Memorial to confront South's troubled history of lynchings

In this photo taken Thursday, Aug. 25, 2016, in Montgomery, Ala., water flows over names on a memorial to people killed during the civil rights movement. The same group that erected the marker is planning a memorial and museum to black lynching victims in the city long known as the first capital of the Confederacy. The nonprofit group Equal Justice Initiative says it plans to build a monument to the dead and an accompanying museum in Montgomery. It hopes to open both in 2017.
In this photo taken Thursday, Aug. 25, 2016, in Montgomery, Ala., water flows over names on a memorial to people killed during the civil rights movement. The same group that erected the marker is planning a memorial and museum to black lynching victims in the city long known as the first capital of the Confederacy. The nonprofit group Equal Justice Initiative says it plans to build a monument to the dead and an accompanying museum in Montgomery. It hopes to open both in 2017.
photo In this photo taken Thursday, Aug. 25, 2016, a statue of Confederate President Jefferson Davis stands on the grounds of the Alabama Capitol in Montgomery, Ala. Montgomery, the Alabama city known as the first capital of the Confederacy, is set to become the site of a privately funded memorial to black lynching victims in the United States. The nonprofit group Equal Justice Initiative says it plans to build a monument to the dead and an accompanying museum in Montgomery. It hopes to open both in 2017.

MONTGOMERY, Ala. - Southern states have long welcomed tourists retracing the footsteps of the late Martin Luther King Jr. and others who opposed segregation. Now the Alabama city that was the first capital of the Confederacy is set to become home to a privately funded museum and monument that could make some visitors wince: a memorial to black lynching victims.

The nonprofit Equal Justice Initiative has announced it is building a memorial in the state capital of Montgomery devoted to 4,075 blacks its research shows were killed by lynching in the U.S. from 1877 to 1950.

The nonprofit's director, Bryan Stevenson, said the aim is to help "change the landscape" of American racial discourse by openly acknowledging a painful past, much as Germany has Holocaust memorials and South Africa a museum on its past state-sanctioned segregation - apartheid.

He said that while hundreds of whites were lynched in roughly the same period of U.S. history, the memorial'sfocus will be on "terror lynchings" against blacks in a dozen Southern states - whether by hanging, gunshots, beatings, burnings or other forms of killing used in the past to terrorize black communities.

"I don't think we can afford to continue pretending that there aren't these really troubling chapters in our history," Stevenson said. "I think we've got to deal with it."

Set to open next year on the site of a former low-cost housing project, the monument is to be accompanied by a museum a few blocks away exploring the history of blacks in America from slavery to the present.

Work is already under way on both. How they will be received is an open question.

Pausing at a historical plaque while visiting Montgomery's civil rights sites, North Carolina tourist Nancy Lange hesitated at the thought of a lynching memorial. "That is tough. I can't even think beyond that word," said Lange, 58, who's white.

But daughter Teresa Lange, 27, said a memorial could be valuable in teaching about America's racial past and fostering conversation about today's climate of Black Lives Matter, police violence against minorities and racial strife.

"How many people talk about lynching? How many people talk about the hate crimes that still go on today?" she said. "As a tourist I think it would be a good thing. ... I'd go see it."

Equal Justice Initiative said the monument and museum also would help counter glorification, in some quarters, of the Confederacy across the South while telling the painful story of race in America. The law firm and its founder, Stevenson, represent death row inmates and advocates for racial justice.

The group already has erected bronze plaques around Montgomery to denote bygone slave markets; another group has built a memorial honoring civil rights martyrs, mostly African-Americans. Elsewhere in Montgomery, a marker explains the history of the church parsonage bombed while King lived there in 1956.

The monument set for a hill in view of Alabama's Capitol - where the Confederacy was formed - is to include thousands of names of lynching victims etched on hundreds of concrete columns. Each column represents a U.S. county where a lynching occurred. The names were gathered both in past research and new work by Equal Justice Initiative.

The nearby museum is to house what organizers describe as the nation's largest collection of information onlynching. Located in the nonprofit's headquarters, it also will include presentations about the domestic slave trade, racial segregation and the incarceration of large numbers of blacks today.

Stevenson said the final design of both the memorial and museum will depend on fundraising, though the Ford Foundation already has given $2 million.

Alabama tourism director Lee Sentell said the project has the potential to be important. But he said his agency will need to find out more about the new project before deciding whether to promote it alongside civil rights attractions such as the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute or the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, where marchers for voting rights were beaten by state police in 1965.

"It is a difficult subject for most all of us Southerners to contemplate because people who are alive today have never had to give this subject much thought," Sentell said. He added of the memorial that "the execution of the details will either make people glad they visited the location or not."

He said Alabama began promoting civil rights sites for tourism in the 1980s. A "Black Heritage Guide" published then was updated and later morphed into the "Alabama Civil Rights Trail," a guide of museums and historic sites.

Not everyone is on board with a lynching memorial.

Marlin Taylor, an African-American visitor from Spokane, Washington, was surprised by it.

"With the climate in America right now I don't know that that's a good idea," Taylor said at the civil rightsmemorial outside the Southern Poverty Law Center, a public interest law firm. "I feel like that could be more divisive than anything."

But the Alabama commander of the Sons of Confederate Veterans, Jimmy Hill, supports it. He said telling the story of the lynchings will help people understand America's tangled, painful past.

"Yes, it's going to hurt some people. There are some people who are going to see that and say they wish the story wouldn't be told. But we are on the opposite side of that. We just want the whole story to be told," Hill said.

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