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Brooklyn Historical SocietyCrown Heights History ProjectProject Description The Crown Heights History Project (1994) combined exhibits and educational programs in an attempt to foster better relations and intercultural understanding among the African American, Caribbean American, and Lubavitch communities in the Crown Heights section of Brooklyn, New York. The project was developed in response to long-simmering interracial and inter-ethnic tensions brought to a head by a violent interracial incident in 1991. The Crown Heights History Project was developed to facilitate dialogue and understanding between the communities. The project was a collaboration among three organizations. Through an exhibit of photographs, oral histories, and artifacts, The Brooklyn Historical Society traced the history of the three main groups in the community and illustrated how the media can overreact and distort the representation of a community. The Brooklyn Children's Museum exhibit presented a positive view of the multicultural community from a child's point of view. The Society for the Preservation of Weeksville and Bedford-Stuyvesant History exhibit examined how and why people came to Crown Heights, tracing the population from the time of migration from Africa to the present. Civic Engagement/Dialogue Activities
Project Summary
Information Sources Ford Foundation grant summary; Cassedy O'Donnell, Susannah. "Making Peace in Crown Heights," Museum News, July/August 1994. |
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