cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/798768

From the first half of the article:

BETHESDA, MD – The desecration of Black burial grounds has received increased attention in recent years. Thanks to the organizing of descendants and community members in the Bethesda African Cemetery Coalition (BACC), the issue will soon be addressed by the state of Maryland’s top judges.

Last month the Supreme Court of Maryland granted the Bethesda African Cemetery Coalition (BACC) to hear its appeal to preserve this critical part of U.S. history. Moses Macedonia African Cemetery is partially located under the parking lot of an apartment complex owned by a quasi-governmental organization, the Montgomery County Housing Opportunities Commission (HOC).

Describing the origins of this case, BACC member Robert Stubblefield said, “In July of 2021 BACC caught wind that HOC was planning to sell to Charger Ventures in the amount of 50 million dollars. We found out on their website that they were selling the land. In August, our attorneys had filed for and received in the Circuit Court a temporary injunction, and in October 2021, the Circuit Court ruled in our favor saying that HOC did not follow the law.”

Since then, the Appellate Court of Maryland has granted an appeal filed by HOC, thereby nullifying the ruling of the Circuit Court.

BACC’s pro-bono attorney, Steve Lieberman, describes the importance of this case going to the Supreme Court, stating “It is critical for the Supreme Court of Maryland to address head-on how the laws of Maryland protect, or do not protect, the sepulchers of the dead and to determine whether our society’s obligations to the dead apply only to beautiful fenced in, well-marked and well-preserved cemeteries, or whether they apply equally to the burial grounds of all Americans.

Lieberman’s encouragement to the general public seeking to support BACC is, “Write to the Governor. Write to your Congressman. Come to the argument at the Supreme Court of Maryland in Annapolis when the case is argued in January.” The exact date for the argument has yet to be set.

On the heels of this Supreme Court announcement, BACC organized an action at a public forum put on by Montgomery County Executive Marc Elrich to, again, demand the return of over 200 bones found at the site of a self-storage development which is adjacent to the land owned by HOC. BACC members symbolically laid bones at his feet to represent their grief and loss.