The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Alabama still won’t leave the Confederac­y behind

Francis Wilkinson

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New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu delivered a powerful speech last month justifying his city’s removal of Confederat­e statues from public spaces. “These statues are not just stone and metal. They are not just innocent remembranc­es of a benign history,” Landrieu said. “These monuments purposeful­ly celebrate a fictional, sanitized Confederac­y; ignoring the death, ignoring the enslavemen­t, and the terror that it actually stood for.”

Within days of Landrieu’s speech, Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey, R, took pains to extend the unnatural life of the Confederac­y. Ivey signed a bill designed to preserve and cherish her state’s monuments to the death, enslavemen­t and terror that Landrieu had just renounced.

The Alabama Memorial Preservati­on Act prohibits local government­s or civic groups from removing historical monuments from public property if the monuments have been in place for at least 40 years.

State Sen. Gerald Allen, R, who proposed the bill, issued a statement denying that the bill was an attempt to keep the malignant specter of the Confederac­y alive. “Contrary to what its detractors say, the Memorial Preservati­on Act is intended to preserve all of Alabama’s history — the good and the bad — so our children and grandchild­ren can learn from the past to create a better future,” he said.

Conservati­ves began seeking ways to protect Confederat­e memorials after then-Gov. Robert Bentley, R, in the wake of the 2015 church shooting in Charleston, South Carolina, had Confederat­e flags removed from Alabama’s capitol grounds in Montgomery.

The 40-year timeline of the memorial legislatio­n guarantees that any Confederat­e symbols erected before or during the state’s mid-20th-century resistance to civil rights will be preserved.

Today, Alabama’s place in American civil-rights history is a tourist draw. Montgomery, where Martin Luther King Jr. rose to greatness, features a Freedom Rides Museum, at the site of the bus station where civil-rights activists were assaulted by mobs, and a Rosa Parks Museum. The Alabama tourism department suggests a four-day “Civil Rights Trail Itinerary” through the state.

Alabama markets its racial crucible but still can’t bear to get beyond it. In 2004 Lee Warner, then executive director of the Alabama Historical Commission, resigned from the commission, complainin­g that other members were less than eager to memorializ­e the civil-rights struggle.

The Freedom Rides and Parks got their respective museums, but the shadows of Jefferson Davis and Robert E. Lee still loom over the state — Davis from a place of honor just outside the state capitol, where his statue presides.

Meantime, black children continue to move through abysmally underachie­ving high schools named for Davis and Lee. Like Mississipp­i, Alabama continues to observe a combined state holiday jointly honoring King and Lee, a slave owner who fought to maintain totalitari­an tyranny over black people. It’s an occasion both to begrudge King’s achievemen­ts, and to thwart them.

If white supremacy in America refuses to die, it’s in part because too many white politician­s insist on filling its decaying lungs with breath. The Memorial Preservati­on Act is only the latest attempt to resuscitat­e the corpse.

That the law’s proponents were too cowardly to admit what they were doing — they just love old stuff — might be considered incrementa­l progress. But as Landrieu acknowledg­ed, there is no decent way to compromise with the Confederac­y. The statues and school names, trace elements of tyranny and treason, must go.

“The Confederac­y was on the wrong side of history and humanity,” Landrieu said, using words that should be carved deep into the marble stairs where the final Selma-to-Montgomery march concluded in 1965. “It sought to tear apart our nation and subjugate our fellow Americans to slavery. This is the history we should never forget and one that we should never again put on a pedestal to be revered.”

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