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		'We have a long way to go:' Descendants of first black Americans on race 
		relations
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		 [August 05, 2019] 
		By Angela Moore 
 HAMPTON, Va. (Reuters) - Four hundred years 
		after the first ship carrying enslaved Africans arrived on the coast of 
		Virginia, the descendants of one of the first black American families 
		say race relations in the United States still have "a long way to go."
 
 The Tucker family, who trace their ancestry to the 1624 census of the 
		then British colony of Virginia, has experienced every chapter of 
		African-American history.
 
 From captivity on ships to slavery on plantations, to the 1861-1865 U.S. 
		Civil War waged over legal slavery, 20th century discrimination laws and 
		lynchings, the civil rights struggle and to the Black Lives Matter 
		movement, racial disparities course through life and politics in the 
		United States.
 
 "The race issues have always been here," said Vincent Tucker, the 
		president of the William Tucker 1624 Society who believes he is nine or 
		10 generations removed from William Tucker, born in Virginia in 1624 
		after his parents were transported from present-day Angola in 1619.
 
 "We have a long way to go," Tucker, 57, said.
 
 Brenda Tucker, 77, another descendant of William who serves on the 
		family society's board, said she supported efforts by some Democratic 
		lawmakers https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-election-warren/senator-elizabeth-warren-backs-reparations-for-black-americans-idUSKCN1QA2WF 
		to have the federal government issue reparations to black Americans who 
		were economically affected by slavery.
 
 "Reparations, I think, would be very appropriate because we, as hard as 
		we worked and continue to work, we were not able to establish businesses 
		to grow other businesses in mass, and that's what it's going to take to 
		grow our economic state," she said.
 
 Issuing reparations to all living people who are descendents of slaves 
		or who have suffered racial discrimination has been estimated to cost 
		trillions of dollars. The U.S. government has never approved 
		reparations.
 
 Some Democratic candidates  seeking the party's nomination to run 
		against Republican President Donald Trump in the 2020 election support 
		reparations for African Americans who for generations were held back by 
		legal discrimination and general prejudice.
 
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            Trump, from his days as a New York businessman, in his 2016 election 
			campaign and as president, has been criticized for making 
			inflammatory statements that stoke racial tensions.
 In July, Trump lashed out in Twitter posts against four minority 
			Democratic first-term congresswomen and U.S. Representative Elijah 
			Cummings, a black longtime civil rights activist. The statements, 
			including saying the congresswomen should "go back" to the countries 
			they came from, were widely viewed as racially divisive, underlining 
			the extent to which those divisions have persisted through the 
			centuries.
 
 Brenda Tucker said she believed Trump fanned racial divisions 
			through his rhetoric.
 
            
			 
			"As far as whether or not he's fueling racism, he's fueling it," she 
			told Reuters.
 Trump has repeatedly denied that racial animus drove his comments, 
			telling reporters last week, "I am the least racist person there is 
			anywhere in the world."
 
 Tucker spoke in front of her ancestors' graves in a cemetery in 
			Hampton, Virginia, less than a mile from the plantation where her 
			ancestors were enslaved.
 
 Some Tuckers have left Hampton over the years, but many have stayed, 
			intent on preserving the family's oral history.
 
 "People can look at us and say, 'Hey, they made it," said Vincent 
			Tucker. "'They're still making it.'"
 
 (Reporting by Angela Moore; Writing by Gabriella Borter; Editing by 
			Scott Malone and Grant McCool)
 
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