How much do any of us know about our family\u2019s past? If we dig deep enough, far enough\u2026 what might be unearthed?
For Randy Quarterman\u2026 and for Sarah Eisner\u2026 living thousands of miles apart\u2026 one in Savannah, Georgia\u2026 the other in Silicon Valley\u2026 who seemingly had separate existences\u2026 what was discovered was an intimate history that binds them together\u2026
A history that is both personal\u2026 and national\u2026 a history of enslavement in the United States\u2026
But what would happen if two people took on this painful past\u2026 and worked together to make things right in the present?
To answer that question and more\u2026 I\u2019m joined by Randy Quarterman, fifth generation descendant of Zeike Quarterman\u2026 and Sarah Eisner, fifth generation descendant of George Adam Keller\u2026 They are the founders of the Quarterman Keller Foundation\u2026 and the Reparations Project\u2026 They are also both a part of the documentary \u2018The Cost of Inheritance\u2019