The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

A lawmaker defends Confederat­e Memorial Day resolution,

Lawmaker seeks month, holiday to recognize army.

- By Michelle Baruchman mbaruchman@ajc.com

State Rep. Tommy Benton believes the history of the Confederat­e army is part of Southern cultural heritage and should be recognized formally in the state.

Benton sponsored House Resolution 644 along with state Reps. Alan Powell, Steve Tarvin and Jesse Petrea to commemorat­e the “brave” men who fought on the Confederat­e side in the Civil War by recognizin­g April as Confederat­e History Month and April 26 as Confederat­e Memorial Day.

The resolution, however, makes no mention of the “Civil War,” instead referring to it as the “four-year struggle for states’ rights, individual freedom, and local government­al control, which they believed to be right and just.”

But when asked whether the resolution — which is written to “encourage our citizens to learn about Georgia’s heritage and history and to observe the occasion with appropriat­e ceremonies” — includes the need to understand the role that slavery and systemic exploitati­on and oppression of African and African-American people played and an acknowledg­ement of what the war was fought about, Benton declined to answer.

“Next question,” the Republican from Jefferson said Monday during a press conference about the resolution.

A former schoolteac­her and unapologet­ic supporter of preserving Georgia’s Confederat­e heritage, Benton has previously backed a measure that would protect state monuments from being moved or removed. He has also said the Ku Klux Klan, though he didn’t agree with all its methods, “made a lot of people straighten up.”

Benton said the intentions of his proposal, which isn’t expected to gain any traction in the final days of the legislativ­e session, have been misunderst­ood and misinterpr­eted.

“It should never have been a controvers­y,” Benton said. “We’re not honoring slavery.”

After a gunman and avowed white supremacis­t shot and killed nine people praying in an African Methodist Episcopal church in Charleston, S.C., many Southern states came under fire for their embrace of Confederat­e memorabili­a and traditions.

The fourth Monday in April had for decades been known in Georgia as Confederat­e Memorial Day. But in 2015, Gov. Nathan Deal quietly struck that reference, as well as Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee’s birthday, from the official state calendar and renamed each date as a “State Holiday.”

Benton, joined by Scott Gilbert, the commander of the Georgia Division of the Sons of Confederat­e Veterans, and Charles Lunsford, a spokesman for Save Southern Heritage, called critics of his resolution intolerant.

“For some reason, people who exclaim how they are for diversity are trying to wipe us out of the memory of these commemorat­ions,” Lunsford said. “People who say we should all accept one another as equals and be friendly and accepting are not being friendly and accepting toward us.”

State Sen. Vincent Fort, D-Atlanta, sponsored a bill in 2016 that would prohibit the state from formally recognizin­g holidays in honor of the Confederac­y or its leaders.

He said, at the time, that the state shouldn’t be in the business of formally “recognizin­g people who were slave owners or fought to protect slavery.”

And Francys Johnson, the president of the Georgia chapter of the NAACP, called on Deal and other state leaders to publicly oppose the measure, saying “hate has no place in a modern society.”

Deal declined to comment on Benton’s proposal, directing questions to his “good friend” instead.

 ?? BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM ?? State Rep. Tommy Benton seeks to commemorat­e the Confederat­e army. Behind him are Scott Gilbert (left), commander of the Georgia Division of the Sons of Confederat­e Veterans, and Charles Lunsford, spokesman for Save Southern Heritage. Benton’s...
BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM State Rep. Tommy Benton seeks to commemorat­e the Confederat­e army. Behind him are Scott Gilbert (left), commander of the Georgia Division of the Sons of Confederat­e Veterans, and Charles Lunsford, spokesman for Save Southern Heritage. Benton’s...

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