[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 112 (Thursday, June 29, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3847-S3848]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO DR. LONNIE G. BUNCH III
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, the Smithsonian Institution in Washington,
DC has as its newest treasure, the National Museum of African American
History and Culture. It is the work of many and would not be there
without its founding director, Dr. Lonnie G. Bunch III.
I know as a member of the Smithsonian board of regents that Dr. Bunch
is the single most important person bringing about this magnificent
museum and one which will speak to the history of African Americans in
this country more than anything else.
We all know that history has seen an enormous amount of pain caused
by violence and deaths resulting from racism in America. When you come
into that moving museum, as I have many times, the last thing you would
expect is someone who would leave the ultimate symbol of racism, a
noose, hanging in it. I know the dismay felt by people of all races
when it was found, but probably what has helped the healing the most is
the op-ed of June 23, 2017, in the New York Times, written by my
friend, Lonnie Bunch.
I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the Record the op-ed, so
that all can see it and so that it will be part of the history of the
U.S. Senate.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
[From the New York Times, June 23, 2017]
A Noose at the Smithsonian Brings History Back to Life
(By Lonnie G. Bunch III)
The person who recently left a noose at the National Museum
of African American History and Culture clearly intended to
intimidate, by deploying one of the most feared symbols in
American racial history. Instead, the vandal unintentionally
offered a contemporary reminder of one theme of the black
experience in America: We continue to believe in the
potential of a country that has not always believed in us,
and we do this against incredible odds.
The noose--the second of three left on the National Mall in
recent weeks--was found late in May in an exhibition that
chronicles America's evolution from the era of Jim Crow
through the civil rights movement. Visitors discovered it on
the floor in front of a display of artifacts from the Ku Klux
Klan, as well as objects belonging to African-American
soldiers who fought during World War I. Though these soldiers
fought for democracy abroad, they found little when they
returned home.
That display, like the museum as a whole, powerfully
juxtaposes two visions of America: one shaped by racism,
violence and terror, and one shaped by a belief in an America
where freedom and fairness reign. I see the nooses as
evidence that those visions continue to battle in 2017 and
that the struggle for the soul of America continues to this
very day.
The people responsible knew that their acts would not be
taken lightly. A noose is a symbol of the racial violence and
terror that African-Americans have confronted throughout
American history and of the intensity of resistance we've
faced to any measure of racial equality. During slavery, one
of the main purposes of lynching was to deter the enslaved
from escaping to freedom. But lynching did not end with
slavery; it was also a response to the end of slavery. It
continued from the 1880s until after the end of World War I,
with more than 100 people lynched each year. So prevalent was
this atrocity that between 1920 and 1938, the N.A.A.C.P.
displayed a banner at its national headquarters that read
simply, ``A man was lynched yesterday.''
Lynching was not just a phenomenon of the American South or
the Ku Klux Klan. And in many places, as black people fought
for inclusion in American life, lynchings became brutal
spectacles, drawing thousands of onlookers who posed for
photographs with the lifeless bodies. This collective memory
explains why the noose has become a symbol of white supremacy
and racial intimidation.
So, what does it mean to have found three nooses on
Smithsonian grounds in 2017? A
[[Page S3848]]
noose inside a Missouri high school? A noose on the campus of
Duke University? Another at American University?
As a historian, who also happens to be old enough to
remember ``Whites Only'' signs on motels and restaurants that
trumpeted the power of laws enforcing segregation, I posit
that it means we must lay to rest any notion that racism is
not still the great divide.
As someone who has experienced the humiliating sting of
racial epithets and the pain of a policeman's blow--simply
because I was black and in a neighborhood not my own--I would
argue that it answers a naive and dangerous question that I
hear too often: Why can't African-Americans get over past
discrimination?
The answer is that discrimination is not confined to the
past. Nor is the African-American commitment to American
ideals in the face of discrimination and hate.
The exhibitions inside the museum combine to form a
narrative of a people who refused to be broken by hatred and
who have always found ways to prod America to be truer to the
ideals of its founders.
In the process of curating these experiences, I have
acquired, examined and interpreted objects that stir feelings
of intense pain. Anger and sadness are always parts of this
work, but I never let them dominate it. Instead, I use them
to help me connect with the people who have suffered and
continue to suffer immeasurable pain and injustice, while
clinging to their humanity and their vision of a better
country.
I see the nooses in the same way. They are living history.
Viewed through this lens, they are no less a part of the
story the museum tells than the Klan robes, the slave
shackles small enough to fit a child, the stretch of rope
used to lynch a Maryland man in 1931 or the coffin used to
bury the brutally murdered Emmett Till.
If you want to know how African-Americans continue to
persevere and fight for a better America in the face of this
type of hatred, you need only visit the museum, where the
noose has been removed but the rest of the remarkable story
of our commitment to overcome remains. Anyone who experiences
the National Museum of African American History and Culture
should leave with that realization, as well as the
understanding that this story is continuing. The cowardly act
of leaving a symbol of hate in the midst of a tribute to our
survival conveyed that message as well as any exhibit ever
could.
____________________