Kuwait Times

George Floyd’s death prompts soul-searching

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WASHINGTON: Confederat­e monuments are coming down and statues of Christophe­r Columbus are being toppled as Americans grapple with the ghosts of the country’s racial history in the wake of George Floyd’s death. “It seems like maybe we’ve hit a tipping point in the retelling of the narrative of who we are as an American people,” said David Farber, a history professor at the University of Kansas. “We’re seeing tens of millions, if not hundreds of millions, of Americans wrestling with fundamenta­l questions of what do we do with the unsavory - and, let’s be frank, even immoral - aspects of our past.” The May 25 killing of Floyd, an African American, by a white police officer in Minneapoli­s has ignited mass protests for racial justice and police reform across the United States.

But the death of the 46-year-old has also triggered a national soul-searching of the country’s checkered past. Demonstrat­ors in several US cities have targeted monuments to generals and politician­s of the pro-slavery Civil War South, pulling down a statue in Richmond, for example, of Jefferson Davis, the Confederat­e president during the 1861-1865 conflict. “The symbols of the Confederac­y are, I think, the most polarizing of these memorials. But it extends all over the United States,” Farber said. “In New York it’s statues to Columbus. In New Mexico, there’s a statue of a conquistad­or who’s a genocidal figure in the eyes of the Pueblo Indian people. “There’s high schools all over the United States named for John Calhoun,” a former vice president who was an avowed proponent of slavery.

‘Public outcry’

Farber noted that the debate over Confederat­e memorials has been going on for years and civil rights marchers of the 1950s and 1960s decried the fact that they were “walking down streets named after avowed racists and white supremacis­ts.” The efforts to remove Confederat­e monuments gathered momentum after a white supremacis­t shot dead nine African Americans at a church in Charleston, South Carolina, in 2015. “The pace of it is now increasing because of public demand and public outcry,” said Andra Gillespie, an associate professor of political science at Emory University. “What I think we’re seeing is a reexaminat­ion of lots of our assumption­s and a challengin­g of various forms of history as it affects African Americans,” Gillespie said. “This is a moment where the focus is on anti-black racism but it is not excluding other forms of racial oppression,” she said. Laura Edwards, a Duke University history professor, said “it’s sinking in to people that these symbols have political meaning and are problemati­c in ways they had not fully appreciate­d. “It’s less easy to call this heritage, for instance,” Edwards said in a reference to arguments often used by opponents of removing Confederat­e symbols who claim it is erasing a proud Southern history. Edwards said she was “blown away” when the NASCAR race car franchise banned the display of the Confederat­e flag at its events. “Amongst all the sports it was the one that embraced what they imagined to be white Southern heritage,” she said. “Symbols associated with white supremacy and the Confederac­y had been part of their brand.”

‘Broader reckoning’

The toppling of Confederat­e statues and those of Columbus are “very much related,” Edwards said, in that both embody the “violent colonizati­on of the United States.” “The first part was Europeans coming and making claims to a place that belonged to indigenous people and then engaging in genocide to wipe them away.” That was followed by the importatio­n of slaves from Africa — what Alan Kraut, a history professor at American University, called “the original sin that we’ve never been able to get beyond.”

 ?? —AFP ?? LOS ANGELES: Photo shows an aerial view of Hollywood Boulevard painted with the words ‘Black Lives Matter as protests continue in the wake of George Floyds death on June 13, 2020 in Los Angeles, California.
—AFP LOS ANGELES: Photo shows an aerial view of Hollywood Boulevard painted with the words ‘Black Lives Matter as protests continue in the wake of George Floyds death on June 13, 2020 in Los Angeles, California.

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