Las Vegas Review-Journal

Historians: Take battle emblem off Miss. flag

Confederat­e symbol called legacy of ‘terror’

- By Emily Wagster Pettus The Associated Press

JACKSON, Miss. — Historians in Mississipp­i say the Confederat­e battle emblem is a “symbol of racial terror” that needs to be stripped from the state flag.

Thirty-four professors released a statement this week saying they expect questions from students about the recent white nationalis­t march in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, where some participan­ts carried the rebel flag.

Mississipp­i has the last state flag with the Confederat­e symbol, a red field topped by a blue tilted cross dotted by 13 white stars.

The professors from public and private universiti­es wrote that Mississipp­i legislator­s adopted the flag in 1894 to assert white supremacy.

“The threat of racist mob violence has been present throughout American history, and, as seen by the flag-wielding neo-nazis and racist sympathize­rs in Charlottes­ville, the use of Confederat­e emblems echoes the racist reasoning of whites in Mississipp­i at the end of the 19th Century, who used terror to impose minority rule,” they wrote.

Voters decided to keep the flag in a 2001 referendum. Confederat­e symbols have come under increasing scrutiny since 2015, when an avowed white supremacis­t who had posed for photos holding the battle flag killed nine black worshipper­s at a church in Charleston, South Carolina.

Some Mississipp­i elected officials, including the Republican speaker of the state House and both of the state’s Republican U.S. senators, have said the state should ditch the current flag and adopt a design that would unify the state, whose population is 38 percent black.

Republican Gov. Phil Bryant has said if the design is reconsider­ed, it should happen in another statewide election. Supporters of the flag say it represents the state’s history.

The professors wrote: “This flag does not reflect the entirety of the state’s history and people. It ignores the reality of the African-american experience, and it limits the scope of what Mississipp­i has been, is, and can be.”

About 40 other opponents of the Mississipp­i flag gathered Tuesday at the state Capitol. Aunjanue Ellis, an actress who grew up in Mississipp­i, said the Confederat­e battle emblem on the flag represents “terrorism.”

“This beautiful state that I live in has a history of domestic terrorism like no other state in the union,” Ellis said. “And our children are going to school every day, walking under a flag that tells them that violence and terrorism against their lives is OK. And that’s unacceptab­le. … This country’s ideals of justice and freedom for all will always be hollow and a lie as long as that flag flies.”

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