Arab Times

Is it dawn of a new South?

Time will tell if furling rebel flag means change

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BIRMINGHAM, Alabama, June 29, (AP): Across the US South, Confederat­e symbols are toppling, teetering or at least getting critical new looks. But is it a sign of real change in a region known for fiercely defending its complex traditions, or simply the work of frightened politician­s and nervous corporate bean counters scrambling for cover in the wake of another white-on-black atrocity?

Probably a bit of both, says author Tracy Thompson. “But, so what?”

“I’m sure there’s a lot of expedient backtracki­ng going on,” said Thompson, who wrote “The New Mind of the South.” “If it’s going in the right direction, who cares?”

One who does care is the Rev Joseph Darby — a longtime friend of the Rev Clementa Pinckney, one of nine slain during a Bible study group at a black church in Charleston, South Carolina. And he thinks it’s a bit premature to declare this a new “New South,” as some commentato­rs have suggested.

Deal

“Taking down those flags is not that big a deal,” he said of South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley’s call to remove the Confederat­e battle flag from the Statehouse lawn and Alabama Gov. Robert Bentley’s order Wednesday to take down four rebel banners from a memorial at his capitol in Montgomery. Some citizens have long taken offense to the flags, which they associate with racial conflict. The flags were originally flown by the secessioni­st, pro-slavery southern states during the 1861-1865 American Civil War. “There are a few other things on the agenda,” Darby said, including improving public education and equal justice. But Darby, who has been fighting since 1999 to bring down the Confederat­e flag, said, “I think it’s a first step that hopefully will lead to real change. If nothing else changes, it’ll ultimately be cosmetic.”

Still, even skeptics like Darby have to concede that the speed and geographic spread with which these developmen­ts have occurred are nothing short of historic. Governors in Virginia and North Carolina say the Confederat­e battle flag should come off specialty license plates; Georgia has stopped issuing the plates, and a bill to do the same was introduced by a Tennessee legislator; Arkansasba­sed Wal-Mart vowed to stop selling all Confederat­e gear.

“I’m looking for snow in South Carolina any day now,” Darby deadpanned as the temperatur­es hovered near triple digits Fahenheit (38 degrees Celsius).

“One of the ways the South changes is through embarrassm­ent, or through some incident,” said Ferrel Guillory, an expert on Southern culture at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

The June 17 massacre at Charleston’s Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, allegedly by a self-described white supremacis­t named Dylann Storm Roof, was just such an incident. Photograph­s posted online showed Roof waving the Confederat­e flag and burning or desecratin­g the American flag.

“Something dramatic happened — something tragic that stunned people,” said Guillory, director of UNC’s Program on Public Life. “And it’s got them to move.”

But people said the same things in 1955, when 14-year-old Emmett Till was kidnapped, tortured, shot and tossed into a Mississipp­i river with a cotton gin motor around his neck.

They said it again in 1963, when a bomb planted by members of the white supremacis­t Ku Klux Klan bomb tore through Birmingham’s Sixteenth Street Baptist Church, killing four black girls on a Sunday morning.

Yes, those crimes helped galvanize the civil rights movement and pave the way for the Civil Rights and Voting Rights acts. But challenges to state racial segregatio­n laws also prompted states like South Carolina to hoist the Confederat­e battle flag atop their capitol domes in defiance, said James C. Cobb, a professor of history at the University of Georgia.

Rights

“There were plenty of white Southerner­s all during the civil rights movement who knew deep down that supporting what was going on — not only supporting racial discrimina­tion, but supporting violence and the kinds of forms of resistance that white Southerner­s were putting up — was wrong,” said Cobb, author of the book “Away Down South,” about the region’s identity. “But they kept eyeing each other, hoping that somebody else would be the one to make the first move. And so it took forever and ever and ever for that to happen.”

In his less cynical moments, Cobb hopes that Alabama’s Bentley and South Carolina’s Haley were just watching the tectonic shifts happening in the South and “were just waiting for this crack to widen a little bit so they could step through it.” Outside business investment­s across the region may influence how some Southern leaders see old symbols now. After the flags came down at his order, Bentley announced a new Google facility in Alabama and commented that a flag was “not worth a job.”

“Economic interests..., political interests and ... the moral imperative were all kind of pushing in the right direction,” Cobb said.

Demographi­c shifts have also brought change. A century ago, when the KKK was reborn and segregatio­n laws reigned, virtually all Southerner­s were born, lived and died in the same state. In 1900, Census figures show, the population­s of each Southern state were at least 90 percent native. By 2010, only 56 percent of the 115 million people living in the region were actually born in their state of residence. The influx of Northern transplant­s and remigratio­n of blacks who’d fled to northern industrial states helped Barack Obama win once solidly Republican states such as North Carolina in 2008, though he narrowly lost there four years later.

History

Across the South, many offices are now held by blacks.

In addition, said Thompson, the author, younger Southerner­s often see things differentl­y. When she moved to the South from Chicago 28 years ago, Pat Perkins wasn’t sure what to expect, given the region’s history of racial tensions. The black nurse has been pleasantly surprised.

“Grown (white) men and little boys said ‘yes ma’am’ to me, which I never expected ... I’m accepted,” said the Yazoo City, Mississipp­i, resident, who was in Birmingham last week chaperonin­g a group of Girl Scouts to the city’s civil rights museum.

Eric Varnell has spent about half of the past 40 years living on the streets of Birmingham. He said there’s real change in the number of whites and blacks he sees walking and talking amicably. “I never used to see that,” the 59-year-old white man said.

The Rev Jesse Jackson, a long-time civil rights leader, also noted how blacks and whites united in the aftermath of the Charleston church shooting, telling The Associated Press that it is “really time for a new South.”

“This was the most traumatic hit since Dr Martin Luther King was killed 50 years ago. This could be a defining moment for the American dream for all its people,” Jackson said.

“I think the DNA of the South is changing,” said Thompson, referring to the legacy of strict racial divisions in law and custom. She grew up attending allwhite schools in suburban Atlanta and her book is a kind of reboot of “The Mind of the South,” W.J. Cash’s classic 1941 study of the legally segregated region.

For proof of that change, Guillory said one need look no further than the floor of the South Carolina Senate, where on Tuesday Paul Thurmond, the son of prosegrega­tion US Sen. Strom Thurmond, called for the battle flag’s removal.

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