Tuesday, June 28, 2022

Turner Partners with Franklin to Restore Life to 'Death' Park

 

Atty. Van D. Turner Jr. turns over management of Health
Sciences Park to well-known personality Telisa Franklin.
(Photo by Wiley Henry)

MEMPHIS, TN – Dead people from the 1870s yellow fever epidemic were reportedly buried in unmarked graves on parkland that once stood a hospital and a memorial to an infamous Confederate general, Atty. Van D. Turner Jr. discovered during his research.

“It's just been quite interesting learning the full history of the park,” said Turner, referring to the former Forrest Park, now Health Sciences Park. 

That parcel of land is in the medical district. Once a memorial to Nathan Bedford Forrest, a slave trader and Ku Klux Klan grand wizard, now brims with new life.

“The park has always been a park of death,” said Turner, president of Memphis Greenspace, Inc., a nonprofit maintaining the park. “Now it’s become a park of life and vibrancy…of new beginnings…and celebrates life.”

“Life and vibrancy” were on display during Father’s Day weekend when the Memphis Juneteenth Festival celebrated “freedom” and “life” on the grounds that Turner once avoided and protested “what it stood for and how painful it was for my father and his generation.”

On Friday, June 24, Turner announced that Memphis Greenspace is partnering with Telisa Franklin Ministries to manage Health Sciences Park. Franklin is a businesswoman, a well-known marketer, and the festival’s president. 

Turner is still president of Memphis Greenspace, which he formed in October 2017 to legally remove the Confederate monuments to Forrest and Jefferson Davis, formerly known as Confederate Park and renamed Fourth Bluff Park. 

“We're happy with this new partnership with her,” said Turner, now contracting with Franklin to promote Health Sciences Park and enrich the green space with various activities throughout the year. 

The treelined park is conducive for all kinds of events and activities. “I think this is really a goldmine for the city,” Turner said. “I think Mrs. Franklin is the right one to carry that vision forward.”

Franklin has accepted the challenge. Now she’s gung-ho about bringing her ideas to fruition. Two callers, she said, have already expressed interest in renting the park. Turner, in his appraisal of Franklin, touted what she’s already done to unite people around an idea.

“That spot of land represented death,” Franklin said. “But in the last two years (during Juneteenth festivities), we were able to see people laugh…hug…people of different races coming together.”

Franklin said the park is for everybody in Memphis and Shelby County. “We're not excluding anyone,” she said. “We're going to create synergy and positive energy in that park.”

The stigma no longer vexes Franklin. However, in past years, she said she’d park her vehicle along the fringes of the park and just sit there. Like Turner, she was protesting, refusing to take a stroll.

The memorial to Forrest would kindle Franklin’s ire, often reminding her of what the Confederate general and slaveowner stood for. Now the equestrian statue of Forrest is gone, along with the remains of Forrest and his wife. 

While it wasn’t widely known, Turner said Forrest was exhumed and buried four times. 

After his death in 1877, Forrest was buried at Historic Elmwood Cemetery, then in Forrest Park. Then he was reburied in an unknown location in the county. Finally, Forrest and his wife were reinterred in Columbia, Tenn. 

“It's been quite the journey,” Turner said, adding, “If the park could only talk, (stories about it would unfold).”

Turner is telling a different story now: death is no longer a sidebar. He is giving Franklin the leeway to create new life in the park with monthly events and activities. 

“From this point going forward, it’s really going to be a story of joy. It’s going to be a story of resilience,” he said.  

Franklin said she’ll work to heal the land and mend hurting hearts. Education is the key, she said. But she won’t dwell on the dead. 

The aura of death will fade eventually, she said, and “life will return to the park.” 

Thursday, June 16, 2022

Abuser and Victim Call Attention to Domestic Violence

Greg Williamson and Gwendolyn Turner

MEMPHIS, TN – Domestic violence is not a respecter of persons, Greg Williamson, a former abuser, believes. “It’s multicultural,” he said. “Abusers come in many forms, different ages.”

Likewise for the victims. Many of them are women whom men have battered or degraded. Or both. 

Men have been victimized too, though only a miniscule number. Women have been known to batter or degrade men as well.

“It is a power and control type situation. That's where it starts,” said Gwendolyn Turner, a survivor of domestic violence. “Whatever the reason for the power and control, it’s always a main component.”

