BBC Gossip
  • Home
  • Health
  • News
  • Crime
  • Local News
  • People
  • Guest Post
BBC Gossip
BBC Gossip
  • Home
  • News
  • Health
  • People
  • Celebrities
  • Crime
  • Entertainment
  • Finance
  • Guest Post
Home In Michigan, a solution to the destruction of Black communities is achieved for future generations
  • Local News

In Michigan, a solution to the destruction of Black communities is achieved for future generations

    Generations later, a remedy to destroying Black neighborhoods is fulfilled in Michigan
    Up next
    Rwanda president stuns CNN's Larry Madowo with response to Trump's USAID bloodbath
    Rwandan President’s surprising reaction to Trump’s USAID controversy on CNN with Larry Madowo
    Published on 08 February 2025
    Author
    BBC Gossip

    In Hamtramck, Michigan, Leslie Knox was a young girl back in the 1960s when the city faced accusations of destroying neighborhoods in order to displace Black residents.

    Now, decades later, as a retired nurse, Knox has returned to Hamtramck and settled into a new two-story home on Gallagher Street. She spends her time watching TV from a fold-up chair as she contemplates how to furnish her home. Fortunately, she doesn’t have a mortgage to worry about, only property taxes and insurance.

    Knox is among the few remaining individuals benefiting from a remarkable legal settlement mandating the construction of 200 homes by the small city for victims of discrimination or their descendants. This case originated from a lawsuit filed in 1968, making it one of the lengthiest civil rights cases concerning housing in the country.

    And it’s finally over.

    “I feel like I’ve been given this house by divine intervention because no man in their right mind would just hand the keys to houses,” said Knox, 70, who placed two Black angel figurines on a kitchen window. “I believe God put me here.”

    Amer Ghalib, a native of Yemen and Hamtramck’s mayor, said a “dark chapter” in the city’s history is now closed.

    “This is not going to happen again,” said Ghalib, who was elected in 2021. “We are a very diverse community.”

    ‘We just want you gone’

    In the early 1900s, Hamtramck’s blue-collar jobs attracted immigrants from Eastern Europe, especially Poland. The association was so deep that Catholic Cardinal Karol Wojtyla of Poland visited the city in 1969 and returned in 1987 — as Pope John Paul II. A statue of him stands high above a public plaza.

    Yet while white people felt welcomed, many Black residents said their civil rights were violated. In 1971, after a trial, U.S. District Judge Damon Keith ruled that the city had intentionally targeted certain Black neighborhoods by demolishing low-income housing.

    “It was an attempt to eliminate a Black population,” said Michael Barnhart, a lawyer for the victims. “It wasn’t, ‘We want this land for something and therefore you’re in the way.’ ‘We just want you gone’ — that was the motivation, to get rid of people.”

    Hamtramck spent years appealing before agreeing in 1981 to a remedy: It would build apartments for seniors as well as 200 scattered housing units for families. People with certain income levels and a connection to the class-action lawsuit would get priority.

    The finish line was generations away

    So why did the promise take until 2024 — more than 40 years — to fulfill?

    “The city didn’t have the money,” said James Allen, an attorney who represented Hamtramck during the last stages of the litigation.

    Indeed, city government twice was placed under state oversight, starting in 2000, due to financial problems. There still were dozens of homes left to build or rehab in 2010 when the judge and Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm held a festive ribbon-cutting ceremony at a new address on Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

    “Most if not all of the construction funding was through federal and state grants,” Allen explained. “If the city had been left to its own devices, they never would have been able to do it. They just didn’t have the resources.”

    The total cost to build the last three houses was approximately $1 million, he said.

    Throughout much of its history, Hamtramck rose and fell with the auto industry. More than 30,000 people worked at a local Chrysler factory, known as Dodge Main, in the 1950s. By 1980, the year the factory closed, the workforce was just a fraction of that number, and the population had plummeted. Polish Americans were slowly moving out, and Hamtramck became a gateway for new arrivals from Yemen, Bangladesh, Bosnia and elsewhere.

