| Democracy,
Dialogue, and Community Action
Truth and Reconciliation in Greensboro
Spoma Jovanovic
History
of the First Truth and Reconciliation Commission in the United
States
On November
3, 1979, five protest marchers in Greensboro, North Carolina,
were shot and killed by the Ku Klux Klan and the American
Nazi Party. There were no police present, but television crews
captured the shootings on video. Despite two criminal trials,
none of the killers ever served time for their crimes, exposing
what many believed to be the inadequacy of judicial, political,
and economic systems in the United States.
Twenty-five
years later, in 2004, Greensboro residents, inspired by post-apartheid
South Africa, initiated a Truth and Reconciliation Commission
(TRC) to take public testimony and examine the causes, sequence
of events, and consequences of the massacre. The TRC was to
be a process and a tool by which citizens could feel confident
about the truth of the city’s history in order to reconcile
divergent understandings of past and current city values,
and it became the foundation for the first Truth and Reconciliation
Commission in the United States.
Spoma
Jovanovic, who worked alongside other community members to
document the grassroots effort to convene the first TRC in
the United States, provides a resource and case study of how
citizens in one
community used their TRC as a way to understand the past and
conceive the future. This book preserves the historical significance
of a people’s
effort to seek truth and work for reconciliation, shows a
variety of discourse models for other communities to use in
seeking to redress past harms, and demonstrates the power
of community action to promote participatory democracy.
Spoma
Jovanovic is associate professor of communication
studies at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro
November
6 x 9 • 285 pages
$34.95 (s) cloth • 978-1-55728-991-9
e-book available • 978-1-61075-509-2
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