[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 106 (Thursday, July 9, 2015)]
[House]
[Pages H4964-H4965]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CONFEDERATE BATTLE FLAG SYMBOLISM
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from New
York (Mr. Jeffries) for 5 minutes.
Mr. JEFFRIES. Mr. Speaker, had this Confederate battle flag prevailed
in war 150 years ago, I would not be standing here today as a Member of
the United States Congress. I would be here as a slave. Over the last
150 years, we have made tremendous progress in this country, but we
still have a long way to go.
As the tragic events in Charleston, South Carolina, illustrated, when
nine God-fearing, churchgoing African American citizens were killed by
a White supremacist, there is much work that needs to be done to
eradicate the cancer of racial hatred.
When Dylann Roof committed this act of domestic terror, his emblem
was the Confederate battle flag.
Later on today we are going to have a vote on the legitimacy of this
flag. On Tuesday, it appeared that House Republicans were prepared to
do the right thing in support of three amendments to prohibit the use
of Federal funds for the purchase, sale, or display of the Confederate
battle flag on National Park Service land.
But less than 24 hours later, House Republicans reversed course in
the dead of night under cover of darkness to introduce an amendment
supporting the Confederate battle flag, which is nothing more than a
symbol of racial hatred and oppression.
There are some in this House who have made the argument that the
Confederate battle flag is about heritage and tradition. I am
perplexed.
What exactly is the tradition of the Confederate battle flag that we
are supporting? Is it slavery? Rape? Kidnap? Treason? Genocide? Or all
of the above.
The Confederate battle flag is nothing more than a symbol of racial
hatred and oppression. And I stand here with chills next to it because
the red in this flag is a painful reminder of the blood that was shed
by Africans who were killed when attempted to be kidnapped and thrown
into the institution of slavery.
The red on this flag is a painful reminder of the blood that was shed
by millions of Africans who died during the Middle Passage when being
transported from Africa to America.
The red on this flag is a painful reminder of the blood that was shed
by African American slaves who were beaten, raped, lynched, and killed
here in America as a result of the institution of slavery.
What exactly is the tradition the Confederate battle flag represents?
We were sent here as leaders to make decisions on the morality of
America. And where we are, notwithstanding our painful history and the
legacy of slavery, we have an opportunity today to make a definitive
statement to be leaders, not individuals who cower in fear of some
narrow-minded Americans who aren't aware that the South lost the war
150 years ago.
Let's choose racial progress over racial poison. Let's choose harmony
over historic amnesia. Let's choose togetherness over treason. Let's
come together not as Democrats or Republicans, not as Whites or Blacks,
not as northerners or southerners.
Let's come together as Americans and vote down the Calvert amendment
and relegate the Confederate battle flag to the dustbin of history,
which is where it belongs.
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