From Southern Poverty Law Center <[email protected]>
Subject Confederate History Month honors a dishonorable past
Date April 1, 2022 7:01 PM
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Friend,

In several states across the South, April is designated Confederate
History Month. The holiday honors a dishonorable past and justifies a
legacy of white supremacy that survives to this day. The
Confederacy's legacy of brutality and racial subjugation must
always be remembered - but it should never be celebrated.

The continued observation of Confederate History Month gives
modern-day Confederate sympathizers a platform to share harmful
disinformation about the Confederacy and perpetuate racial animosity.
In Georgia, the Sons of Confederate Veterans were granted a permit

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to hold their Confederate Memorial Day event on April 30 at Stone
Mountain park. That's why it's important that we recognize
the courageous activists fighting back and working towards the removal
of the thousands of public Confederate monuments and symbols this
month and always.

Communities are coming together to create more inclusive public spaces
that reflect liberation, not oppression. Although over 2,000
Confederate memorials still loom over the United States and its
territories

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, since the Charleston church massacre in 2015, activists have
successfully renamed, relocated and removed 377

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of them. This admirable progress draws from the long history of Black
activism contesting Confederate memorials.

Despite the passage of draconian preservation laws over the past
decade, communities have found creative ways to remove symbols of hate
from public spaces. In South Carolina, legislators are proposing to
eliminate the state's Confederate Memorial Day

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. You can learn more about public Confederate monuments in your state
and how communities are fighting for their removal in the SPLC's
third edition of Whose Heritage? Public Symbols of the Confederacy.

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Until every state ceases to declare a Confederate History Month, we
must condemn this celebration that reveres a history of racial
brutality and sedition that frays the fabric of our communities. We
must also uplift the contributions of those fighting to end public
symbols commemorating the cruelty of the Confederacy. Our hope is
that, just as states have begun removing monuments, they will end this
designation and begin allowing our communities to heal.

Sincerely,

Your friends at the Southern Poverty Law Center
 

 

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