Is Black Ownership Our Only Hope in Stopping Plantation Weddings?

<p>There&rsquo;s nothing romantic about a plantation wedding when you consider the brutal mistreatment of enslaved people forced to live and work there. Sure, the South has its natural charms. Mighty pecan, magnolia, and oak trees with branches stretching out to reach one another, bayous, lakes, rivers, and marshland beaming with life. However, for Black Americans whose enslaved ancestors were forcibly detained there, the mere image of a plantation, with its stately white columns, ruins the scene altogether. And that&#39;s because, throughout much of America&#39;s history, Black people have had very little say in determining what these properties would become.</p> <p><a href="https://readcultured.com/is-black-ownership-our-only-hope-in-stopping-plantation-weddings-e2c1a0a04395"><strong>Click Here</strong></a></p> <p>&nbsp;</p>