In Powerful Ceremony Evoking African Ancestors, Schenck Park is Renamed Sankofa Park African Burial Ground

By Amadi Ajamu

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Power to our African ancestors! Rev. Daughtry, Charles Barron and Inez Barron. Photo: Amadi Ajamu 

New York City Council Member Inez Barron and NYS Assemblyman Charles Barron’s joined together to honor the legacy of our African Ancestors who endured centuries of enslavement in the formation of East New York, Brooklyn. Our ancestors were buried on the land previously known as Schenck Park, named after a former enslaver of Africans. The land has now been renamed the Sankofa Park African Burial Ground in a tremendous Cultural Ceremony and Re-internment of our Ancestors bones, which took place on Thursday, July 18, 2019.  “Sankofa” is a Swahili word meaning “looking back to go forward.”

The park land is the actual resting place for those Africans who were prisoners of war, stolen from Africa, chained, shipped, and forced to build the foundation and development of the U.S. and other European colonies for centuries. Far too many died in the process.

“The preliminary excavation for the renovation of Schenck Park, located here on Barbey Street between Livonia and New Lots Avenues, was put on hold,” Council Member Barron explained. “Historical maps had previously revealed that the park, library and surrounding area was once a site where enslaved Africans were buried. Before starting the park renovations, archaeologists were employed to search for any possible desecrated remains. And indeed, remains including bone fragments of our Ancestors were found.”

“This is an historic day. East New York has gone from having a slave holders’s names for this park Schenck Park to a liberated named Sankofa Park,” Assemblyman Barron said. “Our youth can now feel proud to know that it was their Ancestors that built the roads and the homes; and cultivated the land of East New York, the community that they live in now. Every time they see the park named Sankofa and the street signs named African Burial Ground we can tell them about our Ancestors who built the foundation of East New York and were never paid. We now have a strong case for reparations. We must tell our youth how the land of the indigenous people; the Lenapi, Canarsie, and Rockaway or so called Indians, was stolen, and how we were stolen from Africa to build it.”

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Ceremony participants included Brooklyn Clergy members: Chief Baba Neil Clarke, who opened up the ceremony with an African libation to the Ancestors; Rev. Dr. Herbert Daughtry, National Presiding Minister of The House of the Lord Churches, delivered the eulogy; Minister Henry Muhammad, Mosque No. 7C, Nation Of Islam; Rev. Dr. David K. Brawley, St. Paul Community Baptist Church; Rev. Dr. Anthony Graham, New Hope Family Worship Center and Rev. Brenda Ross, Trinity Pentecostal House of Prayer; and Community Board 5 Chairman Andre T. Mitchell, among many other community activists and cultural artists including the phenomenal performances of Victory Music and Dance.

Brooklyn Parks Commissioner, Marty Maher, was recognized as a partner on the multi-million dollar Sankofa Park renovation African Burial Ground development project by the Assemblyman Barron and Council Member Barron. The renovation process will start this year and is expected to be completed by 2020.