Orange County NC Website
12 <br /> 1 The Board considered voting to approve a proclamation declaring August 1, 2019 <br /> 2 through July 31, 2020 as a year of remembrance to commemorate the 400th anniversary of <br /> 3 unfree Africans first arriving in English North America and authorize the Chair to sign. <br /> 4 <br /> 5 Annette Moore, Human Rights and Relations Director, read the following: <br /> 6 In 1619, after having been kidnapped from their villages and taken from what is now referred to <br /> 7 as Angola, 350 Africans were forced onto Portuguese slave ships that were bound for the new <br /> 8 world. Approximately half of those Africans died at sea. 50 Africans were stolen by English <br /> 9 pirates off the coast of Mexico, and taken to Point Comfort, a colony that eventually became <br /> 10 Virginia. That 'some 20 and odd negroes,' identified by James Rolfe, the widower of <br /> 11 Pocahontas and colony secretary, who were taken to Point Comfort, came on two ships: The <br /> 12 White Lion and The Treasurer. Upon his arrival in Point Comfort, the Captain of The White Lion <br /> 13 sold the Africans for food. This marked, what some believe, to be the beginning of slavery in <br /> 14 the United States. James Horne, President of the Jamestown Rediscovery Foundation said, <br /> 15 '1619 gave birth to the great paradox of our nation's founding: slavery in the midst of freedom. <br /> 16 It marked both the origin of the most important political development in American history: the <br /> 17 rise of democracy; and the emergence of, what would become, one the nation's greatest <br /> 18 challenges: the corrosive legacy of racial discrimination and inequality that has afflicted our <br /> 19 society since its earliest years.' For 246 years slavery was legal in America. It did not become <br /> 20 illegal until 150 years ago. Slavery has been part of America much longer than it hasn't. A <br /> 21 century and a half after slavery was made illegal, we still see the trauma of this infectious <br /> 22 disease. Throughout the 20th century, text books either glossed over slavery, often not treating <br /> 23 it as a part of America's story, or fed students tales that masked the reality of slavery; some <br /> 24 even telling students that Africans were better off enslaved. What has this practice lead to: lack <br /> 25 of understanding; confusion; tension; and polarization. Tonight we ask you, Commissioners, to <br /> 26 proclaim this 400 year anniversary, and ask you to ask the Human Relations Commission, over <br /> 27 this next year, to plan programs to educate people, and to acknowledge the history of Africans <br /> 28 in America. <br /> 29 <br /> 30 BACKGROUND: In 1619 unfree Africans, "some 20. and odd Negroes," arrived in the English <br /> 31 settlement that would become Virginia. This marked the beginning of the period in America <br /> 32 where people of Africa were forcibly taken from their homeland, transported to the American <br /> 33 colonies, and committed to lifelong slavery. <br /> 34 <br /> 35 The Human Relation Commission (HRC) requests that the Board of County Commissioners <br /> 36 recognize the harrowing experience of the Africans who first came to the shores of English <br /> 37 North America and the plight and burden of their descendants with this Proclamation. <br /> 38 Organizations throughout Orange County have had events to commemorate the 400th year <br /> 39 anniversary since January 2019, either as an underlying theme or as the backdrop to events. <br /> 40 Some events include: <br /> 41 . Inaugural Reception of the Orange County Community Remembrance Coalition [HRC is <br /> 42 a member] <br /> 43 • OCCRC Symposium: Confronting the Legacy of Lynching <br /> 44 • 110th Anniversary of the Founding of the NAACP <br /> 45 • 400 Years: Sounds of Freedom Music Festival by Free Spirit Freedom <br /> 46 • 154th Juneteenth Celebration <br /> 47 • Screening of"The Long Shadow" <br /> 48 • Symposium: Reconstruction, Redemption and the On-Going Struggle for Freedom <br /> 49 <br />