RE-WRITING LOUISIANA’S HISTORY FLAGS, MONUMENTS AND ALL!
Thursday, July 2nd, 2015
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
RE-WRITING LOUISIANA’S HISTORY
FLAGS, MONUMENTS AND ALL!
It looks like it’s time to get out the soap powder in
Louisiana. Some elected officials and
the state’s largest newspaper are jumping all over themselves to call for the
banishment of whatever tattered remnants are left from the aftermath of the
Civil War. Not just flags, but monuments,
names, Dukes of Hazzard, Aunt Jemima syrup, Uncle Ben’s rice, Gone with the
Wind, they all gotta go. The cultural cleansing in the Bayou state has begun.
The current focus of obliterating the past is on the Confederate
flag flying about the South Carolina state capitol. Of course the flag should come down, and
should have been lowered years ago. But
the question is, just how far should government bodies go to pacify those who
feel offended by tax dollars being used to maintain past symbols; reminders of
a once divisive nation that are an affront to many black Americans.
Actually, despite newspaper accounts otherwise, the Confederate
flag never flew above the state capitol in Baton Rouge, both during the time of
the Civil War, and in the years afterword.
Louisiana adopted its own flag of secession, comprised of a yellow star
on a red background. What to see what it
looked like? Check out the present flag
of Viet Nam.
So what happens now?
Do reasonable voices want to open up a discussion to learn from history,
or will there be an emotional reaction to determine and shape history? Do we purge symbols and inscriptions of the
past that causes discomfort to some?
Isn’t that what ISIS is doing in the Middle East right now; wiping out
monuments that commemorate both the good and the bad of a region’s history?
If there is an effort to wash away memorials that defined
the state’s mindset of slave ownership at a certain time in its past, then just
how far does the “cleansing” go? There is a call in New Orleans to take down
the statute of General Robert E. Lee since he led the war effort for the South.
Lee never owned a slave. The leader of the Union Army and future president
General Ulysses S. Grant was a slave owner.
Go figure.
Do we change the name of Grant Parish to dishonor the Union
president who himself was the owner of slaves? For that matter, what about the
nation’s first president George Washington, who owned 316 slaves? Should folks in Washington Parish start
searching for a new name? How about
Jefferson Parish, whose presidential namesake owned 171 slaves and fathered
several children by one? The same
concerns are now front and center for those who live in Madison and Jackson
Parishes, both named after slaveholding presidents. In fact, eleven presidents were slave owners.
Jefferson Davis Parish is certainly at risk along with Ft.
Polk, named after Confederate General Leonidas Polk. And families in Lafayette may witness an assault
on the statute of Louisiana Governor,
U.S. Senator and Confederate General Alexandre Mouton who was president of the state’s
secession convention to leave the union
1861.
Now, for a real shocker! The LSU Tigers were named after a Confederate
Army unit called the Louisiana Fighting Tigers that fought in a number of Civil
War encounters, often joined in battle with another Louisiana unit call the Pelican Brigade. So if some within the state’s leadership feel
pressure to demonize the past, then could we see a name change from the LSU
Fightin Tigers in favor of a name more politically correct? The same goes for Tom Benson’s New Orleans
basketball Pelicans, right?
And let’s not even get started on the plight of the American
Indian, whose tribes were assaulted, sometimes massacred and eradicated as
America expanded to the West, all under the red, white and blue. Not a Confederate flag, but the American
flag. Is what’s good for the goose, good for the gander, or do we ignore this wretched
period of American history?
A cultural purge of historical monuments, as ISIS continues to
carry out throughout the Middle East, opens old wounds, and stands in the way
of meaningful understanding of a new generation living in a new South. Political grandstanding can do little more
than widen an already growing racial divide. Learning from history should be the
bellwether, not a doleful attempt to rewrite the colorful and often
controversial highs and lows of our nation’s past.
“The most
effective way to destroy people is to deny and obliterate their own
understanding of their history.”
Peace
and Justice
Jim
Brown
Jim
Brown’s syndicated column appears each week in numerous newspapers throughout
the nation and on websites worldwide. You can read all his past columns
and see continuing updates at http://www.jimbrownusa.com. You can also hear Jim’s
nationally syndicated radio show each Sunday morning from 9 am till 11:00 am,
central time, on the Genesis Radio Network, with a live stream at http://www.jimbrownusa.com.
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