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Cultural Conversations: A bridge to Truth and Connection

Saturday, September 6, 2025 (3:00 PM - 4:30 PM) (EDT)

Description

The African American Research Library and Cultural Center (AARLCC) will host a special Cultural Conversation on the evening of September 6, 2025, to officially open the exhibition 'To Be Sold: Enslaved Labor and Slave Trading in the Antebellum South.' The launch event is a compelling program that explores how truth-telling and an openness to difficult conversations about our shared history can create new paths toward healing and racial reconciliation. The conversation features Sen. Mia S. McLeod and Margaret Seidler, two women whose lives and family histories are linked by the painful legacy of slavery and whose relationship demonstrates the possibility of civility and connection across racial lines. In 2020, Margaret, a white Charleston native whose genealogical research revealed a legacy of slave trading in her family, reached out to Mia’s family via their funeral home website. Mia, a trailblazing Black legislator from South Carolina, had just lost her father, her family’s historian, and felt compelled to answer the message. What followed was a transformative phone call between two women who shared a desire to listen, learn, and reckon with the truth. They discovered hidden family stories and confronted the emotional impact of the Mother Emanuel tragedy. Their relationship has become a living example of courage and common ground. This program invites audiences to consider how personal history, public memory, and civic dialogue can help us reimagine our shared future. A reception will follow the dialogue. This program is presented in collaboration with the Partners for Racial Justice and the Gullah Geechee Cultural Heritage Corridor. Mia McLeod is an eighth-generation South Carolinian and public servant who advocates for justice and equity. As the first woman and African American to represent Senate District 22, and the first Black woman to run for Governor of South Carolina, Mia has worked across party lines to address systemic issues such as healthcare access, education equity, domestic violence, and criminal justice reform. Her leadership has earned national recognition, including the prestigious 2023 John F. Kennedy Profile in Courage Award® alongside her bipartisan Sister Senators. Mia is a Liberty, Diversity, and Education Policy Fellow and a proud mother of two sons. Her family’s funeral business, founded in 1914, plays a key role in her ancestral discovery and reconciliation story. Register here - https://broward.libnet.info/event/14016479?fbclid=IwY2xjawMgWitleHRuA2FlbQIxMABicmlkETFZR0N1Ym56SjREMHZLSTFlAR6qzaBllCbZfv4Z-ggxBnY-N6PsPLj0iMmrtHzOuktfw98EMpEVshltj5JXEQ_aem_eqQfhMa_adgshfBxKQfM6w
African American Research Library & Cultural Center
2650 Sistrunk Blvd.
Fort Lauderdale, 33311
Saturday, September 6, 2025 (3:00 PM - 4:30 PM) (EDT)
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