America’s newest monuments unveil a different look at the nation’s past
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By Krystal Nurse, USA Today
For nearly 100 years, Robert E. Lee’s 10,000-pound monument rode high over the city of Charlottesville. Now, it’s been melted into bronze slabs and another memorial in town has risen to national prominence.
It’s on the UVA campus, titled the Memorial to Enslaved Laborers. It stands as the antithesis to the Confederacy, honoring the slaves forced to work at the university in the 1800s as carpenters, blacksmiths, roofers, stone carvers and other back-breaking trades.
“All these men, women, and children lived with dignity, resisted oppression, and aspired for freedom. For more than four decades, the entire University was a site of enslavement,” according to the UVA President’s Commission on Slavery. “Now, we’re confronting our past, uncovering new knowledge, and using that knowledge to teach, heal, and shape the future.”
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[…] or marginalized histories, alongside reevaluating existing ones to make them more inclusive(America’s Black Holocaust Museum,Smithsonian […]