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| 1 |  | HOUSE RESOLUTION
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| 2 |  |  WHEREAS, The term "holocaust" is defined as, "a great or  | 
| 3 |  | complete devastation or destruction, especially by fire"; and
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| 4 |  |  WHEREAS, Chicago, the third largest city in the United  | 
| 5 |  | States, is a thriving center of business, industry, and
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| 6 |  | culture, with approximately 83,733 registered black owned  | 
| 7 |  | businesses and approximately 40 black communities; it was also  | 
| 8 |  | the location of the Red
Summer holocaust of 1919 and  | 
| 9 |  | approximately 25 other racial holocausts; and
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| 10 |  |  WHEREAS, Black Wall Street - Illinois is an organization  | 
| 11 |  | formed to partner with black business districts and communities
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| 12 |  | in Illinois and abroad, setting a standard for building  | 
| 13 |  | sustainable black businesses and communities as a means to stop
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| 14 |  | violence, retaining current businesses while incubating new  | 
| 15 |  | businesses, and growing through the rich historical blueprint  | 
| 16 |  | in
the tradition of growth and prosperity with the original  | 
| 17 |  | "Black Wall Street District" of Tulsa, Oklahoma's Greenwood
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| 18 |  | District; being ostracized from the mainstream, the business  | 
| 19 |  | and economic population's leaders of
the "Black Wall Street"  | 
| 20 |  | Tulsa area reportedly used "Black Dollars" instead of United  | 
| 21 |  | States currency during the early 1900s, allowing them the  | 
| 22 |  | ability to
track its recirculation within the district; and
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| 1 |  |  WHEREAS, Racial holocausts not only destroyed black  | 
| 2 |  | communities, but destroyed the people in those
communities as  | 
| 3 |  | well; the wealth that was established for their children and  | 
| 4 |  | the examples of pride and self-respect were destroyed as well,  | 
| 5 |  | causing black
business districts to become nonexistent and  | 
| 6 |  | leaving the black communities in economic despair; although  | 
| 7 |  | there were
some reparations, those came years later and were  | 
| 8 |  | not given to over 85% of the communities destroyed; and
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| 9 |  |  WHEREAS, In June 2015, South Suburban Black Wall Street and  | 
| 10 |  | Black Wall Street - Illinois, with the help
of Illinois State  | 
| 11 |  | Representative LaShawn Ford, formed and hosted their First  | 
| 12 |  | Annual Convention and 3-day tour from Chicago to
the "Black  | 
| 13 |  | Wall Street District" in Tulsa, Oklahoma; and
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| 14 |  |  WHEREAS, During the oil boom of the 1910s, the area of  | 
| 15 |  | northeast Oklahoma around Tulsa flourished, including the
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| 16 |  | Greenwood neighborhood, which came to be known as the "Black  | 
| 17 |  | Wall Street District"; many black men and women moved to
the  | 
| 18 |  | area, structuring a system for wealth that produced some of the  | 
| 19 |  | first known black millionaires in the United States; the area  | 
| 20 |  | was home to several lawyers, realtors, doctors, and prominent  | 
| 21 |  | black businessmen, many of them
multimillionaires; Greenwood  | 
| 22 |  | boasted a variety of thriving businesses, such as grocery  | 
| 23 |  | stores, clothing stores,
barbershops, banks, hotels, cafes,  | 
| 24 |  | movie theaters, 2 newspapers, and many contemporary homes;  | 
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| 1 |  | Greenwood
residents enjoyed many luxuries that their white  | 
| 2 |  | neighbors did not, including indoor plumbing and a remarkable  | 
| 3 |  | school
system; each dollar circulated 36 to 100 times,  | 
| 4 |  | sometimes taking a year for currency to leave the community;
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| 5 |  | Greenwood, Oklahoma implemented a blueprint for success  | 
| 6 |  | imitated by other black business communities across the
world;  | 
| 7 |  | and
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| 8 |  |  WHEREAS, The Tulsa, Oklahoma holocaust took place from May  | 
| 9 |  | 31 to June 1, 1921; altercations between whites and blacks at
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| 10 |  | the jail led to a race war; a mob numbering more than 10,000  | 
| 11 |  | attacked the black district; machine-guns were
brought into  | 
| 12 |  | use, 8 airplanes were employed to spy on the movements of the  | 
| 13 |  | blacks and, according to some, were
used in bombing what was  | 
| 14 |  | considered the "colored" section of the town; by the time order  | 
| 15 |  | was restored, the entire business
district of "Black Wall  | 
| 16 |  | Street" and many homes totaling over $1.5 million in value were  | 
| 17 |  | said to have been destroyed by fire; in
the wake of the  | 
