The Freedmen Files

Conversation With Kenneth Ford

31 min · 31 de mar de 2026
Portada del episodio Conversation With Kenneth Ford

Descripción

On this first 5th Monday taping, I had a wonderful conversation with Kenneth, founder of the Descendant Freedmen Alliance of Kansas City. Mr. Ford's ancestry comes out of the Creek Freedman Sells family from Taft Oklahoma. He has become a leader in the Kansas City area, in organizing a group of Oklahoma Freedmen descendants to gather, and study their history coming from the Five Tribes. In this conversation we learn about the how he made a discovery about his own history and later learning how many of ther families in the greater Kansas City area share a similar family story. (To save time for listerners, fast forward to the 30 second mark on the recording where the conversation begins. This will bypass the silent space on the tape.)

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episode Episode 38 Celebrating Freedom in Indian Territory artwork

Episode 38 Celebrating Freedom in Indian Territory

As we celebrate Freedom through the holiday of Juneteenth, let us examine, and celebrate how and when Freedom came to Indian Territory. None of the three gestures of freedom or emancipation in the US affected the enslaved people in the Five Nations. The Emancipation Proclamation, the passage of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution, as well as the Juneteenth announcements in Galveston Texas, all bypassed the enslaved families in the Five Nations. Juneteenth can however be viewed as a symbolic day to celebrate freedom. And beyond that, we as descendants of Oklahoma Freedmen should make the effort to find those freedom stories, because it came in different ways in each tribe, and in each domicile. However, Juneteenth kicks of an entire season of Freedom, from the 19th of June, to the 4th of August, we call their names, learn the dates that are significant, and we relish the resilience of our ancestors to come out of that institution that bound them to others and their ability to still rise up and raise the following generations, in dignity, peace and freedom. So as many of us celebrate Freedom, we too can embrace this symbolic day and commit to not only finding their stories--ous stories and to walk into the future as a free people richly connected and nurtured by our past. We are free!

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