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New Orleans have buried referenced African Americans whose skull was used in racist research world news

New Orleans have buried the renovated African Americans, whose skull was used in racist research (AP)

New Orleans: New Orleans celebrated the withdrawal and burial of remains of 19 African American people, whose skull was sent to Germany for racist research practices in the 19th century. On Saturday, a Multifith Memorial Service that includes a Jazz funeral, one of the most different traditions in the city, paid tribute to the humanity of those who came to their last resting place in Hurricane Katrina Memorial. Historically Black Private Liberal Arts College, President of Dillard University, Monon Gulori said, “We withdraw the irony that the dreaded thing that happened to him after his death is that his body waste,” Historically, the President of Black Private Liberal Arts College said, Monon Guelori said, who earned the foundes from the city. “This is really an opportunity for us to recognize and convince all these individuals that have been denied, you know, sending such a respectable and final burial., 19 people are believed to have died at Charity Hospital for natural reasons between 1871 and 1872, which served people of all breeds and classes in New Orleans during the height of white domination oppression in the 1800s. The hospital closed after Storm Katrina in 2005. The remains were sitting in 19 wooden boxes in the chapel of the university during a service on Saturday, including the music of the Kumbuka African drum and the dance collective. A New Orleans physician included a 19 -people skull to a German researcher in frenchological studies – it is believed that a person’s skull may determine congenital racial characteristics. “All types of experiments were performed on Black Bodies Living and Dead,” Dr. Eva Bahm said, “A historian, who led the efforts to removing the remains of the individuals of the Dillard University. “Those who had no agency on themselves.” Guilery said in 2023, Leapzig University in Germany reached the city of New Orleans. The University of Leipzig did not immediately respond to the remarks request. Bahm said, “This is our own morality with professors in New Orleans and in Leapzig, who wanted to do something to restore the dignity of these people.” Researchers at Dillard University say that possible descendants have to be excavated more to track and track. He believes that it is likely that some people were recently freed from slavery. Gulori said, “These were really poor, people had indigestion at the end of the 19th century, but … they had their names, they had addresses, they used to walk on the streets of the city that we loved,” said Guelori. “We all deserve the recognition of our humanity and the value of our life.”

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