Beyond Boundaries, CRC to present 'Slavery and Our Roots: A Community Dialog'February 09, 2009Aggie Lane
aggielane@verizon.net
Beyond Boundaries and the Cultural Resources Council will present "Slavery and
Our Roots" Feb. 27-March 21, a rich offering of 11 events and facilitated community
discussions addressing the hidden and the distorted, helping people to together think
through what keeps society from achieving social justice, both locally and globally.
This community dialogue builds on the effort of many local groups working toward
healing and consciousness-raising. It also grows out of Beyond Boundaries' mission to
encourage cross-cultural understanding and self-awareness. The activities will take
place at various venues in Syracuse and Fayetteville and will consist of opening and
closing events that bracket three mini-series, each dedicated to an aspect of slavery.
All events are open to the public and, except for the March 21 closing celebration, are
free.
Co-sponsors are Le Moyne College, the Matilda Joslyn Gage Foundation, the
Community Folk Art Center, SU's
Department of African American Studies and
Syracuse Model Neighborhood Facility Inc.
"Slavery and Our Roots" will open with a lecture on "Radical Black Abolitionism"
Friday, Feb. 27, at 7:30 p.m. in the Reilly Room at Le Moyne College. The presenter
will be Graham Hodges, professor at Colgate University, who will speak on "David
Ruggles and Radical Black Abolitionism in New York."
The first mini-series will be on the topic of "Slavery Today," with sessions at
Fayetteville Free Library:
- Monday, March 2, at 7 p.m.: This will be a discussion of Patricia McCormick's
book "Sold." The story focuses on a Nepalese girl bought by a Calcutta
brothel. The book will be on sale at the Feb. 27 opening lecture. Copies can
also be purchased from the Gage Foundation.
- Monday, March 9, at 6:30 p.m.: The feature-length film "Trade" will be
shown. It tells the story of a 13-year-old Mexican girl sold as a sex slave into
the United States.
- Monday, March 16, at 7 p.m.: The mini-series concludes with a panel
discussion on human trafficking in Central New York. This program offers an
opportunity to understand the vulnerabilities that foster this predatory activity
and learn how to prevent or hinder this practice.
The second mini-series, on the topic of "Northern Slavery and Racism," will be held
in the Warehouse Auditorium, 350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse:
- Wednesday, March 4, at 6 p.m.: The film "Unearthing the Slave Trade" will
be shown. It documents the struggle to save the African Burial Ground
exposed during the building of New York City's Federal Building in 1991.
Local activist Aduke Branch will share her involvement in the movement to
honor the graves of her people.
- Wednesday, March 11, at 7 p.m.: The documentary "Traces of the Trade" will
be shown. It follows present-day DeWolfe family members as they uncover
the roots of their family's wealth and status built around the triangular trade
of enslaved Africans, sugar and rum. Guy Swenson, a local DeWolfe
descendant, will speak.
- Wednesday, March 18, at 7 p.m.: The film "Teach Our Children" will be
shown. It shows Northern inner-city poverty and oppression, culminating in
the 1971 Attica prison uprising and the forceful state response. SUNY College
at Oneonta history professor William Walker will lead discussion on social
conditions that keep so many people of color "locked away."
The third mini-series will be on the topic "Slavery's Legacy," with sessions at the
Community Folk Art Center, 805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse:
- Thursday, March 5, at 6 p.m.: "Race, Class & the Creation of Power and
Privilege in the 20th Century" will begin with a short film. Then computer
mapping information will expose how the government and people's attitudes
created white suburbs and black ghettos. SU African American studies
professor Herb Ruffin will lead the discussion.
- Thursday, March 12, at 6 p.m.: With the guidance of Le Moyne professor
Douglas Egerton, audience members will explore the racist theories embedded
in the Founding Fathers' thoughts. To prepare for this discussion, audience
members are encouraged to read the chapter "A Suspicion Only: Racism in
the Early Republic" from Egerton's new book "Death or Liberty: African
Americans and Revolutionary America" (Oxford University Press, 2009).
Members of the public can get a free copy of the chapter at the lecture or may
purchase the book at the Feb. 27 opening lecture at Le Moyne. Copies of the
chapter can also be found at http://www.beyondboundariescny.org.
- Thursday, March 19 at 6 p.m.: Using images from the Fenimore Art Museum
exhibition "Through the Eyes of Others: African Americans and Identity in
American Art," the exhibition's curator, Gretchen Sorin professor at the
SUNY College at Oneonta, will demonstrate how art influences how people
see each other. The 72-page color exhibition catalog will be sold at the Feb. 27
opening lecture and at this lecture.
The series' closing event, "Closing: Exploring and Celebrating Who We Are," will
take place on Saturday, March 21, from 7-9 p.m. at St. Claire Theater, 1119-27
North Townsend St., Syracuse. This celebratory evening will honor African
Americans in Syracuse, their life and culture. It will be historical and cultural-full of
photo memories, stories, and song and dance sweetened by desserts in the Southern
tradition. Admission is $10 for adults and $5 for children 12 and under.
For more information, visit http://www.beyondboundariescny.org.