Windsor Star

Arlington statue latest to draw scrutiny

Some urge removal of Confederat­e memorial, writes T. Rees Shapiro.

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On the western ARLINGTON, VA. edge of Arlington National Cemetery stands a 10-metre-tall bronze hymn to soldiers of a bygone past. Such monuments are common on the hallowed ground where more than 400,000 are buried and honoured for service to the country.

But the one in Section 16 commemorat­es those who fought for another cause. It is the Confederat­e Memorial. A soaring testament to Southern pride, placed in Arlington nearly 50 years after the Civil War ended, the monument features a frieze depicting Rebels shoulderin­g rifles, a black slave following his master and an enslaved woman — described on the cemetery’s website as a “mammy” — cradling a Confederat­e officer’s infant.

Across the U.S., monuments to the Confederac­y and slavery defenders in the antebellum South have come under fresh scrutiny after white nationalis­ts and white supremacis­ts protested plans to remove a statue of Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee from a Charlottes­ville park. Their protests spiralled into a weekend of chaos in the college town as a counterdem­onstrator was killed and two state troopers who had been monitoring the protest died when their helicopter crashed.

There are many Rebel monuments on federal property — in battlefiel­ds, cemeteries and parks. The Confederat­e Memorial stands out, opponents say, for its location on sacred space in Arlington and its offensive depiction of slaves. But it seems unlikely President Donald Trump would agree to remove it: He has pronounced himself a skeptic of monument movers, pointing out that Founding Fathers owned slaves.

“Sad to see the history and culture of our great country being ripped apart with the removal of our beautiful statues and monuments,” Trump tweeted. “You ... can’t change history, but you can learn from it. Robert E Lee, Stonewall Jackson — who’s next, Washington, Jefferson? So foolish!”

Recently, one Confederat­e statue was toppled in Durham, North Carolina, and others were yanked overnight from pedestals in Baltimore and at the University of Texas. The mayor of Lexington, Kentucky, announced plans to move Confederat­e memorials. The Congressio­nal Black Caucus chairman called for the removal of Confederat­e statues from the U.S. Capitol. Democratic state lawmakers from Alexandria, Virginia, previously reluctant to propose a bill to take down the Confederat­e statue “Appomattox” in Old Town, now say they intend to do so when the legislatur­e reconvenes.

The Arlington cemetery, occupying what was once Lee’s estate, is on property administer­ed by the Department of the Army. The Confederat­e Memorial, erected in the early 20th century, is encircled by 482 graves of Rebel officers, enlisted men and others affiliated with their cause. Plenty of critics support its removal, including the NAACP, the Southern Poverty Law Center and the National Associatio­n of Black Veterans.

Many local and state officials opposed to Confederat­e monuments say that all those gallant Southern generals astride horses represent efforts to promote white supremacy. The Confederat­e Memorial features slavery outright, rendering them under the command of masters in perpetuity.

“It’s a memorial that says the people who fought to keep a boot on your neck and to keep you as property are heroes,” said Jeffery Robinson, director of the Trone Center for Justice and Equality with the American Civil Liberties Union. Robinson, who is black, called it “a monument to men who fought for the propositio­n that they own people who looked like me and then treat them as less than human.”

But there is little evidence of any public campaign to remove the memorial. Even if there were, it is unclear what legal path exists for it to be taken down.

Courtney Dock, a spokeswoma­n at the cemetery, said its leadership would not answer questions about the issue.

“We cannot comment on a hypothetic­al matter that would require actions outside the purview of the Secretary of the Army,” Dock said. “Due to the complex nature of the history of the monument and the fact that it is a contributi­ng element to a historic district, the Secretary of the Army cannot unilateral­ly remove the monument.”

Frank Earnest, heritage defence co-ordinator for the Virginia division of the Sons of Confederat­e Veterans, said the public is largely unaware of the memorial.

“One little corner is not too much to ask,” said Earnest, of Virginia Beach. “They didn’t know about it until someone told them to be offended by it.”

Early in President Barack Obama’s first term, a group of professors urged him to abandon a presidenti­al tradition of sending a wreath to the monument for Memorial Day. The professors described the memorial as a “symbol of white nationalis­m.”

But Obama continued the tradition while starting a new one: sending a wreath to the AfricanAme­rican Civil War Memorial in the District of Columbia, which honours the 200,000 blacks who fought for the Union.

 ?? PHOTOS: CALLA KESSLER/WASHINGTON POST ?? The Confederat­e Memorial at Arlington National Cemetery is “a memorial that says the people who fought to keep a boot on your neck and to keep you as property are heroes,” says Jeffery Robinson of the ACLU’s Trone Center for Justice and Equality.
PHOTOS: CALLA KESSLER/WASHINGTON POST The Confederat­e Memorial at Arlington National Cemetery is “a memorial that says the people who fought to keep a boot on your neck and to keep you as property are heroes,” says Jeffery Robinson of the ACLU’s Trone Center for Justice and Equality.
 ??  ?? A frieze on the Confederat­e Memorial at Arlington National Cemetery depicts an enslaved woman cradling a Confederat­e officer’s infant.
A frieze on the Confederat­e Memorial at Arlington National Cemetery depicts an enslaved woman cradling a Confederat­e officer’s infant.

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