    Still a gritty, dense community of just 2 square miles, Hamtramck remains defined by two-story flats with small yards and narrow paths between homes. Today, General Motors makes electric vehicles at a plant that straddles Hamtramck and Detroit, and the population has rebounded to 27,000, 20% higher than in 2010 and holding steady, though nowhere near the peaks of the early 20th century when it was double.

    Median household income was $40,000 in 2023 compared to $71,000 statewide, the Census Bureau said.

    A remarkable cultural change

    Now, the mayor and city council members are all Muslim. A stretch of Holbrook Street was formally renamed Palestine Avenue during the Israel-Hamas war. Amar Pizza, influenced by Bangladeshi tastes, was named one of the best pizzerias in America last year by The New York Times.

    St. Ladislaus Catholic Church, where a future pope had visited, is closed and for sale, while calls to Muslim daily prayer are amplified.

    “Sometimes they’ll wake me up at 6 a.m. because it’s on a loudspeaker,” Knox said. “I’m Christian so when they pray in Yemeni I pray in my spiritual language.”

    She couldn’t recall exactly what drove her Black family out of Hamtramck when she was a child. Knox said she applied to join the lawsuit settlement and was selected for one of the last three houses, moving from nearby Detroit in November.

    “I do reflect about the history,” Knox said. “I believe I was put here for a reason. I can’t explain it. … I’m already 70 and just startin’ all over again.”

    Hamtramck isn’t trying to cover up its past. A park honors the late Sarah Sims Garrett, the lawsuit’s lead plaintiff, and a monument there describes the long struggle to overcome discrimination.

    Her son, Dwydell Garrett, 59, also lives in a house granted to him through the settlement. Memories of his mother inspired his return.

    “It’s a very special honor to have someone raise me as not being bitter for things that went on,” Garrett said. “I can’t hold a grudge.”

    ___

    AP video journalist Mike Householder contributed to this story.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

    You May Also Like
    The suspension of Thailand's prime minister over a leaked phone call stirs familiar turmoil
    • Local News

    Familiar Turmoil Erupts as Thailand’s Prime Minister is Suspended Due to Leaked Phone Call

    BANGKOK – Questions have arisen following the Constitutional Court’s decision to suspend…
    • BBC Gossip
    • July 1, 2025
    Giant Eagle announces deal to sell all GetGo locations completed: How your myPerks will be affected
    • Local News

    “Giant Eagle completes sale of all GetGo locations: What to expect for your myPerks benefits”

    “The sale of the GetGo business marks an important moment in Giant…
    • BBC Gossip
    • July 1, 2025
    Trump says Israel has agreed on terms for a 60-day ceasefire in Gaza and urges Hamas to accept deal
    • Local News

    Trump confirms Israel accepts conditions for 60-day ceasefire in Gaza and calls on Hamas to agree

    Trump announced the development Tuesday as he prepares to host Israeli Prime…
    • BBC Gossip
    • July 2, 2025
    Democrat Colin Allred is running again for US Senate in Texas
    • Local News

    Colin Allred, a Democrat, is running for re-election to the US Senate in Texas

    DALLAS – Colin Allred, a former Texas congressman, has announced his decision…
    • BBC Gossip
    • July 1, 2025
    Major reports about how climate change affects the US are removed from websites
    • Local News

    Reports on the impact of climate change on the US are deleted from websites.