| 18 |  | violence, 35 city blocks lay in charred ruins, over 800 people  | 
| 19 |  | were treated for injuries, 15,000 were left
homeless, and an  | 
| 20 |  | estimated 1,000-plus deaths occurred; and
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| 21 |  |  WHEREAS, Within 5 years of the massacre, surviving  | 
| 22 |  | residents who chose to remain in Tulsa rebuilt portions of the
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| 23 |  | district; they accomplished their goal despite the opposition  | 
| 24 |  | of many Tulsa political and business leaders and punitive
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| 1 |  | rezoning laws enacted to prevent reconstruction; it resumed  | 
| 2 |  | being a vital black community until segregation was
overturned  | 
| 3 |  | by the federal government during the 1950s and 1960s;  | 
| 4 |  | desegregation encouraged blacks to integrate
other surrounding  | 
| 5 |  | communities and Greenwood lost much of its original vitality;  | 
| 6 |  | since then, city leaders have attempted to
strip the landmark  | 
| 7 |  | of its history; and
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| 8 |  |  WHEREAS, Jim Crow segregation, legitimized by the Plessy v.  | 
| 9 |  | Ferguson (1896) Supreme Court ruling, forced black people
to  | 
| 10 |  | use separate and usually inferior facilities; the southern  | 
| 11 |  | justice system systematically denied them equal protection
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| 12 |  | under the law and condoned the practice of vigilante mob  | 
| 13 |  | violence; as an aspiring migrant from Alabama wrote in a
letter  | 
| 14 |  | to the Chicago Defender, "I am in the darkness of the south and  | 
| 15 |  | I am trying my best to get out"; blacks were ultimately forced  | 
| 16 |  | to create their own neighborhoods, business districts, and  | 
| 17 |  | economic base
to survive across the country; and
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| 18 |  |  WHEREAS, In 1898 in Wilmington, North Carolina, political  | 
| 19 |  | wars between prominent blacks and whites resulted in  | 
| 20 |  | accusations of
sexual misconduct by black men against white  | 
| 21 |  | women; a prominent black newspaper editor, Alex Manly,  | 
| 22 |  | responded
with an editorial suggesting that it was possible  | 
| 23 |  | that relations between white women and black men were  | 
| 24 |  | consensual,
a taboo subject at the time; about 500 white men  | 
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| 1 |  | attacked and burned Manly's office, along with other black  | 
| 2 |  | businesses; and
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| 3 |  |  WHEREAS, Racial tension had been building in Atlanta,  | 
| 4 |  | Georgia in 1906 and race-baiting in the state's gubernatorial
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| 5 |  | election brought it to a boil; blacks in Georgia had begun to  | 
| 6 |  | prosper economically and socially and the Democratic
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| 7 |  | candidates for governor, Hoke Smith and Clark Howell, played on  | 
| 8 |  | fears of a rising black middle class; about
10,000 white men  | 
| 9 |  | and boys took to the streets, beating black men and burning  | 
| 10 |  | businesses and homes; and
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| 11 |  |  WHEREAS, In August of 1908, a three-day racial holocaust  | 
| 12 |  | took place in Springfield, Illinois; white mobs headed for the  | 
| 13 |  | small
eleven-by-nine block area considered the "Negro" section  | 
| 14 |  | and attacked homes and businesses in what is now
downtown  | 
| 15 |  | Springfield; this holocaust, in the hometown of Abraham  | 
| 16 |  | Lincoln, shocked Jane
Addams, who met the following year in New  | 
| 17 |  | York City with prominent black civil rights activist W.E.B.  | 
| 18 |  | Dubois to form
the NAACP to promote the equality of rights and  | 
| 19 |  | the eradication of racial prejudice; and
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| 20 |  |  WHEREAS, Between 1914 and 1920, roughly 500,000 black  | 
| 21 |  | southerners packed their bags and headed to the north,
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| 22 |  | fundamentally transforming the social, cultural, and political  | 
| 23 |  | landscape of cities such as Chicago, New York, Cleveland,
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| 1 |  | Pittsburgh, and Detroit; the Great Migration would reshape  | 
| 2 |  | black America and the nation as a whole; black southerners
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| 3 |  | faced a host of social, economic, and political challenges that  | 
| 4 |  | prompted their migration to the north; and
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| 5 |  |  WHEREAS, The City of East St. Louis was the location of one  | 
| 6 |  | of the bloodiest racial holocausts in the 20th century; racial
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| 7 |  | tensions began to increase in February of 1917, when 470 black  | 
| 8 |  | workers were hired to replace white workers who had
gone on  | 
| 9 |  | strike against the Aluminum Ore Company; the May 28th  | 
