Fires burning in Tulsa’s Black community of Greenwood on June 1, 1921, during the Tulsa Race Massacre.Photo: Courtesy of University of Tulsa - McFarlin Library Special Collections

Tulsa Race Massacre

“There are innumerable reasons why the Department of Justice should intervene in this case,” said the letter dated Friday from the groupJustice for Greenwood. “First, the City perpetrated the massacre and then led the cover up of the massacre for 75 years. Over the last 20 years and currently, the City’s official position is they are not responsible for the horrendous loss of life, land, or livelihood that they caused.”

According to the PBS documentaryTulsa: The Fire and the Forgotten, the massacre was sparked after a young Black man entered a downtown elevator and bumped a white woman, who alleged he’d assaulted her. With the Black teen caught and jailed, theTulsa Tribunenewspaper published an editorial headlined, “To Lynch Negro Tonight.”

Aftermath of the Greenwood community following the 1921 Tulsa race massacre.Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

Tulsa Race Massacre

Black men from Greenwood went to the courthouse to protect him. A gunshot rang out. A white crowd then moved on Greenwood, where looting and fires erupted.

The state commission placed the property losses at $1.8 million, equivalent to $27 million today.

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No one was charged. Two weeks later, then–Tulsa Mayor T.D. Evans concluded in a written City Commission report, “Let the blame for this negro uprising lie right where it belongs … on those armed negroes and their followers who started this trouble and who instigated it,” according to the documentary.

Estimates say as many as 300 people died. According toThe Washington Post, eyewitnesses claimed that bodies of Black people were thrown into mass graves, into the Arkansas River, or taken away after being loaded onto trucks or trains.

Current Tulsa Mayor G.T. Bynum in 2018 committed his city to “providing healing and justice,” which included a renewed investigation into searching for mass graves. The cityhas documented those ongoing efforts online.

Greenwood’s Mt. Zion Baptist Church burns during the Tulsa Race Massacre, June 1, 2021.Courtesy of University of Tulsa - McFarlin Library Special Collections. Thanks, Jeff

Tulsa Race Massacre

But anoutcry arose in Juneafter the city chose to rebury 19 bodies exhumed from a possible mass grave in a city-owned cemetery, including the remains of one Black man whose skeletal remains revealed multiple gunshot wounds to his head and shoulder, before any potential connection to the massacre was made public, reports thePost.

“The scientists leading the technical analysis of the remains have obtained all the data they need from the physical remains, so the remains were reburied in accordance with the previously agreed upon plan,” Bynum said in an Aug. 2 email to the Tulsa City Council and shared with PEOPLE.

He added: “Those scientists will now use the data they have obtained to develop a final report presenting their findings, which will be presented in the Fall. This report will include their recommendations for next steps.”

The city, through spokesman Michelle Brooks, declined to comment on the letter to the justice department, citing pending litigation between the city and the Justice for Greenwood group.

A spokesman for the justice department acknowledged receipt of the letter but also declined comment, reportsThe New York Times.

Among those who signed the letter were Regina Goodwin, an Oklahoma state legislator who represents the Greenwood district, who told PEOPLE in May: “Some 300 people were murdered, 1,256 homes burnt to the ground. White folks in particular that had committed the crime didn’t want it discussed, of course. And the Black folks that were victims of the crime knew that no one was ever charged or convicted, so it would be difficult to really have a conversation if you thought you were going to get justice.”

She continued: “Black lives for some folks still don’t matter in Oklahoma. And certainly when you saw a massacre, and you talk about the fire and the forgotten, that was evidence that those Black lives did not matter. Before there was aGeorge Floyd….” She paused.

“The through line is continual,” she said. “And the difficulty is when people don’t want to learn the facts.”

“History will be forgotten if it’s never taught,” she said.

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source: people.com