    WASHINGTON – Legally mandated U.S. national climate assessments seem to have disappeared…
    • BBC Gossip
    • July 1, 2025
    Bush, Obama — and singer Bono — fault Trump's gutting of USAID on agency's last day
    • Local News

    Bush, Obama, and musician Bono criticize Trump’s reduction of USAID funding on the agency’s final day

    On Monday, the long-standing humanitarian and development organization established by President John…
    • BBC Gossip
    • July 1, 2025
    LOOK: Taylor Swift spotted at JoJo's Bar in Chagrin Falls
    • Local News

    Taylor Swift seen at JoJo’s Bar in Chagrin Falls

    The pop megastar’s appearance came a day after her boyfriend, Travis Kelce,…
    • BBC Gossip
    • July 1, 2025
    What the key witnesses at Sean 'Diddy' Combs' sex trafficking trial told the jury
    • Local News

    Testimony of essential witnesses during Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’ trial for sex trafficking.

    NEW YORK – The jury deliberating at Sean “Diddy” Combs’ sex trafficking…
    • BBC Gossip
    • July 1, 2025
    Gov. Mike DeWine issues 67 vetoes in Ohio’s $60 billion budget: Here’s what he cut
    • Local News

    Gov. Mike DeWine rejects 67 proposals in Ohio’s $60 billion budget: Discover what was removed

    • BBC Gossip
    • July 1, 2025
    Dozens evacuated from Austrian village after mudslide covers parts of Alpine valley
    • Local News

    Many people rescued from Austrian village following mudslide in Alpine valley

    Dozens of individuals were airlifted to safety by helicopters in Austria on…
    • BBC Gossip
    • July 1, 2025
    US, Indo-Pacific partners agree to strengthen maritime, critical minerals cooperation
    • Local News

    US and Indo-Pacific nations to enhance cooperation on maritime and critical minerals

    The United States, Australia, India, and Japan have agreed to strengthen their…
    • BBC Gossip
    • July 2, 2025
    Televangelist Jimmy Swaggart, whose ministry was toppled by prostitution scandals, dies at 90
    • Local News

    Televangelist Jimmy Swaggart, who faced prostitution scandals that significantly affected his ministry, passes away at the age of 90

    BATON ROUGE, La. – Jimmy Swaggart, a televangelist known for his influential…
    • BBC Gossip
    • July 1, 2025

    Recent Posts

    • Trump says Israel and Hamas have agreed to a 60-day ceasefire
    • Shocking Details Unveiled by Kristi Noem on Detained Illegal Alien Accused of Cannibalism
    • “Emotional Open Letter from Idaho Victim’s Sister Calls Out Bryan Kohberger’s Plea Deal and Appeals for Trial Instead”
    • Matt Damon’s Big Budget Film “The Odyssey” Trailer Leaks Online
    • Babysitter Not Paid for Seven Hours Due to ‘Inappropriate’ Attire
    Israel has agreed to a 60-day ceasefire with Hamas, Trump says
    • US

    Trump says Israel and Hamas have agreed to a 60-day ceasefire

    President Donald Trump stated on Tuesday that Israel and Hamas have come…
    • BBC Gossip
    • July 2, 2025
    WTH?! Kristi Noem Reveals Horrifying Details About Detained Cannibal Illegal Alien
    • US

    Shocking Details Unveiled by Kristi Noem on Detained Illegal Alien Accused of Cannibalism

    Let’s categorize this as unusual in the WTH (What the heck?!) category.…
    • BBC Gossip
    • July 2, 2025
    Idaho victim’s sister shares gut-wrenching open letter slamming Bryan Kohberger’s last-minute plea deal & begs for trial
    • News

    “Emotional Open Letter from Idaho Victim’s Sister Calls Out Bryan Kohberger’s Plea Deal and Appeals for Trial Instead”

    THE SISTER of one of the victims of the Idaho murders has…
    • BBC Gossip
    • July 2, 2025
    First trailer for Matt Damon's $250million epic film The Odyssey leaks online
    • News

    Matt Damon’s Big Budget Film “The Odyssey” Trailer Leaks Online

    Universal Pictures released the first trailer for their long-awaited adaptation of The…
    • BBC Gossip
    • July 2, 2025
    BBC Gossip
    • Home
    • Privacy Policy
    • News
    • Local News
    • Health
    • Crime
    • Guest Post