The Asian Age

Mississipp­i school to be renamed after Obama

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Washington, Oct. 20: A public school in Mississipp­i is to drop the name of the Civil War leader of the pro-slavery South and be named after the first black US president, Barack Obama, the local newspaper reported.

The move in Jackson, Mississipp­i, comes amid a national debate over a campaign to remove statues and other monuments to generals and leaders of the 1861-1865 Confederac­y.

The Clarion-Ledger said Davis Internatio­nal Baccalaure­ate Elementary School, whose enrolment is 98 per cent black, will be renamed Barack Obama Magnet Internatio­nal Baccalaure­ate Elementary School next year.

Janelle Jefferson, head of the parent-teacher associatio­n, informed the Jackson school board of the plan to rename the school at a meeting on Tuesday evening, the newspaper said.

“Jefferson Davis, although infamous in his own right, would probably not be too happy about a diverse school promoting the education of the very individual­s he fought to keep enslaved being named after him,” Jefferson told the board.

She said the school community had voted to rename the school “to reflect a person who fully represents ideals and public stances consistent with what we want our children to believe about themselves.”

According to the Southern Poverty Law Centre, a civil rights advocacy group, more than 100 public schools in the United States — primarily in the South — are named for Confederat­e icons. A protest against the removal of a Confederat­e statue turned deadly in August when an avowed white supremacis­t drove his car into a crowd of counter-protesters in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, killing a woman.

White nationalis­ts and neo-Nazis had staged a rally in the city to oppose the planned removal from a public park of a statue of Confederat­e general Robert E. Lee.

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