Williamson and Turner agree that the root cause of domestic violence is environmental and because of one’s family dynamics, which impacts both abusers and victims. 

It affects the entire family, he said.

The environment was Williamson’s introduction to domestic violence. He grew up in the inner city in the former (William H.) Foote Homes housing project where violence was commonplace. 

He sold drugs too in a drug-infested environment of hoodlums, pimps, prostitutes, and other seedy characters. It was a toxic environment that was normalized, he said, “when you see it on the regular.”

“I saw domestic violence all my childhood and growing up as a teenager,” said Williamson, calling such wanton violence a traumatic experience that manifested later in his life.

“When you get to a point where you're old enough to act out on them…you will find out that when you get angry, those are the things that you go back to because those are the things that you witnessed,” he explained.

He’d abused women in relationships, he said, only when the abuse was triggered by something from his past. “Mine was more verbal,” he said, “a little bit of physical with the grabbing under the arms and shaking.” 

Turner’s story differs. She’d never witnessed domestic violence – until she was embroiled in a volatile relationship that began with a constant barrage of verbal abuse, mental abuse, and emotional abuse. 

“With emotional abuse, those are hidden scars, hidden wounds. My downfall was I did not know the red flags, the signs, the warning signs of domestic violence,” Turner explained.

 Turner was seven years into the relationship before realizing she was a victim of domestic violence. “It’s hard to detect violence before you get into the relationship,” she said.

Her parents argued, she pointed out, but they didn’t fight. “There was never any violence,” she said. “There was never any turmoil.” 

Domestic violence was foreign to her. She was clueless. “I simply thought that this was an expression of love,” she said. “It's that controlling and mental abuse that you don't recognize.”

Williamson grew up without a father in the home. There wasn’t a male figure to teach him to respect women, he said – even though he didn’t see as much abuse in his single-parent home. 

He said his mother wasn't the kind of woman who would capitulate to an abusive man. “So, when it happened, it immediately stopped,” he said.

But the violence Williamson had witnessed outside the home, in and around the housing project, would find its way into his relationships as an adult. 

He’d picked up negative traits and bad behavior from the perpetrators of violence and employed them when he was angered or agitated. There were triggers that unleashed his fury.

Turner had had enough and broke free from her abuser. Then she turned her victimhood into advocacy. A former employee at Family Safety Center of Memphis and Shelby County, she went to work to help battered women – men too.

“I had the opportunity of working with three generations (of women). They were all being physically abused. It's an acceptable part of the family dynamics,” said Turner, now a renown domestic violence advocate.

“I heard a pastor say once, ‘you draw what you saw,’” she said, adding: “Abusers also target their victims.”

Williamson managed to turn his life around as well. He met an evangelist in the church and befriended her. “I started going to church every Sunday, and God started to work on me,” he said.

During lunch one day, she confided in him that she’d been a victim of domestic violence. He told her he’d been an abuser. Then they brainstormed and a non-profit organization was launched called Circle of Life Transformation Center. 

The center provides domestic violence training for companies, schools, churches, and other non-profit and for-profit organizations. Ex-offenders are given a new lease on life as well via the center’s re-entry program.

“God worked on me and showed me the value of a woman and the purpose of a man,” said Williamson, owner of Kings Barber & Beauty Emporium. Now he intends to return to school for a mental health counseling degree.

“The process of healing starts with separating yourself from the abuser,” Turner said. In society, “we don't have enough hard conversations about what a healthy relationship looks like.”

Victims can call the YWCA Greater Memphis helpline at 901-725-4277; the helpline for CAAP’s Domestic Violence Program at 901-272-2221; and, of course, the Family Safety Center’s helpline at 901-249-7611. 

Young men can contact Dr. Jeffery Ryan Futrell, president of Young Man University, Inc., at 901-825-3326. There is help for married couples too. Contact Rickey Floyd, lead senior pastor of Pursuit of God Transformation Center, at 901-353-5772.

Floyd is the president of The Husband Institute, Inc., a boys-to-men mentoring program, and he’s the founder of the School of Marriage Enhancement, a Ricky and Sheila Floyd Ministries, Inc. program.

