On April 26, 2018, the Equal Justice Initiative (EJI) opened the Memorial for Peace and Justice and its accom­pa­ny­ing Legacy Museum, which tell the sto­ries of the more than 4,000 men, women, and chil­dren killed by racial ter­ror lynch­ings in the cen­tu­ry fol­low­ing the Civil War, and trace the con­nec­tions between slav­ery, seg­re­ga­tion, cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, and mass incar­cer­a­tion. The open­ing drew thou­sands of vis­i­tors from across the coun­try, the­atri­cal head­lin­ers, and a host of civ­il rights leg­ends — includ­ing Congressman John Lewis and the sur­viv­ing plain­tiffs and lawyer who brought the law­suit that end­ed seg­re­gat­ed seat­ing on public buses. 

The memo­r­i­al and muse­um arose out of the crim­i­nal defense work of the Equal Justice Initiative and its founder, Bryan Stevenson, first rep­re­sent­ing indi­gent pris­on­ers on Alabama’s death row and lat­er expand­ing to fight juve­nile life sen­tences and oth­er man­i­fes­ta­tions of mass incar­cer­a­tion. Stevenson said, It real­ly springs from that expe­ri­ence of rep­re­sent­ing peo­ple in courts and begin­ning to see the lim­its of how com­mit­ted our courts are to erad­i­cat­ing dis­crim­i­na­tion and bias. I want to get to the point where we expe­ri­ence some­thing more like free­dom. … I don’t think we are going to get there until we cre­ate a new con­scious­ness about our history.” 

EJI’s research on lynch­ings, includ­ing the 2015 report, Lynching in America: Confronting the Legacy of Racial Terror, shows a clear link between lynch­ings and the death penal­ty. Counties and regions that today car­ry out the most exe­cu­tions are the same places in which lynch­ings were most like­ly to take place, and the ongo­ing racial bias in the appli­ca­tion of the death penal­ty reflects the lega­cy of racial terror lynchings. 

[I] believe that cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment is the stepchild of lynch­ing,” Stevenson said. It was dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly used against peo­ple of col­or; it still con­tin­ues to be shaped pri­mar­i­ly by race.” As America’s glob­al allies pres­sured the coun­try to end lynch­ings after World War II, Stevens said, lynch­ings moved inside. We still exe­cut­ed most­ly black peo­ple after pro­ceed­ings that were unre­li­able and unfair. We promised swift jus­tice,’ which was intend­ed to be the same thing as lynch­ing with­out the spec­ta­cle, with­out the optic, with­out the mob.” 

Stevenson said he was moti­vat­ed to cre­ate the memo­r­i­al and muse­um because a dis­cus­sion of the past is nec­es­sary to cre­ate a more just and equal soci­ety. We haven’t cre­at­ed spaces in this coun­try that tell the his­to­ry of racial inequal­i­ty, of slav­ery, of lynch­ing, of seg­re­ga­tion that moti­vate peo­ple to say, Never again,’” he said.