Recorded March 5, 2021
Boston still strives to live up to the legacy of Melnea Cass, one of the city’s most dynamic civil rights leaders of the 20th century. Join panelists Monica Cannon-Grant of Violence in Boston and Kai Grant of Black Market for a discussion of how our memories of Cass can help us channel our sense of grief as Bostonians into a call for lasting change.
This event took place on March 5, the 251st anniversary of the Boston Massacre. One of the first to fall that night was Crispus Attucks, a man of African and Native descent. His presence inspired generations of activists—including Cass—in their fight for equality. She revived the tradition of a Crispus Attucks Day civic event on March 5 during the height of the busing crisis to express the strength of the Black community in the face of white violence.
Boston stands at a similar historical moment: Marked by deep losses, yet presented with an opportunity to draw on the power of history to transform our despair into hope, and remember that sometimes justice grows in times of greatest loss. The event will be an opportunity to reaffirm Cass’s lasting impact on the city, reflect on the meaning of Attucks today, and imagine the contours of a new March 5 event that can bring all Bostonians together in community.
The panel also features a performance by poet and storyteller Dzidzor.
Panelists
- MONICA CANNON-GRANT, the CEO and founder of the Violence In Boston Inc., a nonprofit working to improve the quality of life and life outcomes of individuals from disenfranchised communities by reducing the prevalence of violence and the impact of associated trauma. As a former Black Lives Matter activist, Monica organized 55,000 people last year to protest the murder of George Floyd and the many others murdered by police across the country. She was named Bostonian of the Year for 2020 by the Boston Globe, Social Justice Advocate of the Year by Bostonian Magazine and one of the top ten leaders of the year by Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce. She has resided in the Roxbury area for 17 years.
- KAI GRANT, the founder of Black Market along with her husband Christopher, creating Nubian Square’s first flexible cultural event spaces with a signature artisan marketplace. She now manages Black Market’s programming, which focuses on reigniting Roxbury’s creative economy. Her family has been in Boston’s Roxbury neighborhood for over 100 years as educators, entrepreneurs, political leaders, artists, spiritual leaders, and military leaders. Kai has been awarded citations by the Boston City Council, the Governor of Massachusetts, the Black & Latino Caucus, the NAACP, and a host of local organizations in recognition of her many achievements.
- DZIDZOR (Jee-Jaw) is an African folklore, performing artist, author and entrepreneur. Didzor’s style of call and response, has re-imagined poetry and story-telling as a way to include the audience in a experience to challenge, inspire and encourage self beyond traditional forms. She began performing through slam poetry and now curates spaces Black Cotton Club, and teaches in Boston.
- The discussion will be moderated by MALIA LAZU, founder of the Lazu Group, is an award winning, tenured strategist in diversity & inclusion who sparked deep economic development and investment in urban entrepreneurship. Most recently, she worked to generate wealth for communities by expanding access to capital and spurring economic growth as EVP and Regional President at Berkshire Bank. She was named one of Essence Magazine’s 50 founders to watch, and sits on the boards of Revolutionary Spaces, the Boston Chamber of Commerce, Massachusetts Business Roundtable, as well as the Nation Magazine Editorial Board.
This event is generously sponsored by the Lowell Institute and New England Women’s Club Fund at the Boston Foundation.
Reflecting Attucks is a virtual exhibit that explores the memory of Crispus Attucks, a man of African and Native descent who was the first to die at the Boston Massacre, an act of protest widely viewed as a turning point on the road to American Revolution.
In this exhibit, we delve into Attucks’s world and look at how generations of Americans have seen their own reflection in the image of Attucks standing in the face of fierce opposition. By remembering him as a martyr, leader and courageous fighter, they fueled freedom movements that changed the course of history.
More Recent Reflecting Attucks Events
- VIDEO | Grief, Remembrance, JusticeAn exploration of how our memories of the legendary Boston activist Melnea Cass can help us channel grief into a call for lasting change.Read more →
- VIDEO | Attucks and the Birth of a NationJAN 27: How William Monroe Trotter, a prominent Black Boston activist, protested the white nationalist film by invoking the memory of Crispus Attucks.Read more →
- VIDEO | Monumental AttucksNOV 10: African American leaders in late 19th century Boston fought to create a lasting monument to Crispus Attucks on Boston Common.Read more →
- VIDEO | Demanding Freedom: Attucks and the Abolition Movement19th presented Attucks as the first martyr of the Revolution who died fighting for liberty, an image that resonated powerfully with those seeking emancipation for African Americans.Read more →
- Video | Imagining AttucksExplores how Attucks has been interpreted through the years and grapples with the challenges that come with bringing Attucks to life.Read more →
- Video | Liberty & Sovereignty in 18th Century New EnglandExamining the political conversations that were taking place around the time of the Boston Massacre among white colonists and the African- and Native-descended communities.Read more →
- Video | Man of Many Worlds Online PanelA lively discussion about Attucks’s Afro-Indian community and reflect on the experiences he might have had that informed his thinking about resistance and protest and ultimately brought him to King Street on the night of the Boston Massacre.Read more →
- Video | Discovering Crispus – A Play in ProcessExploring how the memory of Attucks has inspired generations of activists to fight for social change.Read more →
Join the #ReflectingAttucks Conversation
Upcoming Events
- Massacre and Memory TourBEGINNING MARCH 3: A half-mile guided walking tour that explores the surprisingly small geography of colonial Boston to uncover the roots of the Boston Massacre and includes entry to the Old State House and Old South Meeting House.Read more →
- Special Member TourMAR 30: In this 60-minute tour, we’ll examine visual and textual representations of both powerful men and common people to understand how context impacts our confidence and trust in imagery. This tour is offered as a special benefit to Revolutionary Spaces Members and space is limited.Read more →
- Polly Sumner: Witness to the Boston Tea Party Book LaunchAPR 19: Author Richard C. Wiggin will read excerpts from his new children’s book, which tells the story of Polly Sumner, a real doll that arrived in Boston aboard one of the Tea Party ships 250 years ago.Read more →