The Oklahoma Supreme Court will consider a case seeking reparations for survivors of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, known as one of the worst acts of racial violence in U.S. history.

Tulsa County District Judge Caroline Wall dismissed the case last month, and the last three known survivors, Lessie Benningfield Randle, Viola Fletcher and Hughes Van Ellis Sr., filed an appeal with the state’s supreme court. Last week, the court agreed to consider whether the suit should have been dismissed and if it should be returned to the lower court.

The lawsuit, filed in 2020, said the massacre was an “ongoing public nuisance” to the survivors, and the decimation of what had been America’s most prosperous Black business community continues to affect Tulsa.

“The survivors of the Tulsa Race Massacre are heroes, and Oklahoma has had 102 years to do right by them,” their attorney, Damario Solomon-Simmons, said in a statement to The Associated Press. “The state’s efforts to gaslight the living survivors, whitewash history, and move the goal posts for everyone seeking justice in Oklahoma puts all of us in danger, and that is why we need the Oklahoma Supreme Court to apply the rule of law.” 

The city and other defendants declined to consider a settlement with the survivors, court documents show.

Following the massacre, the city “exacerbated the damage and suffering” of the Greenwood community by unlawfully detaining thousands and using unconstitutional laws to deprive the community of “reasonable use of their property,” the lawsuit said.

Assistant Attorney General Kevin McClure filed a response to the appeal Monday, where he said the suit was based on “conflicting historical facts” from more than century ago and should be dismissed.