Again and again, we hear: I was not alive in 1921; my family had nothing to do with it; I am not responsible.
The moral statute of limitations has not lapsed, and the failure of too many to recognize the continuing pain — the failure even to offer a genuine apology in the name of the people of Tulsa to their fellow Tulsans — prevents true healing.
Until we have atoned for the sins of the race massacre, culpability continues and compounds.
How to expiate such awful acts is a question for the entire community.
It’s a process that should require a thorough, thoughtful and public examination of what led to the massacre, what happened there and what happened afterward. Truth and reconciliation are not a moment but a process, and one that ends only when the pain does.
For the state, it should begin with a new era of policy designed to address disproportionate burdens on the Black population in health care and criminal justice.
For the state and city, it could also include consideration of reparations, direct or indirect. This remains a controversial issue, but one that deserves a public debate.
For individuals, it should mean many things, including acts of charity, self-education and acknowledgement.
For all, it should start with an act of contrition … of apology.
For what happened … for what was done and not done … for what led to it and led from it … for the failure to empathize then and now… we are sorry.
[Read the full Tulsa World editorial]