STANDING WITH ELAINE
STANDING WITH ELAINE
©Wendell Griffen,
2019
August 29, 2019
In
an opinion column published on August 22, 2019 by Baptist News Global, I
condemned and denounced plans to “dedicate” a “memorial” or “monument” in Helena,
Arkansas to the hundreds of black men, women, and children who were murdered in
and near Elaine, Arkansas – 25 miles away from Helena - by white vigilantes and
federal troops over the course of several days beginning October 1, 1919 (https://baptistnews.com/article/a-monument-to-black-people-massacred-100-years-ago-in-arkansas-reeks-of-the-hypocrisy-jesus-condemned/#.XWecy-hKjIX). On August
24, 2019, Judge Brian Miller of Helena took issue with my critique of the Helena
“monument” or “memorial” in a guest editorial published in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
(https://www.arkansasonline.com/news/2019/aug/24/honor-the-dead-20190824/?news-columnists).
I
respect Judge Miller’s choice to honor his four great-uncles who were among the
hundreds of other black men, women, and children, massacred near Elaine, Arkansas. No matter what anyone else may think about
it, Judge Miller and his family are free to do so where a monument to Confederate
soldiers killed during the Civil War now stands.
What
white supremacists in Helena and their sycophants are not entitled to do is
misrepresent history without moral criticism.
They may not turn the Elaine Race Massacre of 1919 into the latest
manifestation of white supremacy and capitalist opportunism without being
denounced as hypocrites.
None
of the massacred black men, women, and children – including Judge Miller’s four
great-uncles – was murdered in Helena. Judge
Miller’s relatives were unjustly arrested and murdered in Elaine.
The faction that directed the Elaine Massacre
was headquartered in Helena, directed the Massacre from Helena, and falsely
represented to the world that the hundreds of Massacre victims – including Judge
Miller’s four great uncles – were part of a black insurrection against white
people in Phillips County.
Helena
is where the sham trials were held by white supremacists which resulted in wrongful convictions of
the Elaine 12 – twelve black men from Elaine – for murder.
Helena is where black men were tortured by white supremacists into making
false confessions.
Helena is where white
supremacists plotted and directed mass murder and then prevented any white
person from being arrested, prosecuted, and sentenced for perpetrating mass murder.
Helena is where restaurants, hotels, and
other establishments owned and operated by the political, economic, and
cultural descendants of white supremacists who perpetrated and benefited from
the Elaine Race Massacre now intend to capitalize and garner profits from
setting up what they and their sycophants have labeled a “monument” or “memorial”
to the Elaine Race Massacre on ground that now includes a monument to Confederate
soldiers.
The
Elaine Race Massacre began in Hoop Spur, a place less than 2 miles from Elaine –
and more than 20 miles from Helena. Hoop
Spur “has long since disappeared from the maps of Phillips County, Arkansas”
according to the opening words of Robert Whitaker’s 2008 award-winning book, On The Laps Of Gods (Three Rivers Press). Hoop Spur, Elaine, and south Phillips County are
where federal troops trained machine guns on black workers and their families
because white planters, merchants, bankers, and other leaders in Helena were
determined to trample black aspirations of liberation and economic independence.
Like
the Elaine Race Massacre, the 2019 Helena “monument” or “memorial” shows how white
supremacy operates to the detriment of black people in Elaine and throughout Phillips
County. Erecting a “monument” and
placing the Elaine name will attract tourist dollars for white merchants.
But it will never absolve the corrupt legal,
commercial, and religious system in Helena that shielded white murderers and
their white supremacist leaders from investigation and criminal
prosecution.
It will never honor the hundreds
of black men, women, and children from Elaine and south Phillips County who
were massacred with the active cooperation of white supremacist local, state, and federal
authorities.
And it will never symbolize
“healing” or “reconciliation.”
Helena’s
falsely-labeled “Elaine Race Massacre” “monument,” like the nearby monument to Confederate
Civil War soldiers where it is located, is a shrine to white supremacy that
shows Helena, Arkansas to be headquarters for a racist, brutal, and
capitalist regime that exploits black and un-wealthy people in Phillips County,
Arkansas.
Jesus
and other Hebrew prophets angrily denounced commercialized religion and pietistic
hypocrisy that ignored and sacralized oppression so merchants and other
affluent actors could line their pockets (see
Amos 8:4-12). That’s why I’m
standing with Elaine to denounce white supremacists of Helena and their
sycophants as hypocrites.
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