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Charleston shooting: Confederate flag still divides the South after racist church massacre

'I think there's a place for it, and that's a museum,' said one Charleston resident

Jeremy Borden
Monday 29 June 2015 00:05 BST
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Supporters of the Confederate flag say: “It stands for states’ rights and no big government.”
Supporters of the Confederate flag say: “It stands for states’ rights and no big government.” (AFP)

Three people stand in line at the Southern Patriot Shop, Confederate flags tucked under their arms, waiting their turn at the cash register.

Owner Robert Hayes, a 75-year-old with crow’s feet and a lingering smile, has a bit of advice for his customers before they head back out into a world they say is drifting further and further from the America they believe in. “Don’t display them in your house but outside of your house,” he says. “We need to be making a statement to the people that know their history and know that [the flag is] not what it’s being accused of.”

That sentiment is growing among many in rural South Carolina and around the South after retailers including Wal-Mart, Sears, eBay and Amazon said they would no longer sell products bearing the flag.

Many former supporters say they now understand why the flag should come down from its prominent perch at South Carolina’s capitol complex.

But others are stunned at the turn of opinion against the flag after photographs surfaced of the alleged Charleston church shooter Dylann Roof posing with the flag. Over the weekend, the flag came down briefly from the front of the State House in Columbia after Bree Newsome, 30, a teacher and activist from North Carolina, scaled the 30ft pole and detached it. She was arrested and authorities later reraised the flag.

“I think there’s a place for it, and that’s a museum,” said one Charleston resident, Diane Gillie. On Saturday morning, about 50 people expressing support for the flag took their concerns to the state capitol, chanting “Heritage, not hate!” and waving Confederate flags. “It doesn’t stand for racism,” said Shannon Blume, 36. “It stands for states’ rights and no big government.”

Southern politicians have lined up to say they disagree, including both of South Carolina’s national Senators and the Republican state Governor, Nikki Haley.

In this part of rural South Carolina, seemingly far from the prying eyes of a shocked world, those seeking out new Confederate items say they will not be silent as the state and federal government continue to “wage a war”, in their words, on Southern heritage and history. Shop owner Mr Hayes, a member of the League of the South, a pride organisation considered by some to be a hate group, says he will probably benefit from the sudden dearth of flags. His shop sells Confederate-themed knick-knacks including phone covers, notebooks, lighters, T-shirts, belts, fridge magnets and postcards, plus dozens of historical flags.

Bree Newsome, a teacher and activist, scaled the 30ft pole in front of the State House and detached the flag (Reuters)

Shoppers and Mr Hayes say they were horrified and saddened by the shootings. But Mr Hayes said that targeting the flag was the same as going after the quick rice and instant noodles that Dylann Roof reportedly ate. “The blacks that say it’s racist – they are the racists,” said Joyce Davis Wareshoals, 66, from Abbeville. “That’s their heritage as much as it is our heritage.”

Mr Hayes pulled out a well-worn manila folder. Inside were pictures of the Ku Klux Klan marching with US flags over their shoulders. “The US flag, the US flag, the US flag!” he said. He had sold more than 100 flags – a store record – in the week since the shootings at a church in Charleston. “And we’re a little, small, out-of-the-way town.”

© The Washington Post

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