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forest444

(5,902 posts)
Mon Jan 18, 2016, 10:20 PM Jan 2016

The battle for Martin Luther King Day: Should King still share a holiday with General Lee?

Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson (R) has called for the state to no longer honor Martin Luther King, Jr. on the same day as General Robert E. Lee. The practice continues in Mississippi and Alabama. Holidays to honor Martin Luther King, Jr. and Gen. Robert E. Lee should be "distinguished and separate," Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson told state lawmakers last week.

The commander of the Confederate Army and the Nobel-Prize-winning civil rights leader were born in two dramatically different centuries, but just four calendar days apart: Jan. 19, 1807, and Jan. 15, 1929, respectively. That coincidence has caused decades-long controversies for states that want to honor them.

Today, Mississippi, Alabama, and Arkansas still commemorate both men with a shared holiday on the third Monday of January, the day most other states — and the federal government — celebrate Martin Luther King, Jr. Day. That leaves state politicians and the public to debate whether the combination is a case of bureaucratic efficiency, or an affront to King's anti-racism legacy. Several other states, including Georgia and Florida, already honor Lee separately.

After the white supremacy-inspired mass shooting of nine black worshipers at Charleston's Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church last June, "a systematic dismantling of Confederate symbols [flags, statues, and buildings] has swept across the South," as The Christian Science Monitor's Lisa Suhay noted. In South Carolina, many cheered when the state house's Confederate flag was finally furled for good, and Virginians are now asking if Lee-Jackson Day, which honors two Confederate leaders, should be retired.

But many say that rewrites history. "It's cultural cleansing. It's fascism is what that is," Sons of Confederate Veterans spokesperson Ben Jones said of motions to end the holiday, celebrated the Friday before Martin Luther King, Jr. Day. Some say consolidating the holidays is simply more efficient.

Others point to the historical timeline: in Arkansas, for instance, Robert E. Lee day was instituted in the 1940s. It wasn't until 1983 that then-President Ronald Reagan somewhat reluctantly signed MLK Day into federal law, and it took nearly 20 years after that for every state in the country to follow suit: New Hampshire, the last in the nation, created an MLK holiday in 1999.

The editorial board of the Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, however, believes it's time for a change, and that precedent is no excuse. In 1947, the first year the state formally celebrated Lee's birth, "the movement for civil rights was already at work in Arkansas," the editors wrote.

New Hampshire approved Civil Rights Day in 1993; but it took another six years for lawmakers to sign on to a holiday remembering King by name. Similar resistance emerged in Utah. Some attribute it to racism; others, to King's anti-Vietnam War views and controversial aspects of his philosophy. Others say that the progress he fought for is what really deserves honor, more than King's life itself.

At: http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Society/2016/0118/The-battle-for-MLK-Day-Should-King-still-share-a-holiday-with-General-Lee

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The battle for Martin Luther King Day: Should King still share a holiday with General Lee? (Original Post) forest444 Jan 2016 OP
A General Lee day really? Kalidurga Jan 2016 #1
it's funny that we insisted on denazification in Germany but not yurbud Jan 2016 #2
no kidding Kalidurga Jan 2016 #3
re. your sig line, I wonder what will happen here if Bernie goes independent yurbud Jan 2016 #4
google is your friend Kalidurga Jan 2016 #5

Kalidurga

(14,177 posts)
1. A General Lee day really?
Mon Jan 18, 2016, 10:53 PM
Jan 2016

The question is wrong. It isn't should they share a holiday it's "Should General Lee have a holiday in his honor?" Then they can move on to the original question.

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