Tag Archives: Legacy Museum

Civil Rights Tour #3

Montgomery, Alabama

Statue outside the National Memorial for Peace and Justice

Site of The Legacy Museum and the six -acre National Memorial for Peace and Justice (aka the Lynching Memorial). These were the main reasons for making the trip and they did not disappoint.

Outside the Legacy Museum

Photos were not allowed inside the museum, so I’ve embedded one of their Instagram posts.

The excitement started before we even entered the exhibits. A hubbub. Early — not even 9:30 am — and ticketed entrants spilled out of the foyer, many more waiting outside. I would’ve loved to know where people had traveled from to be there.

The museum is huge and comprehensive, covering the Transatlantic Slave Trade, Jim Crow, the Civil Rights movement, the prison pipeline, and more. Every inch of the museum is designed to appeal to both emotion and intellect, offering the visitor images, text, and audio. Some exhibits were duplicated on both sides of a small space and entries were timed, so you really could take in the displays (or try to). Other exhibits were cavernous, like the area with replicated runaway slave notices stretching 15 feet up and wrapping around stand-alone display walls.

It’s too much to convey here but let me at least describe the entry and first exhibit.

After passing through security, you enter a small dark room with one wall dedicated to a video of the ocean. It’s probably twenty feet tall. The waves are coming at you. Crashing and swelling. You feel a sense of scale — both the enormity of the ocean and the smallness of your body. And then, projected onto the waves you see a few statistics about the slave trade. Numbers of bodies kidnapped. Numbers of lives lost in transit. The scale of the tragedy is almost impossible to take in.

A powerful way to begin.

Next up, right after the waves, probably my favorite space. Again, it’s small and dark. This time water is projected onto the floor. It’s a luminous blue gridded with white light and it washes over the floor and then recedes. Mirrors amplify the effect. On the floor, as if emerging out of the ground or water: clay heads and busts. They are life-sized. Some are in chains, some wear iron-spike collars or ripped tunics. Others are naked. All express agony or bewilderment. Each is distinct and you cannot stop looking at them. The sparkling water washes over them then recedes, illuminating them and then leaving them in darkness. It’s astonishing.

Scattered throughout the interior are viewing rooms. In one room, there was a video about the artist who made these clay forms. Kwame Akoto-Bamfo. He is from Ghana and you can read about his work here.

The outdoor memorial also uses scale to convey the mind-bending levels of violence perpetrated by white people on Black people. The shed is huge. The down-hanging blocks represent counties, with names of known lynching victims etched upon them. They are not organized by state and so you get this dizzying impression of murder being everywhere — an unavoidable and relentless violence.

D is from Georgia and so photographed her county.

Photo by Doris Tennant

The site is not a static memorial. Each block hanging in the shed has a duplicate version stacked up out on the lawn. If a county is prepared to go through a process of public acknowledgement, they can take their block to their county and post a landmark. The plaques below are copies of such acknowledgments. They are not formulaic. I got the impression each was informed by a thorough and deep community process.

https://videos.files.wordpress.com/HABMC7me/img_9464.mp4

Most of the blocks are unclaimed.

Haiku, Nov ‘23 (first half)

11/1
Out with the mouth guard.
In with the flipper. If you
don’t know, you’re lucky.

11/2
Silver-haired driver.
“Now see here, Dumbledore!” Ha!
Not Robert Burns then.

Another one:

Catalpa leaves float
and sway on their way from sky
perch to rusty ground.

Birmingham

11/3
Today’s tough topics:
reparations, guilt, fear, shame.
And don’t forget: love.

11/4
A doom loop. App shows
one booking, then the other.
Never together.

11/5
There are those who love
the time change, even stay up
to watch it happen.

https://videos.files.wordpress.com/lpgJpKSd/img_9464.mp4

11/6
His name was Moses
and he called me ma’am.
Not in Boston now!

11/7
The actual bus
where Rosa Parks sat, displayed
in Montgomery.

11/8
For walking past a
house where a white woman bathed
they strung him up. Dead.

11/9
Storefronts boarded up
with plywood. Abandoned gas
stations. Weeds. Selma.

11/11

If the Black Bayou
could talk, what would it say? “Oh
sleep, sweet Emmett, sleep.”

Tallahatchie River
Cotton gin fan like the one the killers tied around Emmett Till’s neck. It weighs 70 pounds. They never expected his body to be found.
Miss Jesse Jane Demings
Refurbished Sumner courtroom where killers were acquitted in 67 minutes