In August 1908, mobs of white residents tore through Illinois'
capital city under the pretext of meting out judgment against
two Black men. After authorities secretly moved the prisoners
from the jail and sent them to another lockup miles away, the
mob took out their anger on the city's Black population.
The riot fueled the formation of the influential civil rights
organization the National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People (NAACP) in 1909.
White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said during a
briefing with reporters this week that the ceremony will be held
on Friday in the Oval Office and will feature civil rights
leaders and community leaders from Springfield, which is also
former President Abraham Lincoln's hometown.
"The new national monument will tell the story of a horrific
attack by a white mob on a Black community that was
representative of the racism, intimidation, and violence that
Black Americans experienced across the country," the White House
said in a statement.
The event comes a few weeks after the fatal July shooting of
Sonya Massey, a 36-year-old Black woman, by a white sheriff's
deputy in her Springfield home after she called 911 for help.
Massey's death has reignited the debate over police brutality
against Black Americans four years after the murder of George
Floyd by the police in Minneapolis, which led to protests over
racial inequality.
In June 2021, Biden became the first sitting U.S. president to
visit a site in Tulsa, Oklahoma, where hundreds of Black
Americans were massacred by a white mob in 1921, and he said the
legacy of racist violence and white supremacy still resonates.
The same month, he and Vice President Kamala Harris signed a
bill into law to make June 19 a federal holiday commemorating
the emancipation of enslaved Black Americans.
(Reporting by Nandita Bose in Washington; Editing by Jamie
Freed)
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