Old hatreds die hard
MORE African-American men, women and children were hanged, burned and dismembered per capita in Mississippi between the Civil War and World War II than in any other Southern state.
This bloody sacrifice to white supremacy sprang immediately to mind over the weekend when a white Mississippi state representative, Karl Oliver, railed in a Facebook post that elected officials in New Orleans deserved to be “lynched” for arranging to have four Confederate memorials removed from the city.
Oliver’s grotesque remark reminds us yet again that the era of racial terror that spawned these memorials still casts a shadow over American life.
The Confederate monuments were erected in plazas throughout the South primarily during the height of Jim Crow rule in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, when black Southerners were non-persons, with no say in how such public spaces were used.
Those who spoke out against the oppression often died in lynchings staged as public entertainment.
African-American opposition to the memorials – and to the Confederate emblem on Mississippi’s state flag – has grown, naturally, since black citizens belatedly gained the power of the ballot box.
Oliver finally apologised on Monday. But citizens and elected officials were still appalled that such a comment would come from a lawmaker in Mississippi, the epicentre of racial terror during the lynching period.
Oliver’s district includes the hamlet of Money, where Emmett Till, a 14-year-old black boy from Chicago, was kidnapped, mutilated and killed while visiting relatives in 1955.
The Legislative Black Caucus has called on Oliver to resign and has renewed its demand for the legislature to finally dispatch the Confederate emblem from the state flag.
Finally discarding that emblem would represent an important step toward breaking with Mississippi’s toxic past.