| 10 |  | disturbances were only a prelude to the violence that
erupted  | 
| 11 |  | on July 2, 1917; no precautions were taken to ensure white job  | 
| 12 |  | security or to grant union recognition, which further increased  | 
| 13 |  | the already high level of hostilities; and
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| 14 |  |  WHEREAS, In 1919, racial holocausts erupted in 26 U.S.  | 
| 15 |  | cities during the course of
the year, including Washington, DC;  | 
| 16 |  | Knoxville, Tennessee; Longview, Texas; Phillips County,  | 
| 17 |  | Arkansas; Omaha, Nebraska;
and Chicago; many of the holocausts  | 
| 18 |  | occurred during the summer months, in what is known as the "Red  | 
| 19 |  | Summer"; racial
tension was particularly bad in northern  | 
| 20 |  | cities, as white soldiers returning from World War I found that  | 
| 21 |  | their jobs had
been taken by blacks who had migrated north; in  | 
| 22 |  | addition, black soldiers returning from war became embittered  | 
| 23 |  | by the
lack of civil rights extended to them, particularly  | 
| 24 |  | after they risked their lives fighting for their country; and
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| 1 |  |  WHEREAS, Postwar Washington, D.C., which was roughly 75%  | 
| 2 |  | white, was a racial tinderbox; housing was in short supply and  | 
| 3 |  | jobs were so scarce that ex-doughboys in uniform panhandled  | 
| 4 |  | along Pennsylvania Avenue; however, Washington's black  | 
| 5 |  | community was the largest and most prosperous in the country,  | 
| 6 |  | with a small but impressive upper class of teachers, ministers,  | 
| 7 |  | lawyers, and businessmen concentrated in the LeDriot Park  | 
| 8 |  | neighborhood near Howard University; and
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| 9 |  |  WHEREAS, Drawn by Chicago's meatpacking houses,
railway  | 
| 10 |  | companies, and steel mills, the African-American population in  | 
| 11 |  | Chicago skyrocketed from 44,000 in 1910 to
235,000 in 1930; a  | 
| 12 |  | racial holocaust ensued on July 27, 1919, lasting until August  | 
| 13 |  | 3, 1919; after the holocaust, varying estimates of the death  | 
| 14 |  | toll circulated, with the Chicago Police Chief estimating that  | 
| 15 |  | 100 blacks had been killed; renowned journalist Ida B. Wells  | 
| 16 |  | reported in the Chicago
Defender that 40 to 150 black people  | 
| 17 |  | were killed in the rioting, while the NAACP estimated deaths at  | 
| 18 |  | 100 to 200; 6,000 African-Americans were left homeless after  | 
| 19 |  | their neighborhoods were burned; and
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| 20 |  |  WHEREAS, In August of 1919, a racial holocaust in  | 
| 21 |  | Knoxville, Tennessee broke out after a white mob mobilized in  | 
| 22 |  | response to a black
man being accused of murdering a white  | 
| 23 |  | woman; the 5,000-strong mob stormed the county jail searching  | 
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| 1 |  | for the prisoner and freed 16 white prisoners, including  | 
| 2 |  | suspected murderers;
after looting the jail and sheriff's  | 
| 3 |  | house, the mob moved on and attacked the African-American  | 
| 4 |  | business district; many
of the city's black residents, aware of  | 
| 5 |  | the racial holocausts that had occurred across the country that  | 
| 6 |  | summer, had armed
themselves and barricaded the intersection of  | 
| 7 |  | Vine and Central to defend their businesses;
two platoons of  | 
| 8 |  | the Tennessee National Guard's 4th Infantry led by Adjutant  | 
| 9 |  | General Edward Sweeney arrived, but were unable to halt the  | 
| 10 |  | chaos; the mob broke into stores and stole firearms and other  | 
| 11 |  | weapons on their way to the
black business district; upon their  | 
| 12 |  | arrival, the streets erupted in gunfire as black snipers  | 
| 13 |  | exchanged fire with both rioters and soldiers; the Tennessee  | 
| 14 |  | National Guard at one point fired 2 machine guns  | 
| 15 |  | indiscriminately into the
neighborhood, eventually dispersing  | 
| 16 |  | the rioters; shooting continued sporadically for several  | 
| 17 |  | hours; outgunned, the
black defenders gradually fled, allowing  | 
| 18 |  | the guardsmen to gain control of the area; newspapers placed  | 
| 19 |  | the death toll at
just 2 persons, though eyewitness accounts  | 
| 20 |  | suggest the dead were so many that the bodies were dumped into  | 
| 21 |  | the Tennessee
River, while others were buried in mass graves  | 
| 22 |  | outside the city; and
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| 23 |  |  WHEREAS, A racial holocaust in Detroit, Michigan in 1943  | 
| 24 |  | flared from the increased friction over the sharp rise in the  | 
| 25 |  | black population, which led to competition with whites on the  | 
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| 1 |  | job and housing markets; on June 20, 1943, rioting broke out on  | 
| 2 |  | Belle
Isle, a recreational area used by both races but  | 
| 3 |  | predominately by blacks; fist fights escalated into a major  | 
| 4 |  | conflict; the
first wave of looting and bloodshed began in the  | 
| 5 |  | "Paradise Valley" and later spread to other sections of the
