Shanghai Daily

American city axes Civil War statues

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THE southern US city of Charlottes­ville on Saturday took down controvers­ial statues including two honoring Civil War proslavery generals which had become the focus of protests.

The statues of generals Robert E. Lee and Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson are among hundreds of Confederat­e monuments in the United States now widely considered symbols of racism, even if their supporters argue they are a historical legacy.

Workers in the Virginia city used a crane to remove the statues — which depicted Lee and Jackson in uniform mounted on horses — as a crowd watched and cheered.

No violence was immediatel­y reported. “Taking down this statue is one small step closer to the goal of helping Charlottes­ville, Virginia, and America, grapple with the sin of being willing to destroy black people for economic gain,” Charlottes­ville Mayor Nikuyah Walker, who is African American, told reporters before the monuments’ removal.

Tensions over the fate of the Lee statue led to violence in August 2017, when a white nationalis­t drove his car into a crowd of demonstrat­ors in

Charlottes­ville, killing a woman.

The protesters had gathered in opposition to white supremacis­ts who staged a “Unite the Right” rally against plans to remove the statue.

Then-president Donald Trump came under fire when he said afterward that there were “very fine people on both sides” of the protests.

The Charlottes­ville violence gave new life to a campaign to remove Confederat­e symbols which first gained momentum following the June 2015 murders in South Carolina of nine black churchgoer­s by a white supremacis­t.

The campaign picked up again following the May 25, 2020 death of George Floyd, an African American killed by a white police officer in Minneapoli­s, Minnesota.

Defenders of preserving the Confederat­e symbols have argued that they serve as a reminder of a proud Southern heritage, and say removing them is erasing history.

According to historians, however, most of the Confederat­e monuments dotting the southern United States were erected during the Jim Crow era of racial segregatio­n and in response to the civil rights movement.

Charlottes­ville’s city council also voted in an emergency meeting Saturday to remove a statue of explorers Meriwether Lewis and William Clark and their Native American guide Sacagawea.

The depiction had drawn criticism for what some saw as a demeaning portrayal of Sacagawea, who is crouching at the men’s feet and looking at the ground, and officials took advantage of the available equipment and personnel to take it down, city spokesman Brian Wheeler said.

Sacagawea assisted Lewis and Clark on their 1804-1806 expedition from the Mississipp­i River in Missouri to the Pacific Ocean, crossing territory mostly occupied by Native Americans.

Virginia’s flagship university also joined in, confirming it would begin a project to remove a statue of George Rogers Clark yesterday.

George Rogers Clark was William Clark’s older brother and fought against the British army and its Native American allies during the Revolution­ary War, seizing swaths of Native territory for the young nation.

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