Porterville Recorder

Why hate came to Charlottes­ville

- By SARAH RANKIN

CHARLOTTES­VILLE, Va. — The white nationalis­ts behind last weekend’s violent rally found an appealing target in the historic town where Thomas Jefferson founded a university and an outspoken, progressiv­e mayor declared his city the “capital of the resistance” to President Donald Trump.

For more than a year, the Charlottes­ville government has also been engaged in contentiou­s public soul searching over its Confederat­e monuments, a process that led to the decision to remove a statue of Gen. Robert E. Lee. All those factors made this community a symbolical­ly powerful backdrop for what’s considered the largest white nationalis­t gathering in at least a decade.

“We are a progressiv­e, tolerant city. We are also a Southern city,” Mayor Mike Signer said. About a year and a half ago, Charlottes­ville “decided to launch on the difficult but essential work of finally telling the truth about race. That made us a target for tons of people who don’t want to change the narrative.”

On the eve of Saturday’s rally, hundreds of white men marched through the University of Virginia campus, holding torches and chanting racist and anti-semitic slogans. The next morning, many looked like they were dressed for war as they made their way to Emancipati­on Park.

They clashed with counter-protesters in a stunning display of violence before authoritie­s forced the crowd to disperse. Later, a car plowed into a crowd of demonstrat­ors, killing 32-year-old Heather Heyer and injuring 19 others.

With a population of around 47,000, Charlottes­ville is a progressiv­e island in a conservati­ve part of Virginia.

The funky, cosmopolit­an town is nestled in the rolling foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains. It’s known for being home to Jefferson’s plantation, Monticello, and the place where the Dave Matthews Band got its start.

The heart of its downtown is an openair pedestrian mall lined with restaurant­s, bars and quirky boutiques. Tourists flock to Charlottes­ville not only for the history and culture but also to visit the wineries that dot the countrysid­e just outside of town.

Charlottes­ville was easily overwhelme­d by the numbers that showed up Saturday, said Ed Ayers, a leading Civil War scholar who taught at UVA for decades before moving to Richmond.

Despite Virginia’s bloody part in the Civil War, Ayers said, the Lee statue does not have a significan­t historical connection to Charlottes­ville. The city “did not play a central role in the war at all, he explained, and the statue was not erected until the 1920s, when Jim Crow laws were eroding the rights of black citizens.

Charlottes­ville was just “a very clear symbol they could go to and have a protest,” Ayers said.

The city is proud of Jefferson’s university, a prestigiou­s school with graduates that include prominent figures such as Robert F. Kennedy. But UVA is also a school largely built by slaves and where professors had ideologica­l connection­s to the resistance movement that followed the Brown vs. Board of Education school desegregat­ion decision.

The university did not admit black students until 1950. Last year, figures provided by the school show only 6 percent of students were black.

White nationalis­t leader Richard Spencer — a UVA grad who was one of the most high-profile speakers lined up for the rally — echoed Ayers’ perspectiv­e. He said that the Confederat­e monuments are a metaphor for something “much bigger,” referring to “white dispossess­ion and the de-legitimiza­tion of white people in this country and around the world.”

Saturday was not Spencer’s first demonstrat­ion in Charlottes­ville. In May, he was among another torchwield­ing group that rallied around the statue at night, chanting, “You will not replace us.” Later that month, local right-wing blogger and UVA graduate Jason Kessler applied for the permit for Saturday’s event.

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