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Seattle Parks Seeks Erasure of the Black Lives Memorial Garden

Erin Fried - October 13, 2023
In June 2020, people gathered and admired the early stages of garden that Marcus Henderson of Black Star Farmers spearheaded at Cal Anderson Park. (Doug Trumm)

Seattle Parks and Recreation recently announced its intent to erase the Black Lives Memorial Garden in Cal Anderson Park, a move as cowardly as it is offensive, echoing a history of redlining and racial discrimination that persists in American institutions today.

Cal Anderson Park, named for the first openly gay member of the Washington State Legislature, itself holds a legacy of protest. Most recently, the Capitol Hill Organized Protest (CHOP) found its home there during 2020 demonstrations against police brutality when a standoff with the East Precinct of the Seattle Police Department ended in the abandonment of the building.

Yet, despite complaints from some Capitol Hill residents and a failed mediation with the Parks department, who incidentally began and then abandoned a community dialogue about the garden in 2020, the Black Lives Memorial Garden has persisted. It has moved beyond an origin story symbolic of opportunity, joy, and resilience during a time of collective darkness. Now, the Black Lives Memorial Garden reminds us that Black, Indigenous, and People of Color in Seattle continue to be marginalized by a government that has so neglected their communities it cannot even recognize the incredible achievement of their resilience.