The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Confederat­e flag tension builds

4 are left at iconic civil-rights locations: King historic site, Ebenezer Baptist Church.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com and Shannon McCaffrey smccaffrey@ajc.com

Confederat­e battle flags were scattered outside Martin Luther King Jr.’s church on Thursday, ratcheting up tensions that have been building over the emblems since a deadly shooting last month at a black church in Charleston, S.C.

The four doormat-size flags were left at the visitor center of the King National Historic Site and adjacent Ebenezer Baptist Church. Both are historic symbols with deep meaning in the city known as the cradle of the civil rights movement. The flags were discovered by a maintenanc­e man just before sunrise.

Ebenezer’s pastor, the Rev. Raphael Warnock, wasted no time labeling the display “a terrorist act” no different than spray-painting swastikas on a synagogue. Federal and state authoritie­s are investigat­ing and reviewing surveillan­ce footage that showed two men placing the flags on the ground.

“Let the message go out that we will not be shaken by this,” Warnock said at a morning news conference. “We will not be intimidate­d.”

It’s the latest in a series of increasing­ly confrontat­ional incidents surroundin­g the Confederat­e flag and other symbols of the Southern rebellion.

At the South Carolina state Capitol, a scuffle erupted earlier this month between members of the Ku Klux Klan and black activists who were demonstrat­ing simultaneo­usly.

More recently in Georgia, a convoy of trucks bearing Confederat­e flags interrupte­d a black child’s birthday party in Douglasvil­le. Thefts and threats have erupted over the flag in Conyers and Covington. And weeks after a planned boycott of Stone Mountain — the granite monument to the Confederat­e war dead — a pro-flag rally is planned at the park Saturday. A law enforcemen­t official said preparatio­ns were being made for hundreds of protesters.

Much has been made of reconcilia­tion after last month’s Charleston church massacre, which swiftly led South Carolina lawmakers to remove the Rebel war flag from the Statehouse grounds. But taken together, the incidents show a mounting frustratio­n by those who see a threat to the flag as a threat to their heritage.

“Our history is being trashed — you have the government trying to remove history like it didn’t happen,” said Tyler Nicholson, a 24-year-old welder and volunteer firefighte­r who is an organizer of Saturday’s planned rally at Stone Mountain.

“This is the history,” Nicholson said, “and we have to live with what happened hundreds of years ago.”

Andra Gillespie, a professor at Emory University who specialize­s in African-American history and politics, called the rash of recent confrontat­ions “jarring” but not surprising.

“It’s not unusual when you have moments of racial progress that you also have a backlash,” Gillespie said.

Nonetheles­s, she said, Thursday’s actions in Atlanta are particular­ly antagonist­ic and up the ante, especially after the shootings in Charleston.

“Going into a black space, a black church, with the Confederat­e flag is overtly hostile,” she said.

Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed condemned the act. But the state’s Republican leadership, including Gov. Nathan Deal, remained mum Thursday.

Around the King historic center and church, there was a mix of anger and sadness.

“This breaks my heart. It’s just taking the flag to another level,” said Tracey Jackson, a 45-year-old from Atlanta who lives near the historic church. “That flag represents what happened in the past. And too many people are holding on to that past. It just hurts.”

Georgia shrunk and ultimately removed the Confederat­e war emblem from its flag more than a decade ago, but other symbols of its Rebel history remain enshrined in law or protected by executive fiat.

Democrats are urging the state to quit celebratin­g Confederat­e Memorial Day and Confederat­e Heritage Month. And the state has stopped selling license plates with the Rebel battle emblem after Deal announced a “redesign” of the tags. But images of Confederat­e war leaders Jefferson Davis, Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson on Stone Mountain, etched as deeply in Georgia law as on the mountain’s granite face, are particular­ly galling to critics who view them as symbols of hate, preserved in perpetuity by the state.

Calls for boycotts of the park have been met by decisions by the attraction’s leaders to keep flying Confederat­e battle flags on monument grounds. After Atlanta’s City Council endorsed a resolution asking Deal to study giving the monument a makeover, Georgia’s GOP leadership has rallied behind the park.

“It’s not a debate that is useful,” Deal said, urging critics to shift their focus instead to the plight of struggling schools.

“If they would exert the same amount of influence and time and effort to try to make sure that the children in our school systems in this state who are in failing schools get a good education, it will erase any of the things that they think the memorials symbolize,” the governor said.

Other Republican­s have closed ranks. House Speaker David Ralston said he has a “dim view of politicizi­ng recent tragedies” such as those in Charleston and Chattanoog­a, Tenn. “You can’t change history,” he added, “even when it’s history that shows our bad behavior.”

The flag rally at Stone Mountain is another sign the debate will continue. Nicholson, the organizer, asked participan­ts to abstain from alcohol, racial slurs, taunts and violence. He said that Stone Mountain’s law enforcemen­t team was given three weeks’ notice about the rally and will show up in force.

“We are all about the history, what we inherited and what we believe in,” Nicholson said. “It’s our love for the South — heritage not hate.”

 ?? BRANDEN CAMP PHOTOS / SPECIAL ?? An Atlanta police officer stands near where one of four Confederat­e flags was placed at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta on Thursday. The church’s pastor said the placing of the flags was “a terrorist act.”
BRANDEN CAMP PHOTOS / SPECIAL An Atlanta police officer stands near where one of four Confederat­e flags was placed at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta on Thursday. The church’s pastor said the placing of the flags was “a terrorist act.”
 ??  ?? “Let the message go out that we will not be shaken by this,” the Rev. Raphael Warnock of Ebenezer Baptist Church said Thursday. “We will not be intimidate­d.”
“Let the message go out that we will not be shaken by this,” the Rev. Raphael Warnock of Ebenezer Baptist Church said Thursday. “We will not be intimidate­d.”
 ?? BRANDEN CAMP / SPECIAL ?? An Atlanta police officer works at the scene where Confederat­e flags were placed on the ground at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta early on Thursday morning.
BRANDEN CAMP / SPECIAL An Atlanta police officer works at the scene where Confederat­e flags were placed on the ground at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta early on Thursday morning.

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