Black Hand<span>, </span><span>byname of </span>Ujedinjenje Ili Smrt (Serbo-Croation: Union or Death)<span>, secret </span>Serbian<span> society of the early 20th century that used terrorist methods to promote the liberation of Serbs outside Serbia from Habsburg or Ottoman rule and was instrumental in planning the assassination of the Austrian archduke </span>Franz Ferdinand<span>(1914), precipitating the outbreak of </span>World War I<span>. The society was formed (1911) and led by Col. </span>Dragutin Dimitrijević<span>; its members were primarily army officers with some government officials. Operating from </span>Belgrade<span>, it conducted propaganda campaigns, organized armed bands in Macedonia (before the </span>Balkan Wars<span>, 1912–13), and established a network of revolutionary cells throughout Bosnia. Within Serbia it dominated the army and wielded tremendous influence over the government by terrorizing officials; it became so powerful that its authority challenged that of the government. In order to eliminate that rival, Prince Alexander, commander in chief of the expatriate Serbian army, brought the leaders of the Black Hand to trial on dubious charges at Salonika in 1917. Dimitrijević and two others were executed, and more than 200 were imprisoned.</span>
I believe it would be politics, education, and voting right
Slavery was given to them, they bought their rights and they felt like that was justification for buying blacks.
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President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 8802, also called the Fair Employment Act, on June 25, 1941. The order prohibited racial discrimination by all federal agencies, unions, and companies engaged in war-related work.
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