Given the subject of this week’s news, I wanted to do a bit of a throwback. On the pod, I invite you all to listen to an episode we reported in 2019, about the story of Claude Neal. Eighty-five years ago, a crowd of several thousand white people gathered in Jackson County, Florida, to participate in Neal’s lynching. The poet L. Lamar Wilson grew up there, but didn't learn about Claude Neal until he was in high school. When he heard the story, he knew he had to do something. The story we shared on the pod was about resisting the urge to forget history, even when remembering is incredibly painful. |
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WHAT KEEPS YOU UP AT NIGHT |
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That's all for today, friends. As always, you can write to us with your thoughts, questions, feelings and feedback any time at CodeSwitch@npr.org. In the meantime, remember — you don't need to exaggerate your experiences in order for them to be valid.
All right, I'm off to go take a hundred year nap. I'm literally exhausted. (They've been working me to the bone over here!)
Until next week,
Leah Donnella, senior editor |
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Written by Leah Donnella and edited by Courtney Stein |
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