Education

Jacksonville Residents Defend Slavery to Avoid Renaming Robert E. Lee High School

Some Jacksonville residents argued in defense of slavery while debating the renaming of a high school named for confederate general Robert E. Lee, thus revealing the fractured elements of a city divided on the issue of race.

News 4 Jax reported on a tense atmosphere where a number of Jacksonville’s white residents shared views on changing the name that blamed Black American’s African ancestors for the slavery endured

in this country, said Jesus embraced the owning of human chattel, and “cancel culture.”

One woman stated

, “I was taught that the chiefs of the tribes in Africa sold their people into slavery. If it had not been that way, there would not have been and slaves anywhere in America… So don’t blame Robert E. Lee. Maybe you should be after your ancestors.”

A man in the crowd spoke about Jesus, which enraged many of those who supported the name change. “It says in the Bible, Jesus himself never condemned slavery. In fact, he said slaves have an obligation to obey their master.”

Another man, Don Likens, re-upped the conservative talking point that wanting to change things that do not consider a phenomenon’s racist past was part of America’s ongoing “cancel culture.”

“Why should the name be changed, because it’s offensive? If this is a real issue, will it stop here? No, this will continue until everything that is offensive to this cancel culture movement is just that. Canceled.”

Someone else also wondered if the “problem” with the school, as they saw it, was the demographic makeup. Lee High is 80% minority, primarily Black.

The Jacksonville meeting went viral after a video was posted to Twitter and picked up live by several major news organizations, including CNN. Some were shocked while others saw this as typical Floridian racism.

 

The school board intended for the renaming of all schools bearing confederate soldiers’ names to be a healing measure. Board member Warren Jones reiterated this in the initial proposal to rename the school. He wrote, “we must being the process of renaming all the schools named for a confederate soldier. This effort can help to heal a city that is fractured.”

Thursday’s meeting showed they have a long way still to go.

Aisha K. Staggers

Aisha K. Staggers, M.F.A., Managing Editor for Sister 2 Sister and News Onyx. Not just a writer, I am also a literary agent, political analyst, culture critic and Prince historian. Weekly appearances on the Dr. Vibe Show feed my soul. The Hill, Paper Magazine, MTV News, HuffPost, Blavity, AfroPunk, Atlanta Blackstar, The New York Review of Books, are just a few of the places where you can find my work.