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Public Awareness 2009 - 2011

Media Coverage to Date:


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
  August 16, 2011
Media Contact:

 
 1 (912) 601-3000

GA STATE SENATOR DONZELLA JAMES PROPOSES
STATE INSTITUTIONS AND PROPERTIES STUDY COMMITTEE
Historic Geechee Gullah Culture Equity in Governance
 Press Conference, Public Hearing Set for Tomorrow

 ATLANTA/SAPELO ISLAND, Georgia – Tomorrow, Senator Donzella James, member of the Senate State Institutions and Properties Committee, will conduct an historic public hearing that spans a Geechee Gullah cultural history of over two hundred years on Sapelo Island.  Data submitted into the official record of the public hearing will be submitted for full review in a State Institutions and Properties Study Committee being proposed by Sen. James.

To publicly announce her proposal, Sen. James will hold a press conference tomorrow at noon in the Georgia State Senate Pressroom (Room 204, Coverdell Legislative Office Building). SCLC newly-elected President Isaac Newton Farris, Jr., Rainbow Push Southeast Regional Director Joe Beasley, and Concerned Black Clergy President Rev. Dr. Richard Cobble will speak in support of Sen. James’ proposal and her role in this matter on the State Institutions and Properties Committee. 

Sen. James will conduct apublic hearing delving into data collection and research efforts that indicate land grabs of title deed - purchased land (owned by descendants of Sapelo Island’s enslaved West African ancestors) started taking place in 1871, and have continued to the present.

Efforts are already underway by Sen. James to reach across the legislative branch to the executive branch in developing strategies – long-term and short-term – to resolve existing equity in governance issues for the Geechee Gullah descendants on Sapelo Island.

“This is a chilling and compelling issue that concerns us all,” states SCLC President Farris, Jr., the nephew of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. 

Senator James will propose a State Institutions and Properties Study Committee on this matter during next week’s legislative session.  The purpose of the study committee is to conduct thorough research into the framework of initial skeletal legislation entitled “Geechee Gullah Culture Equity in Governance Act.”  The Equity in Governance legislative act is slated to be introduced during the 2012 legislative session of the Georgia General Assembly.

A delegation of descendants from Sapelo Island, along with representatives and stakeholders of the Geechee Gullah Culture Non-Government Organization, Inc., will be testifying in Senator James’ public hearing tomorrow from 1:00pm - 4:00pm in Room 307 of the Coverdell Legislative Office Building at the Georgia State Capitol.  The public is invited to attend.


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Public Hearing Attendees - August 17, 2011 - Atlanta

Sapelo Island Faces Fight

WTOC CBS, Savannah, Georgia

http://www.wtoc.com/story/15159817/sapelo-island-faces-fight
Posted: Jul 27, 2011 6:23 PM EDT
Updated: Jul 31, 2011 7:40 PM EDT
By Tim Guidera

SAPELO ISLAND, GA (WTOC) - Every day, Reginald Hall takes the 12 minute boat ride from Sapelo Island to the mainland to conduct business.

But tomorrow, he'll make a longer, more important trip as part of a group hoping to preserve, restore and rebuild Sapelo's local history.

Hall will present the Geechee Gullah Cultural Act to the state legislature, seeking to end what he calls cultural deprivation of descendents of slaves who have lived on Sapelo for 210 years and the return of land he says the state has taken illegally from the Geechee Gullahs.

"It's systemic,'' says Hall, the CEO of the Sapelo-based Geechee Gullah Culture, Inc. "That is an idea of how to remove the people from the land to create another Jekyll Island, another St. Simons or Hiltion Head. It can't happen.''

What locals claim has been happening in Sapelo's 13 Geechee Gullah neighborhoods, its historic district, has been the dwindling presence of a people being forced out, they say by increased property taxes because of new, un-zoned resort homes and large landholders like the state's Department of Natural Resources and the University of Georgia.

"They're the only two organizations over here,'' said Iregene Grovener. "They don't hire anybody from the community, but they use the Sapelo Island name to get their grants.''

"My community is dying every day,'' added Cornelia Bailey, a local resident and business owner. "Somebody out there has got to be able to help.''

For Geechee Gullah residents, that help would be welcome from an administrative hearing on the equity in governance act or simply increased exposure to their plight.

"Business as usual must be conducted differently,'' said Hall. "It must be conducted with the resident of sapelo as decendents to have gernance of our own equities.''

"The state owns 99.9 percent of Sapelo and we own the other .1 percent,'' added Bailey. "But this .1 percent is very important because we're one of the last gullah geechee heritages left. I want this to remain our homeland. I want that for my children, my grandchildren and great grandchildren, even the unborn. I want this to be the place.''

Copyright 2011 WTOC. All rights reserved.


 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Tuesday, June 28, 2011
                                MEDIA CONTACT:                                 
1 (912) 601-3000

GEECHEE GULLAH CULTURE LEADERS ESTABLISH TRIBUNAL

 ATLANTA/SAPELO ISLAND -- Geechee Gullah Culture leaders have just announced that the Tribunal for their National Assembly has been officially established.  Reginald H. Hall, Chairperson of the Executive Accountability Team for the Non-Government Organization, has released the following statement for the press:

“Our efforts as a culture to establish the various components of a National Assembly are now solidly underway.  In May, we officially established our Executive Accountability Team.  Today, our Tribunal was officially established.  We are well on our way to officially establishing the Legislative Body of our National Assembly.”

The Tribunal, the second phase of a three-phased effort of the Geechee Gullah Culture Non-Government Organization, Inc. to form a National Assembly, will act to:  1. identify barriers to communication within the culture; 2. conduct an assessment on challenges to cultural collaboration; 3. review upsets and disagreements within the culture; and 4. clarify remedies to opposing cultural strategies.

The Geechee Gullah Culture National Assembly intends to establish a public engagement strategy as well as provide leadership on the public policy scopes of work for the Geechee Gullah cultural initiatives of the 21st century.    



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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Wednesday, June 22, 2011
                           MEDIA CONTACT:                            
1 (912) 601-3000
                                
 GEECHEE GULLAH CULTURE SPOKESPERSON FROM SAPELO ISLAND, GEORGIA 

ANNOUNCES NON-GOVERNMENT ORGANIZATION 
The Regeneration Of An Indigenous Culture
 
ATLANTA, Georgia – Geechee Gullah Culture Spokesperson Reginald H. Hall announced today the establishment of the Geechee Gullah Culture Non-Government Organization, Incorporated.  The NGO consist of an executive accountability team, a tribunal, and a legislative body.

This NGO intends, according to Hall, to remedy the current deprivation situation impacted by the illegal land claims of the Sapelo Island Heritage Authority and The Department of Natural Resources Wildlife Management Area of the state of Georgia. The area of concern is known in the culture as the ancestral Geechee settlement of Raccoon Bluff, consisting of 1,376.78 acres.

West Africans, enslaved and brought to America, embraced the conditions of the land, and nurtured the growth and survival of their families by connecting their strength and resilience to the land itself. Additionally, the spirit of their relationship with nature framed their existence as indigenous. The land -- and everything that the land produced -- became an expression known as “the indigenous culture of the Geechee Gullah people”.

“We intend to hold onto as well as reclaim lands,” Hall asserts, “that have legally belonged to our families since 1871, as well as preserve and create the economic sustainability that will allow us to pass on our culture for generations to come.”


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Sapelo Island AL JAZEERA Report 2009

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