WASHINGTON — In a historic moment, South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley called late yesterday for removal of the Confederate Battle Flag from statehouse grounds. ADVERTISING WASHINGTON — In a historic moment, South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley called late yesterday for
WASHINGTON — In a historic moment, South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley called late yesterday for removal of the Confederate Battle Flag from statehouse grounds.
It was the right thing to do and, to many of us, long overdue.
Whatever arguments have been offered in the past for its prominent placement on government property, the massacre of nine people at Charleston’s Mother Emanuel Church nullified them. The pro-heritage argument no longer can stand.
I say this as a South Carolinian who joined others in 2000 in calling for the flag’s removal from the Capitol dome. I say this, today, as a human being who, along with millions of others, insist removal of the flag is the least we can do to honor those killed.
To this end, Haley, surrounded by fellow leaders including senators Lindsey Graham and Tim Scott, the first African-American elected to the U.S. Senate from the South since Reconstruction, put the South Carolina General Assembly on notice that it will be called upon to remove the flag from where it was transferred 15 years ago. Today, it lists upon a flagpole near a Confederate statue on the statehouse grounds, but close to the city’s more important intersection and more visible from the street. Removal of the flag might require a two-thirds vote of lawmakers.
The flag issue, which erupts every few years, always has been complicated. It is fair, as Haley pointed out, to respect the feelings of people whose forebears fought and died in the Civil War — and this has been the argument for allowing it to wave. I myself had family who fought for the Confederacy, as well as other family members who fought for the Union. I have visited their graves deep in the woods of rural Illinois.
I have a rocking chair my Southern great-great somebody sat in, according to family lore, as she watched her soldier husband, minus one leg, hobble across a field toward home. I love that chair for the person who loved her husband who loved his homeland, who fought bravely — and who definitely never owned a slave — and from whom I am descended. For so many Southerners, and most weren’t plantation owners, the war was about protecting their homes and families from invaders who came to conquer and burn.
The reasons for that invasion were noble and no one would argue otherwise. Wars to liberate people from bondage are the noblest of all. But the story of honoring one’s forebears with the flag is as true for many as is the story of hatred the flag represents for so many others.
To me personally, the flag was offensive long before a mad-boy of evil heart gunned down nine lovely, innocent people as they included him in their prayers.
As I wrote many years ago, I was just as afraid of a pickup truck with a Confederate flag in the window as any African-American would be. This is because we all know the occupants of that truck mean no good by showing that flag. It says: Danger.
The fact that the mere sight of the banner brings pain and humiliation to our African-American neighbors is argument enough to bring it down. But last week’s brutal slayings nullified the pro-heritage argument. Forevermore, there’s no disputing its power as a symbol of racial hatred and the sickness of racism we all have a duty to fight with the same ferocity those soldiers a century and a half ago mustered to end slavery.
It’s no longer a matter of if but when the flag comes down and finds a home in a museum with other artifacts of historical significance. My hope is that the General Assembly will see it that way and that we don’t again witness a divisive issue split along racial lines.
America and the world saw the coming together of whites and blacks in Charleston this past weekend and marveled that such a thing could happen in the Deep South where, indeed, the first shot of the Civil War was fired. The reason this happened in Charleston is because the city has been working on racial reconciliation for decades. The unity we all observed doesn’t happen overnight but takes work and commitment — and love.
In the final analysis, love requires the flag come down.
Kathleen Parker’s syndicated column appears regularly in the Tribune-Herald. Her email address is kparker@kparker.com.