Cape Times

Old hatreds die hard

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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.

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