Current:Home > MarketsCharleston's new International African American Museum turns site of trauma into site of triumph -Capitatum
Charleston's new International African American Museum turns site of trauma into site of triumph
Rekubit View
Date:2025-04-06 00:17:09
The power of resilience can be felt throughout the new International African-American Museum in Charleston, South Carolina.
The $120 million project, which opened its doors this summer, is no ordinary tourist attraction. The museum is built on scarred and sacred ground: Gadsden's Wharf, the arrival point for nearly half of all enslaved Africans shipped to the U.S.
"We were able to find this outline of what had been a building. And we believe it was one of the main storehouses," said Malika Pryor, the museum's chief learning and engagement officer. "We do know that captured Africans, once they were brought into the wharf, were often in many cases held in these storehouses awaiting their price to increase."
Pryor guided CBS News through nine galleries that track America's original sin: the history of the Middle Passage, when more than 12 million enslaved people were shipped from Africa as human cargo. The exhibits recount their anguish and despair.
"I think sometimes we need to be shocked," she said.
Exhibits at the museum also pay homage to something else: faith that freedom would one day be theirs.
"I expect different people to feel different things," said Tonya Matthews, CEO and president of the museum. "You're going to walk in this space and you're going to engage, and what it means to you is going to be transformational."
By design, it is not a museum about slavery, but instead a monument to freedom.
"This is a site of trauma," Matthews said. "But look who's standing here now. That's what makes it a site of joy, and triumph."
Rep. James Clyburn, South Carolina's veteran congressman, championed the project for more than 20 years. He said he sees it as a legacy project.
"This entire thing tells me a whole lot about how complicated my past has been," he said. "It has the chance of being the most consequential thing that I've ever done."
Mark Strassmann has been a CBS News correspondent since January 2001 and is based in the Atlanta bureau.
veryGood! (2)
Related
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- 15 Oregon police cars burned overnight at training facility
- Madeleine McCann’s Parents Share They're Still in Disbelief 17 Years After Disappearance
- After top betting choices Fierceness and Sierra Leone, it’s wide open for the 150th Kentucky Derby
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Traffic snarled as workers begin removing bridge over I-95 following truck fire in Connecticut
- Bryan Kohberger's lawyer claims prosecution has withheld the audio of key video evidence in Idaho murders case
- Kevin Spacey hits back at documentary set to feature allegations 'dating back 48 years'
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- Self-exiled Chinese businessman’s chief of staff pleads guilty weeks before trial
Ranking
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- Colorado school bus aide shown hitting autistic boy faces more charges
- South Dakota Gov. Noem erroneously describes meeting with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un in new book
- Kendrick Lamar doubles down with fiery Drake diss: Listen to '6:16 in LA'
- $73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
- Troops fired on Kent State students in 1970. Survivors see echoes in today’s campus protest movement
- Researchers found the planet's deepest under-ocean sinkhole — and it's so big, they can't get to the bottom
- The Lakers fire coach Darvin Ham after just 2 seasons in charge and 1st-round playoff exit
Recommendation
Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
Runaway steel drum from Pittsburgh construction site hits kills woman
Q&A: What’s the Deal with Bill Gates’s Wyoming Nuclear Plant?
Judge in Trump’s hush money case clarifies gag order doesn’t prevent ex-president from testifying
Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
A judge is forcing Hawaii to give wildfire investigation documents to lawyers handling lawsuits
Kenya floods hit Massai Mara game reserve, trapping tourists who climbed trees to await rescue by helicopter
Captain sentenced to four years following deadly fire aboard dive boat Conception in California