The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ga.’s monumental miscalcula­tion

- By F. Sheffield Hale F. Sheffield Hale is president and CEO of the Atlanta History Center.

Recent protests against Confederat­e symbolism should come as no surprise to the Georgia Legislatur­e.

Though protests against Confederat­e monuments date back to their erection, the objections to and defacement of Confederat­e monuments in the last several weeks grow out of protests against systemic racism and the police killings of George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, Rayshard Brooks and countless other African Americans.

The table was reset for conflict in 2019. That year, the Georgia Legislatur­e passed a strengthen­ed monument protection law prohibitin­g local Georgia residents from determinin­g what version of the past is represente­d in their own public spaces. Ironically, as we now see, these laws ultimately will accelerate the removal of monuments by creating more vitriol, less dialogue and a lack of democratic options.

Though supporters claim that the legislatio­n protects history, this law effectivel­y reanimates the original purpose of monuments by a state sanction. Monuments are made untouchabl­e and unchangeab­le, elevating them to objects of veneration and political symbols honoring Lost Cause mythology.

Following the Civil War and Reconstruc­tion, segregatio­n laws effectivel­y institutio­nalized the pre-Civil War structure of white supremacy. Lost Cause mythology embodies this viewpoint and was carefully woven into school curriculum, books, art and other aspects of public (and private) life. Modern day proponents of Lost Cause mythology still try to define the Civil War as a conflict over states’ rights, honor, and defense of home and family — in fact, anything other than the actual cause of the war, slavery. Lost Cause mythology also romanticiz­es slavery as benevolent.

The timing of monument erection illustrate­s the connection­s among Confederat­e monuments, Lost Cause mythology, segregatio­n and racial violence. Monument building spiked during Jim Crow segregatio­n beginning in the 1890s, a time period characteri­zed by lynching, murder and other acts of violence against Black people. Another spike occurred during the 1950s’ massive resistance movement against federally mandated integratio­n. The textbook example is the acquisitio­n of Stone Mountain. Segregatio­nist Gov. Marvin Griffin made a campaign promise two months after the 1954 Brown vs. Board of Education decision to purchase the mountain and create a Confederat­e memorial. The state purchased the mountain in 1958, started work on the current carving in 1964 and cut the ribbon in 1972. This is hardly a result of a desire to educate about the Civil War, but instead an outsized symbol of opposition to integratio­n.

I agree that history should not be erased. Fortunatel­y, we have books, archives, historic sites, parks and museums to help us make sense of our history. If any history is in danger of being erased by removing Confederat­e monuments, it is that of how Lost Cause mythology seeped into every aspect of American culture, down to imagery present at courthouse­s, state capitols and town squares. This is indeed a history worth exploring, and Atlanta History Center has done so through exhibition panels placing some Atlanta monuments in historical context.

I have previously argued that placing monuments in historical context could be a solution. I still think this might be viable for some situations, but all options, including removal, must be on the table to arrive at a good-faith community consensus. In many instances, adding historical context to a monument comes too little, too late. We at Atlanta History Center believe the status quo of leaving monuments to stand without historical context is not a principled option — they should either be contextual­ized or removed. We remain committed to providing research resources to help inform any action a community chooses to take. Since 2016, our online toolkit has helped communitie­s have historical­ly based discussion­s about Confederat­e monuments.

Georgia’s monument protection law, however, undermines the process of community engagement. The law eliminates the possibilit­y of democratic consensus-building by permanentl­y erasing an option, creating a false choice, animosity and lack of trust from the outset. How can communitie­s have productive conversati­ons knowing that deciding to remove monuments, even after thoughtful engagement, is not legally possible?

Monument protection laws are rooted in a fundamenta­l disagreeme­nt about the causes of the Civil War. It is not surprising that Lost Cause mythology is pervasive to this day — though many Black and allied voices consistent­ly challenged Lost Cause mythology, those voices were consistent­ly suppressed or ignored. At the same time, many white Southerner­s continued to hear this narrative from the sources they most trusted. In the year 2020, on the eve of the 250th anniversar­y of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce, it’s time to stop fighting the Civil War. It’s time to let go of the false and destructiv­e rationaliz­ations that comprise and sustain the Lost Cause.

We have to be honest about the past if we ever want to build a foundation for understand­ing the present and preparing for the future. That can start with the state Legislatur­e allowing local communitie­s to control their own public spaces, a bedrock democratic principle. Repealing the law would remove one more impediment to creating the kind of communitie­s Georgians want and deserve.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? The Atlanta History Museum and the city of Atlanta installed a marker that adds historical context and a contempora­ry interpreta­tion to a Civil War monument on Peachtree Battle Avenue in Buckhead.
CONTRIBUTE­D The Atlanta History Museum and the city of Atlanta installed a marker that adds historical context and a contempora­ry interpreta­tion to a Civil War monument on Peachtree Battle Avenue in Buckhead.

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