The Battle Against Racism in Jena: Hi-Jacked
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This is my statement in
response to a Chicago Tribune article concerning the racial tension in
“I’ve lived here most of my life,
and the one thing I can state with absolutely no fear of
contradiction is that LaSalle Parish is awash in racism—true racism,” a
white Pentecostal preacher, Eddie Thompson, wrote in an essay he posted in
the Internet. “Here in the piney woods of central I’m the white Pentecostal preacher
mentioned by Howard Witt in his Tribune article. Despite the fact that I
made that statement—perhaps because I made it—I feel obligated to comment
on the misinformation passing as fact concerning racial tension in our
community. I believe those words from my Internet essay, “The Battle
against Racism in To remind some and inform others
about our situation: In September of 2006, three white students hung
nooses from a tree in the center court area of Lumped together in one paragraph,
especially in light of the nooses being hung, these events shout one thing
to the casual observer: RACIAL TENSION! In context, these events took
place over a period of eight months: A despicable prank, two fights, a
standoff in a parking lot, and a costly fire. Read the headlines in your
hometown newspaper. String together the worse incidents over the last
eight months through a prism of racism. Tell me what you see. Although I
believe that racism exists in Let me dispel a few rumors and
innuendoes that have festered into questionable facts. First, the media
keeps repeating what some of the distraught parents of the six black
students keep erroneously insisting: “that nothing happened to those white
kids who hung the nooses.” These students being minors, administrators
can’t comment on the facts. I have learned that those white students were
first suspended and then sent to an alternative school off-campus. They
underwent psychological evaluations before being re-admitted to The charges against the Jena Six drive this story. Attorneys and leaders of national race-based organizations have hi-jacked any local efforts to overcome racial tensions. If the charges made by Reed Walters, our local District Attorney, are supported by the evidence, these young men should suffer the consequences of their actions. If the evidence does not support these charges, they should be dropped or reduced. I personally believe that the local
school board system, law enforcement agencies, and courts are responsible
for the racial progress that has been made in our community in the course
of my lifetime. What remain are the heart and the spirit of individuals
who live here. Local ministers, parents, and business owners must step up
to the table and begin to teach our children the Golden Rule, which is
color blind. The day of questionable pejorative phrases and bigoted
generalities is over in
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