Boston Herald

Alt-right sparks monumental choices

Confederat­e statues should be removed

- By RICH LOWRY open Rich Lowry is the editor of National Review.

Robert E. Lee wasn’t a Nazi, and surely would have had no sympathy for the white supremacis­t goons who made his statue a rallying point in Charlottes­ville, Va., last weekend.

That doesn’t change the fact that his statue is now associated with a campaign of racist violence against the picturesqu­e town where Thomas Jefferson founded the University of Virginia. The statue of Lee was already slated for removal by the city, but the Battle of Charlottes­ville should be an inflection point in the broader debate over Confederat­e statuary.

The monuments should go. Some of them simply should be trashed; others transmitte­d to museums, battlefiel­ds and cemeteries. The heroism and losses of Confederat­e soldiers should be commemorat­ed, but not in everyday public spaces where the monuments are flashpoint­s in poisonous racial contention, with white nationalis­ts often mustering in their defense.

Some discrimina­tion is in order. There’s no reason to honor Jefferson Davis, the blessedly incompeten­t president of the Confederac­y. New Orleans just sent a statue of him to storage — good riddance. Amazingly enough, Baltimore has a statue of Chief Justice Roger Taney, the author of the monstrous Dred Scott decision that helped precipitat­e the war. A city commission has, rightly, recommende­d its destructio­n.

Robert E. Lee, on the other hand, is a more complicate­d case. He was no great friend of slavery. He wrote in a letter to his wife “that slavery as an institutio­n, is a moral & political evil in any Country” (he added, shamefully, that it was good for blacks — “the painful discipline they are undergoing, is necessary for their instructio­n as a race”). After the war, he accepted defeat and did his part to promote national healing.

Yet, faced with a momentous choice at the start of the war, he decided he was a Virginia patriot rather than an American nationalis­t. He told one of President Abraham Lincoln’s advisers: “I look upon secession as anarchy. If I owned the four million slaves in the South I would sacrifice them all to the Union; but how can I draw my sword upon Virginia, my native state?” He betrayed the U.S. government and fought on the side devoted to preserving chattel slavery.

That is a grievous political sin, although he obviously wasn’t the only one guilty of it. The Civil War was an America conflict, with Americans on both sides. An honorable soldier, Lee is an apt symbol for the Confederat­e rank and file whose sacrifices in the war’s charnel house shouldn’t be flushed down the memory hole.

The Baltimore commission has called for moving a striking dual statue of Lee and Stonewall Jackson to the Chancellor­sville, Va., battlefiel­d where the two last met before Jackson’s death. This would be appropriat­e, and would take a page from the Gettysburg battlefiel­d. A statue of Lee commemorat­es Virginia’s losses and overlooks the field where Gen. George Pickett undertook his doomed charge. If you can’t honor Robert E. Lee there, you can’t honor him anywhere.

For some of the left, that’s the right answer, but this unsparing attitude rejects the generosity of spirit of the two great heroes of the war, Abraham Lincoln and Ulysses S. Grant. Notably, Grant vehemently opposed trying Lee for treason.

For supporters of the Confederat­e monuments, removing them from parks and avenues will be a blow against their heritage and historical memory. But the statues have often been part of an effort to whitewash the Confederac­y. And it’s one thing for a statue to be merely a resting place for pigeons; it’s another for it to be a fighting cause for neo-Nazis.

Lee himself opposed building Confederat­e monuments in the immediate aftermath of the war. “I think it wiser,” he said, “not to keep open the sores of war, but to follow the examples of those nations who endeavoure­d to obliterate the marks of civil strife and to commit to oblivion the feelings it engendered.” After Charlottes­ville, it’s time to revisit his advice.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? FLASHPOINT: A statue of Gen. Robert E. Lee still occupies a prominent perch in Richmond, Va.
AP PHOTO FLASHPOINT: A statue of Gen. Robert E. Lee still occupies a prominent perch in Richmond, Va.

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