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| 6 |  | city; white mobs attacked blacks in the downtown area and  | 
| 7 |  | traveled into black neighborhoods by car; by the time
federal  | 
| 8 |  | troops arrived to halt the racial holocaust, black communities  | 
| 9 |  | and homes were damaged in amounts exceeding $2 million; and
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| 10 |  |  WHEREAS, Many blacks were economically distressed because  | 
| 11 |  | of the loss of homes, businesses, and jobs from previous racial
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| 12 |  | holocausts; they migrated to areas like Chicago, New York,  | 
| 13 |  | California, D.C., New Jersey, and Maryland, where they
found  | 
| 14 |  | refuge and safety with other family members as well as entry  | 
| 15 |  | level employment, government subsidies, and low-income  | 
| 16 |  | housing; and
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| 17 |  |  WHEREAS, Most of the black communities that were attacked  | 
| 18 |  | from 1914 to 1943 were completely abandoned or regentrified,
or  | 
| 19 |  | have continued to struggle because of the social, racial, and  | 
| 20 |  | economic barriers that accompany generational
poverty; as  | 
| 21 |  | descendants of black slaves struggled to recreate wealth and  | 
| 22 |  | make demands for equal education and social and
workforce  | 
| 23 |  | opportunities, over 700 racial holocausts took place between  | 
| 24 |  | 1964 and 1971, adding to the debilitating forces against blacks
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| 1 |  | which further pushed them behind the economic development  | 
| 2 |  | curve; and
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| 3 |  |  WHEREAS, Racial holocausts in the United States and their  | 
| 4 |  | consequences for black communities have served as a constant  | 
| 5 |  | reminder of the open platforms for constant displacement  | 
| 6 |  | through the destruction of small
businesses and housing which  | 
| 7 |  | has created the inability for blacks to rise above; lacking  | 
| 8 |  | business or homeowners
insurance, blacks have left the land to  | 
| 9 |  | be bought by developers or surrendered for delinquent taxes;
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| 10 |  | solving the attendant poverty problems and re-building the  | 
| 11 |  | economic capacity that could re-circulate community dollars  | 
| 12 |  | would create sustainability; and
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| 13 |  |  WHEREAS, Research by social scientists William Collins and  | 
| 14 |  | Robert Margo, published in the National Bureau of Economic
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| 15 |  | Research Working Paper 10243, shows that black communities have  | 
| 16 |  | never recovered from the economic
impact created by racial  | 
| 17 |  | holocausts; the studies show economic disadvantages that were  | 
| 18 |  | created to keep black communities under
the poverty level and  | 
| 19 |  | classified as the working poor; finally, the studies show the  | 
| 20 |  | impact of segregation on the rising prices of impoverished  | 
| 21 |  | urban developments and the socioeconomic factors that created  | 
| 22 |  | the downward spiral in black communities and
real estate  | 
| 23 |  | values; and
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| 1 |  |  WHEREAS, Many urban renewal initiatives and public housing  | 
| 2 |  | transformation projects, among other pilot
programs, were  | 
| 3 |  | created in the City of Chicago and other cities; other small  | 
| 4 |  | business and community initiatives were
also implemented;  | 
| 5 |  | however, other ethnic races entering black communities were  | 
| 6 |  | able to be funded and financed, while
black business owners  | 
| 7 |  | were driven to close and work part-time minimum wage jobs to  | 
| 8 |  | survive; black citizens migrated to other communities in  | 
| 9 |  | surrounding areas; the initiatives were promoted as a way to  | 
| 10 |  | create access, growth,
and equal opportunities for  | 
| 11 |  | communities, but promoted renting instead of property  | 
| 12 |  | ownership, thus creating
an economic gap which allowed other  | 
| 13 |  | nationalities to fill the demands for small businesses and  | 
| 14 |  | property ownership in black
communities; therefore, be it
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| 15 |  |  RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE  | 
| 16 |  | HUNDREDTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we  | 
| 17 |  | urge the United States Congress to rewrite history and redefine  | 
| 18 |  | the race riots as racial holocaust; and be it further
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| 19 |  |  RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be  | 
| 20 |  | delivered to President Donald Trump, U.S. Senate Majority  | 
| 21 |  | Leader Mitch McConnell, U.S. Senate Minority Leader Chuck  | 
| 22 |  | Schumer, U.S. Speaker of the House Paul Ryan, U.S. House of  | 
| 23 |  | Representatives Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, and all members  | 
| 24 |  | of the Illinois Congressional Delegation.
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