigjohnson4011
      @craigjohnson4011 10 місяців тому +2

      And what do you see “coming” on your day?

  • @sharayutravels
    @sharayutravels 9 місяців тому +27

    This is good outcome. As Indians we find very heartbreaking when British ballantly say they are not sorry. Most British are rich and live lavish lives based on what their ancestors looted from India.

    • @kangarojack3814
      @kangarojack3814 6 місяців тому +6

      Most of them are in hell now!!!

    • @CT-uv8os
      @CT-uv8os 6 місяців тому +4

      I'd debate that. The British are descended from the losers of the Battle of Kureksettra . Your ancestors sent theirs into exile with nothing, west of the Himalayas and said they would be white when they would come back.
      The debt has been paid by both sides. You both owe each other nothing. But both of you DO owe the Indigenous Peoples of the Americas. You BOTH have benefited from that.

  • @walterflemister606
    @walterflemister606 Рік тому +39

    Kudos to these two ladies for stepping up. The acknowledgement is so important but of course nothing can repair the damage that their ancestors exacted on the families of these poor fellow Americans.😢

  • @inaschultz1431
    @inaschultz1431 Рік тому +31

    I LOVE how this woman talked about they came with "empty hands, but NOT empty heads". Sorry that big business stripped the peace by dropping noisy freeways and factories in that community. Glad I just grew up as a poor white girl, don't think O could deal with or enjoy being wealthy knowing it was because of an evil act of my ancestors or enjoy my current quiet peaceful home FAR away from that noisy factory filled place.

    • @earlofmar7987
      @earlofmar7987 Рік тому +2

      Well you family could have been hurt by the Civil War, WWI or the Great Depression, WWII, Korean War, or Viet Nam. Have to take all that into account.

    • @Faretheewell608
      @Faretheewell608 28 днів тому

      I have no dog in this fight. I have no ancestors who enslaved people. My education was funded by me - summers working at factories, during school at part time jobs. I paid for my bachelors and graduate degree. My children have been educated through my and my husband's hard work. Now in retirement, I pay taxes on my retirement savings and my social security benefits. I do not get worked up about that. But I am old and tired no. There needs to be plain speaking. I must ask, where are the monies for reparations supposed to come from? And be honest, call it reparations - because debt forgiveness must be paid for by someone. There is no free lunch. If the rich people in this video donate the land the others want, the rich people will deduct that donations appraised value on their income taxes. Less tax money to spread around. It is s vicious circle.

  • @tiawebber9507
    @tiawebber9507 Рік тому +32

    What a blessing to witness this. To see our country make steps to recover, recognize and restore. The first thing is admitting that harm and oppression exists and it played a part in the outcome of the layer of oppression. Also that we can say we won’t allow one more mistake or another human to be help back because of race. We will take back our country and everyone will be considered and given fair treatment and honest treatment to become anything they want that each person will be given the same choice and chance to rise to who they can fully be

  • @Lion_Honey
    @Lion_Honey 8 місяців тому +2

    I like how inclusive their language was. Topics like reconciliation, addressing mental health trageties and starting the healing process for descendants...that's what makes a sitdown possible. I hope as tabletalks continue, people focus on coming together to help restore mankind to grace rather than to condemn each other....❤

  • @BurritoMassacre
    @BurritoMassacre Рік тому +14

    We need more of these conversations

  • @cheyanner2589
    @cheyanner2589 Рік тому +35

    I would love to come and visit Africatown and support such a place it’s extremely sad for me to know that this isn’t in our history books. We need to know about e true history of this country and the people who suffered and where mistreated. We need to see the ugly truth to truly understand the history of African American people:

    • @earlofmar7987
      @earlofmar7987 Рік тому

      The Democrats don't want ppl to know their horrific past. That's why.

    • @CoraDeFlorian
      @CoraDeFlorian 10 місяців тому +1

      I wonder if there's a hotel/motel in town? I think it would be a really interesting road trip!

  • @carlcunningham294
    @carlcunningham294 Рік тому +20

    This is good. The hard conversation we all need to have.

    • @mars6541
      @mars6541 Рік тому

      Conversations won’t make up for the atrocities done to blk ppl. Nothing can make up for it

    • @HowieHoward-ti3dx
      @HowieHoward-ti3dx Рік тому

      No reparations. If they weren't brought to America, these people wouldn't be born or be living in some hut in Africa. They have it good.

  • @Coreyrob26
    @Coreyrob26 7 місяців тому +23

    As an American, this was hard to watch. My family came from Italy in the 20th century, others were poor Appalachian farmers. However, we’re all here now, one big American family, and we need to help lift each other up.

    • @thesoulsofourancestors
      @thesoulsofourancestors 4 місяці тому

      We’re not an “American family”. There will be no reconciliation until there is reparative justice. And need I remind you, your people came here by choice, my people by force. #NeverForget

  • @montaynedates9747
    @montaynedates9747 Рік тому +23

    What goes around comes around.