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Martha Joan's avatar

I am in Berlin. This city has memorials everywhere. There are “stumbling stones” that mark where someone once lived before the Nazis took them and what happened to the person.

There is a memorial to the Jews murdered by the Nazis.

Memorials to the disabled, gay people and Parliament members killed.

And of course memorials to those lost in a divided Germany and Berlin

They carry their history forward to a new and better place

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Tony Haines's avatar

Well done, Diana.

I have five brothers and five of the six of us are Eagle Scouts. To attain that rank, you must identify, design, and complete a comprehensive project worthy of an Eagle Scout.

One of my brothers heard of an unkept cemetery and took took that on as his project. He received approval from the city, and with the help of my family and others in the community the project was completed and restored to its former glory.

During the process, my brother, with help from others discovered that the buried were early settlers in Alabama. Among the graves were both whites and blacks, some slaves and some free, buried together.

To this day, I wonder how a desegregated cemetery came into existence in the Heart of Dixie.

True history is our friend, romanticized history is not. The Alabama cemetery was and is real history of slave and freed blacks and whites buried together.

Go figure.

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