At all levels of government, we haven't done nearly enough to protect sites like Olivewood Cemetery, which was established in 1875.
Olivewood Cemetery, established in 1875, is the final resting place for some the earliest Black residents of Houston, Texas, where I was born and raised. To walk among the headstones at Olivewood, as I have with local leaders, is to grapple with the area's fraught racial history and gain a deeper understanding of the resilience of the city's African American community.
The policy explicitly recognizes that the federal government has hurt many with its actions, particularly American Indian, Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian, Indigenous, and African American communities. It calls out the federal Indian boarding school system for traumatizing tribal families and communities, putting children into marked and unmarked graves.
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