100 years after Tulsa Massacre, fight remains for insurance companies to pay up

In this photo provided by the Department of Special Collections, McFarlin Library, The University of Tulsa, a group of Black men are marched past the corner of 2nd and Main Streets in Tulsa, Okla., under armed guard during the Tulsa Race Massacre on June 1, 1921. On May 31, 1921, carloads of Black residents, some of them armed, rushed to the sheriff's office downtown to confront whites who were gathering apparently to abduct and lynch a Black prisoner in the jail. Gunfire broke out, and over the next 24 hours, a white mob inflamed by rumors of a Black insurrection stormed the Greenwood district and burned it, destroying all 35 square blocks. Estimates of those killed ranged from 50 to 300. (Department of Special Collections, McFarlin Library, The University of Tulsa via AP, File)

A century later, the issue is still not settled on the massacre of the wealthy Black Greenwood district in Tulsa, Oklahoma. 

One hundred years ago, Black families in Tulsa were denied financial restitution from insurance companies after the massacre that occurred between May 31 and June 1, 1921. Ironically, some of the same insurers that denied those claims are still economically thriving today from that decision.

In this photo provided by the Department of Special Collections, McFarlin Library, The University of Tulsa, a group of Black men are marched past the corner of 2nd and Main Streets in Tulsa, Okla., under armed guard during the Tulsa Race Massacre on June 1, 1921. (Department of Special Collections, McFarlin Library, The University of Tulsa via AP, File)

“We know what was taken,” said Damario Solomon-Simmons, the lead attorney for the last living survivors of the Tulsa Race Massacre. “We also know some of the insurance companies that are still active today.”

Read More: Tulsa Race Massacre survivors deliver emotional pleas to Congress at hearing

Solomon-Simmons announced during a hearing before Congress that he wants to open a dialogue with “CNA, AIG companies, the Insurance Company of Pennsylvania, Westchester Fire Insurance Company, the Hartford, Great American Insurance Company, Insurance Company of North America, North River Insurance Company, California Insurance Company, Phoenix Insurance Company.”  

NAACP President Derrick Johnson contends this is an example of how Corporate America participates in structural racism. 

“It is not only the government of policies, it is not only the behaviors of individuals, it’s the ongoing collusion of Corporate America who profited off of the [backs] of African Americans,” Johnson tells theGrio. “It wasn’t just a function of a region of the country in the South or local governments or the federal government. It was the ongoing participation of all society.”

In the midst of a new push for racial equity, 100 years after the displacement of 10,000 people and destruction of 35 blocks of the affluent Black enclave, President Joe Biden will travel to Greenwood on Tuesday. According to Biden Senior Advisor, Cedric Richmond, the administration is “recognizing the moment and we hope to meet the moment.”  

Cedric Richmond speaks at a press conference on Capitol Hill on February 14, 2018 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Aaron P. Bernstein/Getty Images)

Richmond, who also heads the White House Office of Public Engagement, said the president will connect his “racial equity agenda” and the “economy” to the visit. 

President Biden plans to meet with the remaining three living survivors of the Tulsa Race Massacre who are now centenarians. The survivors were children at the time of the massacre. Another portion of the president’s trip to the historic area is to visit the Greenwood Cultural Center. 

President Biden is expected to tell the story of the town and then of its downfall. Richmond underscored “it is a story in this country most people don’t know.”

As the story goes, a Black man and white woman were in an integrated elevator in a building. The white woman screamed for no apparent reason except for fear of a Black man. The scream began a chain of events that ended in death and the destruction of a town that was both the hope and dream of the slave of yesterday and the people of today. 

The state of Oklahoma created a commission on how to move forward with what happened in the Greenwood district. Action, however, has yet to be taken.

Now Congress is stepping in. Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee held a hearing on the matter where Georgia Congressman Hank Johnson stepped up by proposing to take on another legacy piece of legislation initially introduced by former Congressman John Conyers Jr.

Read More: 3 books on the Tulsa Race Massacre you should pay attention to 100 years after the attack

Rep. Hank Johnson (D-GA) (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Congressman Johnson has proposed the Tulsa Greenwood Race Massacre Accountability Act. He said it ”will bring some measure of accountability, and perhaps even compensation for the losses that those victims and their heirs suffered as a result of this state-sanctioned violence.”

The legislation seeks to redress the denied insurance claims and lost funds that banks held after the massacre. 

Johnson contends “the complicity of the state and the city in finding that it was a race riot” was a maneuver to block the survivors from recompense.

“All of those cases were dismissed and so the people never did get their just compensation in the courts of law,” Johnson tells theGrio.

Johnson is working on finding someone in the Senate to create a compassion bill to his measure in the House. 

Congresswoman Jackson Lee, who sits on the House Judiciary Committee, said the conversations about repairing what happened in Tulsa are underway.

Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee of Texas (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

“We’re talking also about reparations right now when it comes to Tulsa, Oklahoma, and the 100th anniversary of the massacre there, Black Wall Street, the destruction of a viable, economically viable, self-sustaining Black community that was broken up because of racism,” the Texas Congresswoman tells theGrio

Congresswoman Jackson Lee also highlighted that reparations is an international term and for that reason, Congress is working with organizations that focus on the international human rights aspect of the Tulsa Race Massacre, such as the Human Rights Watch. 

theGrio spoke exclusively to Congressman Gregory Meeks, chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, who also contends many of these race issues are human rights issues.

Chairman Rep. Gregory W. Meeks speaks as U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken testifies before the House Committee On Foreign Affairs March 10, 2021 on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC. (Photo by Ting Shen-Pool/Getty Images)

As a representative of the United States on the international stage, he makes it a point to talk with other countries about their human rights problems and account his own experiences as a Black man in the United States. 

”I say to them before they even have a chance, I’m not coming here to tell you that America is superior to you. I’m telling you that we are trying to fix our problems in America still to this day,” Meeks explained.

“And the right thing for you to do is when you to start doing the same thing, and I can’t sit back knowing the injustices that I have suffered … [and] allow that to continue someplace else …. and not speaking up about it.”

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