Thursday, June 9, 2022

Momentum Builds as Juneteenth Plans Schedule of Events

 

Ekpe Abioto, a noted Memphis musician who plays the djimbe drums
and other instruments, leads a contingent of musicians along a path at Health Sciences Park during last year's Memphis Juneteenth Festival. (Photo by Wiley Henry)

MEMPHIS, TN – The Memphis Juneteenth Festival is building momentum in the Bluff City and solidifying its brand as a major freedom and cultural festival for African Americans.

The festival was boosted last year after Opal Lee, the “Grandmother of the Juneteenth Movement,” visited Memphis, and after President Biden signed into law the Juneteenth National Independence Day Act on June 17, 2021.

Telisa Franklin, Juneteenth’s president, noticed an uptick in interest and participation from supporters and revelers in Memphis now that Juneteenth is being observed as a federal holiday, one of 11 in the U.S., commemorating June 19, 1865.

“The work was put in 29 years ago when Juneteenth was first launched in Memphis,” said Franklin, who has led the festival for 10 of those years after the founder, the late Glynn Johns Reed, tapped Franklin to take the reins of leadership. 

“Since then, it’s been an arduous journey, but we kept educating people and building the brand to what it has become today,” she said. “It’s a labor of love and we’re still here celebrating our freedom.”

The Juneteenth celebration has expanded throughout the month of June with “Juneteenth: The Musical Stage Play,” slated June 10, 7 p.m., at The Pursuit of God Church, 3759 North Watkins. Tickets: $10 per person.

Chrysti Chandler is the artistic director. Ricky Floyd is the host pastor.

“Juneteenth: The Movie,” the first for the organization, will be showing at 7 p.m., June 15, at The Orpheum Theatre in Downtown Memphis.

A Community Baby Shower kicked off the schedule of events Sunday, June 5 at The Kent Memphis, located in the Historic Snuff District in Memphis. Attendees were privy to information on health and wellness for mothers and babies, breastfeeding, and free baby essentials. Lunch was served as well.

This year’s festival again takes place Father’s Day weekend, Saturday, June 18, and Sunday, June 19, from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. each day at Health Sciences Park at 26 South Dunlap St. at the intersection of Madison Avenue in the Medical District.

The festival is free to the public.

On June 18, a youth showcase commences with high-stepping majorettes, drummers, dancers, and cheerleaders strutting their stuff – all in the name of Juneteenth. 

The day begins with a roster of singers and entertainers and ends with them. Look for the headliners whose artistry varies from rhythm and blues to gospel, from hip-hop to soul, and jazz too.

The list includes Keith Washington, Queen Ann Hines, Stacey Merino, Marquee of Soul, Men At Large, Mr. Sam, Joshua Rogers, and young talents such as local R&B singers Luvia Gwin and Cortney Boyland, also known as Cortney B.

Music is germane, of course, so is the food. Both are integral to the Juneteenth experience, including the relaxed ambiance of the park setting, Franklin said, where revelers congregate for fun, excitement, culture, and freedom, all to commemorate the end of slavery in the United States.

“We will have lots of food vendors and a marketplace for participants to shop for garments, jewelry, artwork, Juneteenth memorabilia, and more,” Franklin said. “There will be live entertainment on two stages and a Juneteenth outdoor museum as well.”

A Juneteenth Car Show will also be on display and revelers can take part in the Juneteenth 2.5 Run/Walk. (Two point five means it took 2 ½ years for slaves to realize they were free – from the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation to that day in Galveston, Texas, where the slaves were notified that they were henceforth free.)

Also on that day, a Divine 9 Greek Step Show kicks off at 6 p.m. The high-stepping, high-energy routine performed by fraternities and sororities is the first for Juneteenth. Their display of handclapping, foot-stomping and spoken word is an artform and a staple among Greek letter organizations.

The celebration continues June 19 with the Memphis Juneteenth Official Flag Raising Ceremony and loads of entertainment, food and shopping vendors, for the entire family, Franklin said.

“This is the 29th year that Juneteenth is being celebrated in Memphis. And we will continue the cultural festival celebrating our freedom,” Franklin said. “In fact, it’s been 157 years since General Order #3 was delivered on June 19, 1865, in Galveston, Texas, announcing the end of slavery.”

For more information, contact Telisa Franklin at (901) 281-6337 or visit the website at www.MemphisJuneteenth.com.