New York City is a model of how the diversity of the successful peace zone exists. New York is filled with a combination of rich behavior, enthusiasm, and culture in every sense. For example, when walking in a lively street, not only the details that made the details of the city clear and the various people who cheer it up, but also many worlds blending into this magical city such as Little Italy, Chinatown I can see. , Little Syria, Korea Town etc.
In most of its history, New York was the largest and most diverse and economically ambitious city in the United States. There is no place on earth that welcomes human business more enthusiastically. Paradoxically, New York has been the capital of American slavery for more than two centuries. In October 2005, the New York Historical Society began exploring for two years to explore this less known chapter in the story of the city. New York State sovereignty was the first of two exhibitions from the 17th century to 1827 of legitimate slavery abolition in New York State. By presenting the treasures of the New York Historical Society and other wonderful knowledge bases, it focuses on rediscovering the collective and personal experiences of New York Africans and African Americans. This educational program brings new course materials to hundreds of schools in the metropolitan area and welcomes visitors to specially designed exhibition tours.
When I lived in New York, I met Richard DeBinowitz who was planning slavery in New York, and the New York Historical Society exhibition held an association between slavery African labor and New York City wealth We revealed. The story believed that slavery was the southern sin and surprised many customers who had never thought about many other cities built with this "special system". Prior to the opening, Ravinobitsz thought that the show may be controversial for this reason, and because of what he experienced in the relevant topic project in Charleston, South Carolina. An African-American man resented the idea of a white man expressing a painful moment in the history of the black, "Let me tell stories to people like you, which infringes my human rights "I said.
Supreme Court Judge Ruth Vader Ginsberg held a naturalization ceremony at the New York Historical Society on Tuesday and handled her fanatic audience with a history class, a crack crack collar, and a treat treat featuring life and freedom It was. The seats at the West End Theater in the historical society have people from 59 countries, including Muslim, Hussain, Khachi, Angi, Sunday, as well as pastors and childhood cancer physicians, and other occupations. Two men from Guinea are sitting in the third row and they all know that they are named Mamadou Alpha Diallo, two taxi drivers.