Related Resources

The Tulsa Massacre’s Effects on the Black Community 100 Years Later | PBS NewsHour

Tiffany Crutcher, a native of Tulsa and a civil rights activist whose twin brother, Terence Crutcher, was shot and killed by a police officer in 2016, joins Yamiche Alcindor to discuss the Tulsa massacre, how it still affects the local Black community, and what reparations the community desires.

Directions: Read the summary, watch the video and answer the discussion questions below. To read the transcript of the video above, click here.

June 3, 2021 video and resource materials from PBS NewsHour. Find the original story at PBS NewsHour Extra.

  • Crutcher’s great-grandmother fled Tulsa during a concerted attack against the Black community of Tulsa in 1921. During the attack, anywhere from 74 to 300 Black Tulsans were killed, hundreds more were hospitalized and up to 6,000 people were rounded up by officials and put into internment camps.
  • The attack also destroyed many Black homes and businesses, ending a business district that was once known as “Black Wall Street.”
  • Crutcher suggests that more needs to be done to atone for the attack, though does mention an apology from a National Guard officer for the Guard not doing enough 100 years before was a “powerful moment.”

Discussion questions: 

Warm up questions: Have your students identify the 5Ws and an H:

  • Who is interviewed in this piece and why?
  • What happened in Tulsa 100 years ago?
  • When was Terence Crutcher shot and killed by police?
  • How does Tiffany Crutcher connect the events from 100 years ago to civil rights struggles today?
  • Why is the loss from 100 years ago still felt today, according to Crutcher?

Focus questions: What do you think is the best way for communities to respond to difficult or harmful episodes in their histories?

Media literacy: How did they cover it? Read the headlines and more from the front page of the Tulsa World printed during the attack. Then discuss: How does the writing reflect the biases of the authors? What do you know now about Tulsa that isn’t accurately reflected on the front page of the paper? To explore more ways important historical moments were covered at the time, visit our site, Journalism in Action.

Publisher
PBS Learning Media

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