Chicago Sun-Times

A tragic turn on hallowed ground

- GENE LYONS Arkansas Times columnist Gene Lyons is a National Magazine Award winner and co- author of “The Hunting of the President.” Email: eugenelyon­s2@yahoo. com

Watching the Charlottes­ville spectacle from halfway across the country, I confess that my first instinct was to raillery. “Vanilla ISIS,” somebody called this mob of would- be Nazis. A parade of love- deprived nerds marching bravely out of their parents’ basements carrying tiki torches from Home Depot.

The odor of citronell a must have been overpoweri­ng. Was this an attack on the campus left or on mosquitoes?

“Blood and soil!” they chanted. “Jews will not replace us!” Jews? Had Jews somehow prevented these dorks from getting sex?

Deeply offensive, but also deeply ridiculous. The iconograph­y of the torch- lit parade was straight out of “Triumph of the Will,” Leni Riefenstah­l’s epic film glorifying Hitler. Deliberate­ly so. These Stormfront geeks get off on trying to frighten normal people with Nazi imagery.

“Hogan’s Heroes” ismore like it. I mean Confederat­e flags are one thing, but swastikas? Politicall­y, nothing could be dumber. Why not just have “Besiegte” tattooed on your forehead? That’s German for “vanquished.”

Speaking for the overwhelmi­ng majority of Americans, Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah tweeted: “My brother didn’t give his life fighting Hitler for Nazi ideas to go unchalleng­ed here at home.”

Then things went from laughable to tragic overnight.

The University of Virginia has always been hallowed ground to me. When I first arrived, the sheer, serene beauty of Thomas Jefferson’s architectu­re affected me almost viscerally. Was the orderly life it implied even possible in thisw orld? Well, certainly not in Jefferson’s own life, but art is art.

I was first introduced tomy wife in a serpentine- walled garden maybe 50 yards from where the would- be Nazis assembled around Jefferson’s statue. If I closemy eyes, I can still see her standing there in her little shirtwaist dress— an Arkansas girl more exotic to me than anybody I’d known. A coach’s daughter, she’d applied to study history at UVA entirely unaware that there were no women undergradu­ates back then.

The dean asked if I’d ever heard of Hendrix College, her Arkansas alma mater— a potentiall­y embarrassi­ng question.

“No, sir,” I said. “Theymust not play football.”

She laughed because I was right; also because it was a cheeky way to talk to the graduate school dean. I’ve done my best to keep her laughing ever since.

For thatmatter, I played several seasons’ worth of rugby games on Nameless Field, where the would- be SS- men lit their little torches. We got married in Charlottes­ville two years later. Indeed, we’ve sometimes regretted ever leaving. So, yes, it’s doubly distressin­g to see the university and city turned into a stage set for fascist street theater.

“Charlottes­ville,” wrote UVA professor Siva Vaidhyanat­han, “is an ideal stage for them to perform acts of terrorism. This was the home of Thomas Jefferson, the man who codified religious tolerance in colonial Virginia and who declared ‘ all men are created equal.’ It’s also the home of Thomas Jefferson, the man who owned, sold, raped and had whipped people he considered racially inferior to him. It’s the site of the University of Virginia, an institutio­n steeped in conservati­ve traditions that echo the Old South. And it’s the site of the University of Virginia, an elite, global research university with a cosmopolit­an faculty and student body.”

It’s definitely all that. Old South or not, Charlottes­ville is also a liberal college town that voted to remove an equestrian statue of Robert E. Lee fromits courthouse square and relocate it to a park on its outskirts. Like many of the thousand or so Confederat­e monuments across the South, it was erected long after the CivilWar, in 1924— hence more an expression of white supremacy than Virginian ancestor worship, precisely as Stormfront wants to use it today.

Lee himself steadfastl­y refused to be so memorializ­ed in his lifetime. He would not contribute to the building of Confederat­e monuments and steadfastl­y advised white Southerner­s to leave it all behind. To an embittered Confederat­e widow, Lee once wrote, “Madam, do not train up your children in hostility to the government of the United States. Remember, we are all one country now … Bring them up to be Americans.”

Vaidhyanat­han regrets that he and his wife stayed away on Saturday for fear of precisely what happened: amad act of violence by a deranged young man. He vows to bear peaceful witness when the would- be Storm Troopers march again. Maybe he can help to calm campus hotheads as well. The last thing Americans need is anybody romanticiz­ing violence.

Meanwhile, if Virginians need monuments, and they do, the state’s covered with CivilWar battlefiel­ds. The Lawn at UVA remains; also Jefferson’s Monticello. For all the terrible ambiguity of his life, the manwas the great genius of his age. The Washington and Lee campus in Lexington memorializ­es Robert E. Lee as he’d have preferred to be remembered.

For thatmatter, Appomattox Courthouse isn’t far away.

“Madam, do not train up your children in hostility to the government of the United States. Remember, we are all one country now … Bring them up to be Americans.” Gen. Robert E. Lee, in a letter to a Confederat­e widow

 ?? | CLIFF OWEN/ AP ?? A statue of Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee in Charlottes­ville, Virginia.
| CLIFF OWEN/ AP A statue of Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee in Charlottes­ville, Virginia.
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