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3 Views· 06/03/26· People & Blogs

Formerly Enslaved vs. Identity — The Gap Left Behind


A. Johnson-Kellogg
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This documentary continues examining how a people were harmed not only through Negro Slavery, but through the loss of a legally recorded birthright identity.

In U.S. law, the population subjected to Negro Slavery was documented under a specific legal classification: Negro.
That classification functioned as evidence — not symbolism.

After Negro Slavery ended, citizenship was granted, but identity was never formally restored.
Courts later adopted the phrase “formerly enslaved people” to describe a condition, not a people.

This created a legal gap.

Without a restored or protected identity tied to the original record of harm from Negro Slavery, descendants inherited confusion and ongoing compound harm — as the protective legal classification Negro, under which the injury was recorded, was later removed, weakening evidence and obstructing generations from tracing their factual history with clarity.

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