Survivors
Use attributes for filter ! | |
First episode date | November 23, 2008 |
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Final episode date | February 23, 2010 |
Networks | BBC |
BBC One | |
Creators | Terry Nation |
Adrian Hodges | |
Feb 16, 2010 | |
Liked | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 896876 |
About Survivors
A handful of survivors are left after a flu-like virus wipes out most of the world's population.
Thalidomide: Australia gives national apology to survivors and families
...By Hannah RitchieBBC News, SydneyAustralia s prime minister has given a national apology to Survivors of the thalidomide scandal and their families...
Scout Association fees rise to pay for new safeguarding measures
...By Paul Grant & Hayley HassallBBC File on 4The Scout Association is overhauling its safeguarding procedures following a campaign by abuse Survivors - with a membership fee rise to cover the costs...
Afghanistan: Thousands dead and homes flattened in earthquakes
... Whole villages were flattened in some areas - Survivors are mourning relatives and friends and many have lost homes and livestock...
Libya floods: 5,300 dead amid calls for humanitarian support
... Rescue teams are digging through the rubble of collapsed buildings in the hope of finding Survivors - but hope is waning and the death toll is still expected to rise further...
Manipur: India outrage after two women paraded naked in violence-hit state
... It has also raised questions about the failure of the state in comforting the Survivors - and finally forced Mr Modi to make a statement on the ethnic violence...
'Church seems less safe' says bishop after abuse panel sacked
... Their sacking has been met with criticism from some Survivors and their advocates and now some members of the clergy...
Turkey earthquake: Hope as foreign help arrives in quake-ravaged Antakya
... The men and women from UK International Service and Rescue took a round of applause from the waiting crowd and moved on, looking for more Survivors...
South Korea Halloween crush: The lost belongings in pictures
... But now - just days later - Survivors and victims families have been invited into the hall, so they can pick out items that belonged to them or their loved ones...
Trump in Tulsa: a city on a violent past before the rally
President Donald Trump has moved to Rally his Tulsa-Saturday
President, Donald Trump holds his first political Rally since the beginning of the pandemic in Tulsa, Oklahoma, this weekend. His choice of location and the date of the voltages in a city, the fight to have collected, with his history of Violent Racism .
1. In June 1921, a white mob ransacked the affluent black neighborhood of Greenwood , killing an estimated 300 people and burning keep the 35 blocks of homes and businesses on the ground
The bodies of The Victims were buried in mass graves and, for decades, The Memory of those terrible first days in June were buried with them.
"after The Massacre , both the black and white swept this under the carpet," Says Mechelle Brown, program coordinator at the Greenwood Cultural center preserves the history of the neighborhood.
"concentrate, you had to survive. She said that talking about it meant to be experienced once, and it was to experience painful. "
The Killing began after a young Black Man accused, a young white woman in a downtown office Elevator .
Greenwood was once known as " Black Wall StreetThe Man , Dick Rowland , was arrested and there were fears that he would be lynched. A group of African Americans went to prison to protect him, and were faced with a larger group of white men. Shots were fired and the resulting violence lasted for several days.
thousands of white men, some of them rose deputised by The Police , in Greenwood , in. Ten Thousand people were driven from their homes. Others were murdered. Eye witnesses said the planes above their heads circled bombs of turpentine or coal oil, and the buildings were lit from the ground.
It was the deadliest single act of racial violence in American History remains.
no one was ever charged in the plunder and destruction and city officials, who were there, or took part - have never been accountable to protect drawn for the failure of their black residents.
The neighborhood, the recovery is never complete from The MassacreBut as the 100-year anniversary of the Tulsa race massacre approaches, has started The City to reckon with his past.
A Commission was Set Up , The Graves , to locate and identify The Victims - postponed although a test excavation was at one of the sites, because of the Corona Virus pandemic. Special attention was directed to the training with the plans, that the history of Greenwood in all Oklahoma state schools. And the neighborhood is being promoted as a cultural and tourism destination.
Oklahoma's Republican Governor Kevin Stitt has invited Mr Trump and Vice-President Mike Pence to tour Greenwood before the Saturday Rally , a move that has outraged many of the inhabitants.
Thirty -five blocks of Greenwood was burned during The MassacreThe President , an unarmed Black Man , was often accused of hate speech and fomenting racial divisions during the protests, according to George Floyd, who was killed by a white Police Officer in Minneapolis in the past month. He claimed that the law and order approach, the critics say, has not addressed the concerns of the peaceful protesters.
Some Tulsa residents say The President 's visit to Greenwood would be disrespectful, and increase The Risk of the spread of the coronavirus within a vulnerable community. Statistics show that the number of fatalities among African-Americans is disproportionately higher than for White People .
"We Are very concerned about all these people in our state than to visit as a group in our community, the Greenwood Cultural Center. This is how you directly to Our House ," Says TheRese Adunis, whose grandparents survived the Tulsa race massacre and whose father was born a few months later.
"As we come to the 100-year anniversary of The Massacre , Greenwood is stop a hot tourist now. Our city and our state want to promote, but it's like, you want to make money and you want to be known for our misery, but you don't care about our lives," she Says .
Tulsa Rally will be The President for the first time since the pandemic lockdown beganshe is also angry that despite repeated promises no reparations ever paid to The Survivors of The Massacre , and has done little to reduce social and economic disparities within The City .
Before The Massacre , Greenwood was known as Black Wall Street , the richest African-American neighborhood In America , with approximately 300 black-owned businesses.
It was a center for jazz and blues, which influenced deeply The Music legend Count Basie . Apart from a handful of historical markers, there is little evidence that the prosperity of today. In North Tulsa, with its population of 65,000 African-Americans who remain separated by the railway tracks of the predominantly white and wealthy southern part of The City .
"you want to fix credit for talking instead of possession and it," said Damario Solomon Simmons, a lawyer and activist in Tulsa, who has represented some of The Survivors .
Greenwood was to be a vibrant black communityHe was attending a Rally with Rev Al Sharpton on 19. June, a date also known as Juneteenth, a national commemoration of The End of slavery in the United States.
President Trump had planned to take his campaign Rally on Juneteenth but postponed it by A Day after local protests.
"It is an opportunity to the history of Greenwood and The Massacre for his own benefit," Says Mr. Solomon Simmons. "This is what we see in the whole city of powerful people, and the favor of the story push their agenda and give cover to their gentrification efforts. "
According to the 1921 massacre, Greenwood residents back to their community, without help or money from The State . For a while flowered, but never fully recovered and eventually rejected.
A tape of Martin Luther King day marches in 2016 in GreenwoodMr. Solomon Simmons Says the death of George Floyd sparked a new awareness for the continuing inequalities and injustices that faced African-Americans.
"we advocate for the legislation, we have to double our efforts. The Time is now. I can't imagine a better time, with the whole world," he Says .
donald trump, united states, us race relations
Source of news: bbc.com