The Province

Adam Driver’s KKK comments prove true

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A museum official who questioned Star Wars actor Adam Driver’s recent comments about rememberin­g frequent Ku Klux Klan rallies during his youth in northern Indiana now acknowledg­es he was wrong.

Driver made the comments during a USA Today interview about his role in the new movie BlacKkKlan­sman. Travis Childs of The History Museum in South Bend was quoted Monday saying the actor was likely misremembe­ring his childhood in nearby Mishawaka. “If they were as active as he said they were active, they’d have been in the paper every other week,” Childs told the Indianapol­is Star.

But local Klan members and rallies were indeed frequent when Driver, 34, was growing up. Six men claiming to be Klansmen attacked a black couple and their baby arriving home in 1992, less than two years after Driver moved to Mishawaka from California at age 7, according to the

South Bend Tribune. The men were later sent to prison for the crimes. Four local white men claiming affiliatio­n with a hate group called White Brotherhoo­d set out to find and rob a black woman in

1993, killing Cathy Long in the process and drawing media coverage. They were also sentenced to prison, according to the newspaper.

The Tribune also reported that five KKK rallies occurred in the area between 1993 and 2001, in addition to two KKK protests in 1998 when a white student was forced to remove a shirt with a racial slur. Childs, who moved to the area in 1999, said he hadn’t adequately researched the Klan’s history in the area before commenting on Driver’s assertions.

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