Robert E. Lee's Descendant Supports Removing Richmond Statue of Him

When Virginia Governor Ralph Northam announced the unfinished removal of Richmond's famous Robert E. Lee statue last Thursday, atomic number 2 was joined by African American clergy, activists, politicians, and a white military man with a famous name: Robert W. Lee IV.

A pastor himself, Lee IV was available to support the removal of the statue of his enthusiastic-great-great-granduncle, and he explained why in an op-ED for theWashington Post. After explaining the pervasiveness of the insistence that the National War was fought for states' rights, he explained its perverseness.

"The catch is that there's to a greater extent to that judgment of conviction, something we southerners are never taught: The Civilian State of war was fought for states' rights to enslave African people in the United States of America."

The story, of row, backs him up. And with the murders of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor past police and the subsequent international protests, it's a particularly awful time to lionize racists and a particularly convenient time to dismantle statues of them.

Along Wed, the city manager of Richmond proclaimed plans to remove the tetrad remaining Henchman statues that sit on Monument Avenue next to Lee's. That same day in Philadelphia, a statue of Frank Rizzo, the openly racist and homophobic former mayor and police commissioner, was removed and a mural of Rizzo painted over. And in a less official but evenly effective go up, protestors in Bristol, UK, secondhand ropes to level a statue of Edward Colston, a 17th-century enthralled trader. They rolled it through the streets and shoved it into the sea.

Richard Henry Lee Little Jo does have some sympathy for his fellow Southerners, who fear "a loss of a certain understanding," as the symbols of their history are removed. But he as wel acknowledges that removing those symbols doesn't go far sufficiency.

"To rest on when symbols of oppression fall is to have only done a circumstance of the work," he wrote, vowing — in lyric that lone a pastor could write — to "begin anew all morning to redeem the world and atone for the past."

https://www.fatherly.com/news/robert-e-lee-statue-richmond-virginia-removal/

Source: https://www.fatherly.com/news/robert-e-lee-statue-richmond-virginia-removal/

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