Confederate monument to be removed from
University of Louisville campus
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[April 30, 2016]
By Brendan O'Brien
(Reuters) - A Confederate monument will be
removed from the grounds of University of Louisville, a gesture that
school and city officials said on Friday is intended to spur diversity
and inclusion on campus.
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The monument, a commemoration to Kentuckians who fought and died
for the Confederacy during the Civil War, will be cleaned and kept
in storage until an appropriate location is selected, University of
Louisville President James Ramsey and Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer
announced.
“This monument represents our history — a painful part of our
nation’s history for many — and it’s best moved to a new location,”
Fischer said in a statement.
The Kentucky Woman’s Monument Association gave the monument to the
city in 1895.
Public symbols of the Confederacy including the Confederate flag
have been the center of controversy across the U.S. South after a
white gunman allegedly shot dead nine black worshipers at a historic
church in Charleston, South Carolina in July 2015.
The accused gunman Dylann Roof who posed with the flag in photos
posted online faces federal hate crime charges.
Opponents consider the Confederate flag and statues of Confederate
leaders emblems of slavery that has become a rallying symbol for
racism and xenophobia in the United States.
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Supporters say they are symbols of the South's history and culture,
as well a memorial to the roughly 480,000 Confederate casualties
during the 1861-65 Civil War.
The University of Louisville Diversity Committee listed the statue's
removal as "one of their highest priorities to improve diversity and
inclusion on campus," the school said in a statement.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee; Editing by Kim Coghill)
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