The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Monuments to embattled history

Debate a testimony to enduring, terrible toll of Civil War.

- Andre Jackson, for the Editorial Board.

The great debate over a war that ended 152 years ago goes on across the U.S., Georgia and metro Atlanta.

Protests continued last week, and monuments to long-dead leaders of the Confederac­y remained on endangered-species lists or, in one instance, were draped in funereal black.

All of which is a powerful testimony to the terrible, and enduring, toll of America’s Civil War. Today, its uncanny ability to stir division among even well-meaning people remains seemingly as strong as it was from 1861 to 1865.

Georgia remains near the core of today’s movements to, alternatel­y, tear down part of history — or bolster it, however stubbornly, in place. Georgia’s role in all this comes courtesy of the mammoth carving of Confederat­e heroes at Stone Mountain and even despite Atlanta’s role at the center of the Civil Rights movement that helped America gain ground in addressing a violent and unjust legacy of Jim Crow-era discrimina­tion.

Lost on both sides, seemingly, is the need for a civil society to accept the past as it was, flaws and all. That can only come from accurately interpreti­ng yesterday’s events and monuments for today’s citizenry.

That’s unlikely in today’s divided America.

Reaching any sort of common viewpoint on stone reminders of the Confederac­y will require a continuing, robust exchange of viewpoints. We present today a pair of edited-for-space arguments on this issue. Among them is a plea from relatives of a vice president of the Confederac­y. Longer versions appear on myAJC.com.

 ?? AJC 2015 ?? Reaching a common viewpoint on stone reminders of the Confederac­y will require a continuing, robust exchange of viewpoints.
AJC 2015 Reaching a common viewpoint on stone reminders of the Confederac­y will require a continuing, robust exchange of viewpoints.

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