Background Circle Background Circle
Black Nonprofit Gets Six-Figure Donation From White Donor After Discovering His Great-Grandfather Was A Slave Owner

Black Nonprofit Gets Six-Figure Donation From White Donor After Discovering His Great-Grandfather Was A Slave Owner

A Black nonprofit organization in Kentucky received a six-figure donation after a white donor discovered their great-grandfather owned formerly enslaved people.

The organization, Change Today, Change Tomorrow (CTCT) was founded in Sept. 2019 and has served over 100,000 marginalized Louisville residents, according to its website. 

“It is a blessing for us but also definitely owed,” the nonprofit’s founder and executive director, Taylor Ryan, said Monday afternoon during a press conference, the Courier-Journal reported

According to CTCT, the donor, who chooses to remain anonymous, came across inheritance money on their 25th birthday and delved into their family’s history to find out the origins. 

“They investigated their family history to find out their great-grandfather had enslaved six individuals in Bourbon [County], Ky.,” Nannie Grace Croney, deputy director of CTCT said as the nonprofit announced the donation, NPR reports

The organization also released a statement from the donor, who found that their relative didn’t keep records of the formerly enslaved people’s names. 

“He inflicted the trauma and violence of slavery on six people for his own monetary gain and did not even bother to record their names. Although no amount of money could ever right that wrong, their descendants deserve repayment for what was taken,” the statement read. 

Croney noted that because the donor is “aware of how hoarding wealth is a huge contributing factor of inequity in this country, they decided that they should give most of it away.”

Initially, the group thought they were being pranked when they were contacted about the donation. Then, the money was wired to them. 

“So the initial emotion was like, ‘Oh this isn’t real,’ but once it was real, we knew that we had to act on it,” Croney said. “We knew that as disruptors and changemakers, we have to challenge other corporations, foundations and individuals to really pay reparations back.”

The payment will undoubtedly help support CTCT’s efforts as they originally launched to help secure school supplies for teachers, but have grown exponentially over the last two years. Now, they have programs geared towards education, food justice and public health. Some of their outreach measures include providing hot meals for students, menstruation products and food deliveries with fresh produce from a Black-owned farm. 

And as conversations around reparations continue to permeate the national consciousness, the donor is calling on other white people to do what it takes to rectify the wrongdoings of their ancestors.

“As white people we all unfairly benefit from racism,” the donor said, according to the nonprofit. “We have to be willing to part with what was stolen, and do so without expectations of praise or control over how the money will be spent.”

Ryan said the nonprofit, which has never received a reparations payment before, intends to put 40% of the money toward supporting the organization’s staff, while another 40% will go toward sustaining their community outreach efforts and 20% will be put into reserve. 

“We don’t have the luxury to kind of just sit on it, so it’s literally money that’s going to go right back into the community,” Andreana Bridges, an administrative associate at the nonprofit, told NPR.

Croney said that she’s hopeful that her organization is one of many that will continue to see reparations pouring in. 

“I think that this is just the start. I thank this donor for beginning this cycle that is going to continue to lead to more reparations,” she said on Monday. “But also, with this reparations coming in, we’re going to continue to do the work and continue to show up…”

In 2018, an anonymous donor gave $200,000 to the Denver-based nonprofit Soul2Soul Sisters. The donor was a graduate student who had learned her ancestors owned formerly enslaved people.

Source link

Related Posts
Why are there so few Black coaches in professional football? | Oh My Goal
Why are there so few Black coaches in professional football? | Oh My Goal

More than a quarter of professional footballers in Europe's top leagues are Black. But in all 98 head coaching positions Read more

Tiffany Hainesworth Becomes First Black Woman To Independently Own Her Own Tequila Brand
Tiffany Hainesworth Becomes First Black Woman To Independently Own Her Own Tequila Brand

A Maryland resident is breaking barriers as an entrepreneur, becoming the first Black woman to solely own a tequila brand. Tiffany Hainesworth Read more

D9 LOVE! Here’s a List of Prominent Black Fraternity and Sorority Couples from the Early 1900s
D9 LOVE! Here’s a List of Prominent Black Fraternity and Sorority Couples from the Early 1900s

Beautiful Black fraternity and sorority couples have existed over 100 years so let’s celebrate their love. We’ve compiled a list Read more

Black Men Teach plans to change Minnesota education disparities
Black Men Teach plans to change Minnesota education disparities

“Black Men Teach is trying to get Black men in elementary school classrooms,” Markus Flynn, executive director of Black Men Read more

Black Couple Had Their White Friend Pose As The Owner and Their Home Appraisal Magically Went Up 500K
Black Couple Had Their White Friend Pose As The Owner and Their Home Appraisal Magically Went Up 500K

California home owners experienced racism and discrimination when they were getting an appraisal for their Bay Area home. “It was Read more

Black Girl Freedom Week Envisions A World Where Black Girls And Women Are Regularly Invested In
Black Girl Freedom Week Envisions A World Where Black Girls And Women Are Regularly Invested In

A weeklong series emphasizing investment in Black cis and trans girls is having its inaugural launch this week.Through virtual programming, Read more

2 Chainz Drops Black History Month Gems While Getting A Champagne Pedicure On NPR’s ‘Tiny Desk’
2 Chainz Drops Black History Month Gems While Getting A Champagne Pedicure On NPR’s ‘Tiny Desk’

As the celebration of Black History Month continues around the country, 2 Chainz honored the special time of the year Read more

Black Excellist: Top 10 American Black Billionaires (+ Up&Comings)
Black Excellist:  Top 10 American Black Billionaires (+ Up&Comings)

Top 10 American Black Billionaires (+ Up&Comings) http://www.blackexcellist.com ---------------------------------------------- Business Inquiries, Partnerships, & Suggestions blackexcellist@gmail.com Support the Movement w/$25 * Read more

DJ SkyWalker #24 | Hip Hop Mix | RnB Dancehall Rap Songs | Black Music Club Party
DJ SkyWalker #24 | Hip Hop Mix | RnB Dancehall Rap Songs | Black Music Club Party

Donate to DJ SkyWalker: https://paypal.me/pools/c/8qNqWU4tVr DJ SkyWalker jetzt auch als Artist KINKO 069 in der DeutschRap Szene. Eigene Produktion mit Read more

Should You Ever Wear Your Boyfriend’s Black Fraternity Paraphernalia?
Should You Ever Wear Your Boyfriend’s Black Fraternity Paraphernalia?

So you are dating a member of a Black fraternity, you are over at his house and it is cold. Read more

Ta-Nehisi Coates to Eve Ewing: Black Authors To Read | The Daily Social Distancing Show
Ta-Nehisi Coates to Eve Ewing: Black Authors To Read | The Daily Social Distancing Show

Essential Black authors to read: Ibram X Kendi & Jason Reynolds, Bakari Sellers, Eve Ewing, D.L. Hughley, Mikki Kendall, Mary Read more

Sacramento Black Teens Forced Off Flight For Mask Violations as Parent Speaks Out for Not Being Notified
Sacramento Black Teens Forced Off Flight For Mask Violations as Parent Speaks Out for Not Being Notified

Four Black teens were forced off a plane by flight attendants before takeoff claims they were not wearing mask according Read more