Charlottesville confronts identity one
year after clashes
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[August 07, 2018]
By Joseph Ax
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (Reuters) - For many
residents of Charlottesville, Virginia, last year's white nationalist
rally shattered the city's carefully curated reputation as a
progressive, idyllic place to live.
But for Nikuyah Walker, an activist who was elected mayor just three
months later, the violent clashes only underscored deep racial and
economic inequities that have long divided this picturesque college
town. In her view, the rally has forced Charlottesville to confront its
own complicated legacy.
"You can have three or four generations who are struggling, and that
family has not been able to move out of poverty wages – that's a
significant portion of Charlottesville," Walker, the city's first black
female mayor, told Reuters outside City Hall. "And then you have this
very wealthy community that loves and raves about it."
As Charlottesville prepares for the one-year anniversary this weekend,
it is still agonizing over clashes last year in which one woman was
killed when an Ohio man drove his car into a crowd of
counter-protesters.
Some residents have argued that the vast majority of the marchers last
year were from out of town, but Walker said that narrative ignores the
city's broader problems.
She noted that the main instigators of the "Unite the Right" rally,
Richard Spencer, who coined the term "alt-right" to describe the loose
coalition of white nationalists, and Jason Kessler, a local blogger,
graduated from the University of Virginia on the western side of town.
The rally was billed as a protest over the city council's plan to remove
two Confederate statues from downtown parks. Last year, a judge blocked
the city from taking down the statues, which are encircled by orange
plastic fencing and are off-limits to residents.
Several officials including the police chief, the city manager and the
city attorney left their positions after widespread criticism that
Charlottesville had been ill-prepared to manage the hundreds of white
nationalists who descended upon it, many armed with shields, clubs and
other weapons.
"We recognize that we have to earn the community's trust," said Brian
Wheeler, the city's chief spokesman. "The way that we can best do that
this year is learn from the mistakes."
Local and state police have vowed to have zero tolerance for any
violence this weekend, in stark contrast with last year when some
officers did not intervene to break up fights. Virtually the entire
downtown will be closed to vehicles.
Police have said that they are preparing for the worst, even though
Kessler, who organized last year's event, lost a bid to get a permit
this year. Instead, he has received permission to rally outside the
White House on Sunday and has said he will focus on Washington.
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A CITY AT ODDS WITH ITSELF
The effects of last year's violence are still felt every day in
Charlottesville.
City council meetings have frequently devolved into shouting
matches. At a recent community outreach meeting where police
officials detailed security plans for this weekend, residents asked
one after another how they were supposed to trust the police after
2017.
"Charlottesville has had a tendency to self-congratulation; it's
constantly in the magazines as the best place to live," said
Reverend Will Peyton, who oversees St. Paul's Episcopal Church.
"The violence was perpetrated by outsiders, yes, but the response
from the black community is like, 'Really, this isn't us? We don't
have a problem here?' Because, of course, there's entrenched
inequality and entrenched structural racism," Peyton said.
At the Jefferson School African American Heritage Center in downtown
Charlottesville, an exhibit documents the struggle of black
residents who fought for equal access to public education.
"I don't know that people understood that this narrative of
progressive Charlottesville had flaws," said Andrea Douglas, the
center's executive director. "Now those flaws have been exposed."
When Mayor Walker, 38, announced her run for city council last
spring after years of activism on behalf of low-income residents,
she adopted the motto "Unmasking the Illusion," aiming to dispel the
notion that Charlottesville was a diverse, liberal utopia. She has
focused her attention on issues like affordable housing and
policing.
Last month, she joined residents on what they called a "civil rights
pilgrimage" to the lynching museum in Montgomery, Alabama, bringing
along soil from a site where a black Charlottesville man was lynched
in 1898.
Reverend Tracy Howe Wispelwey, a local activist, said last year's
rally was eye-opening for many in Charlottesville.
"You have a lot of white liberals who have not grappled with our
history and want to dismiss it," she said. "That's just not truth."
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; Editing by Toni Reinhold)
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