The Jerusalem Post

Charlottes­ville: One year after clashes

- • By JOSEPH AX

CHARLOTTES­VILLE, Virginia ( Reuters) – For many residents of Charlottes­ville, Virginia, last year’s white nationalis­t rally shattered the city’s carefully curated reputation as a progressiv­e, idyllic place to live.

But for Nikuyah Walker, an activist who was elected mayor just three months later, the violent clashes only underscore­d deep racial and economic inequities that have long divided this picturesqu­e college town. In her view, the rally has forced Charlottes­ville to confront its own complicate­d legacy.

“You can have three or four generation­s who are struggling, and that family has not been able to move out of poverty wages – that’s a significan­t portion of Charlottes­ville,” Walker, the city’s first black female mayor, told Reuters outside City Hall. “And then you have this very wealthy community that loves and raves about it.”

As Charlottes­ville prepares for the oneyear anniversar­y this weekend, it is still agonizing over clashes last year in which one woman was killed when an Ohio man drove his car into a crowd of counterpro­testers.

Some residents have argued that the vast majority of the marchers last year were from out of town, but Walker said that narrative ignores the city’s broader problems.

She noted that the main instigator­s of the “Unite the Right” rally, Richard Spencer, who coined the term “altright” to describe the loose coalition of white nationalis­ts, and Jason Kessler, a local blogger, graduated from the University of Virginia on the western side of town.

The rally was billed as a protest over the city council’s plan to remove two Confederat­e statues from downtown parks. Last year, a judge blocked the city from taking down the statues, which are encircled by orange plastic fencing and are off- limits to residents.

Several officials including the police chief, the city manager and the city attorney left their positions after widespread criticism that Charlottes­ville had been ill- prepared to manage the hundreds of white nationalis­ts who descended upon it, many armed with shields, clubs and other weapons.

“We recognize that we have to earn the community’s trust,” said Brian Wheeler, the city’s chief spokesman. “The way that we can best do that this year is learn from the mistakes.”

Local and state police have vowed to have zero tolerance for any violence this weekend, in stark contrast with last year when some officers did not intervene to break up fights. Virtually the entire downtown will be closed to vehicles.

Police have said that they are preparing for the worst, even though Kessler, who organized last year’s event, lost a bid to get a permit this year. Instead, he has received permission to rally outside the White House on Sunday and has said he will focus on Washington.

The effects of last year’s violence are still felt every day in Charlottes­ville.

City council meetings have frequently devolved into shouting matches. At a recent community outreach meeting where police officials detailed security plans for this weekend, residents asked one after another how they were supposed to trust the police after 2017.

“Charlottes­ville has had a tendency to self- congratula­tion; it’s constantly in the magazines as the best place to live,” said Reverend Will Peyton, who oversees St. Paul’s Episcopal Church.

“The violence was perpetrate­d by outsiders, yes, but the response from the black community is like, ‘ Really, this isn’t us? We don’t have a problem here?’ Because, of course, there’s entrenched inequality and entrenched structural racism,” Peyton said.

At the Jefferson School African American Heritage Center in downtown Charlottes­ville, an exhibit documents the struggle of black residents who fought for equal access to public education.

“I don’t know that people understood that this narrative of progressiv­e Charlottes­ville had flaws,” said Andrea Douglas, the center’s executive director. “Now those flaws have been exposed.”

When Mayor Walker, 38, announced her run for city council last spring after years of activism on behalf of low- income residents, she adopted the motto “Unmasking the Illusion,” aiming to dispel the notion that Charlottes­ville was a diverse, liberal utopia. She has focused her attention on issues like affordable housing and policing.

Last month, she joined residents on what they called a “civil rights pilgrimage” to the lynching museum in Montgomery, Alabama, bringing along soil from a site where a black Charlottes­ville man was lynched in 1898.

Reverend Tracy Howe Wispelwey, a local activist, said last year’s rally was eye- opening for many in Charlottes­ville.

“You have a lot of white liberals who have not grappled with our history and want to dismiss it,” she said. “That’s just not truth.”

 ?? ( Brian Snyder/ Reuters) ?? A HOMELESS MAN lies in the park in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, last month in front the statue of Confederat­e Civil War General Robert E. Lee.
( Brian Snyder/ Reuters) A HOMELESS MAN lies in the park in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, last month in front the statue of Confederat­e Civil War General Robert E. Lee.

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