thank you very much right reverend marianne edgar budde, presint john garvey and professoraroldean trulermany thanks to each of you for an interesting conversation. >>> we have a special report now on one of the greatest tragedies of american history. the lynching of many thousands of african-americans. before the generation of people who remember such atrocities dies off, scholars are trying to record eyewitness accounts and what they're findingsotust graphic photos and consuming hate, but the ability of some of those most affected to forgive. >>> for two sisters who witnessed a lynching, memories still haunt. 94-year-old kathryn fletcher will never forget how her one-time classmate was murdered at st. oseph, missouri eig decas ago. >> they chained him to the back of a car and dragged him up and down the main street of the black neighborhood screaming, "this will happen to you so-and-sos" then they tranged him to a tree and set afire and burned his body. >> throughout the country from the civil war era well into the 20th century, african-american men, women and even some whites were lync