Created Equal: America’s Civil rights Struggle
Dr. James Cameron and
America’s Black Holocaust
Museum
Reggie Jackson from America’s Black Holocaust Museum returns to talk about civil rights
activist and Milwaukee icon Dr. James Cameron, who survived a lynching as a
young man, and founded Milwaukee’s America’s Black Holocaust Museum.
Dr. Cameron’s lifework focused on raising Americans’ consciousness and conscience about the atrocity of lynching. He did this by publicly and tirelessly retelling his personal experience. To educate the public about the injustices suffered by people of African descent in America, Cameron founded and ran the America’s Black Holocaust Museum from the mid-eighties until his death.
All films and
discussions are free and open to the public
This series is made possible by a grant from the National
Endowment for the Humanities and Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Please call the library at (414)
351-3461
or stop by the Reference Desk
to register.
If you require special
accommodations, notify the
Library Director Richard
Nelson at least 72 hours in advance.
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