Friday, July 29, 2011

Follow Friday: Healing Slavery's Wounds at www.comingtothetable.org

A few weeks ago there was a great article in People magazine of all places called Healing Slavery's Wounds. It's a great article, full of individual stories about genealogists who are the descendants of slaves and enslavers who have come to terms with their shared pasts. For some reason, People doesn't have it online, but you can download a copy here.

The article mentioned a great Web site that's new to me called Coming to the Table. Their About section states:

The Coming to the Table story is about connecting people and the past to the present and future in a way that is relevant for our nation. Housed at Eastern Mennonite University’s Center for Justice and Peacebuilding, CTTT was launched when people whose ancestors were connected through an enslaved/enslaver relationship realized they had a shared story that remained untold. Today, they and many others believe that the legacies and aftermath of slavery impact our nation in seen and unseen ways and they are committed to writing and telling a new story about our nation’s past and the promise of our collective future.

Resources on the site include:

Read more about researching slavery at:


I recently learned that my husband has a mulatto line that starts in Virginia, so I'm hoping these resources will help.

3 comments:

  1. Thanks for providing a link to the article in "People". I usually only read it at the hair salon, and I'll still look for it there because all the 20-something hair stylists are in LOVE with the TV show WDYTYA. They'll love the link and they'll be picking my brains about their own family trees again when they see this!

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  2. Thanks for posting this! I would have missed it if you hadn't posted it. Related to this story would be the book "Slaves In the Family" by Edward Ball. While you won't get research links or places to go with this book it is a truly captivating story. Here's the link from Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Slaves-Family-Edward-Ball/dp/0345431057

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  3. kin, I've read Ball's book, but I thought it was badly flawed and I hope a more talented author takes on the same topic soon. Ball is so intrusive and constantly abjures the reader to feelings that they could easily reach on their own if he's just step back a bit. And I find it frankly unbelievable that he goes to a single meeting of a Harlem genealogical society and out of the dozen people there, one is a descendant of slaves from his family's plantations.

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