Racist slur defaces African Burial Ground Monument in Lower Manhattan
THE NEW YORK TIMES
By Ali Watkins
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| African Burial Ground Monument in Lower Manhattan is considered a symbol of New York’s prominent and long-ignored role in colonial African-American culture. Credit: Mary Hardiman/The New York Times |
The African Burial Ground Monument in Lower Manhattan, a treasured site for the nation’s black community, was defaced with a racist slur on Thursday, the authorities said. In black marker, a vandal scrawled “Kill,” followed by the slur, on a plaque at the monument. The authorities said they did not have a suspect in the incident. Discovered in 1991 during construction of an office building, the six-acre burial ground is estimated to contain 15,000 intact skeletal remains of New York City’s colonial African-American community, who were not allowed at the time to be interred in traditional church cemeteries. Many were slaves. The monument, which is steps from City Hall, is considered a literal and figurative symbol of New York’s prominent and long-ignored role in colonial African-American culture. [More]
