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In reply to the discussion: What is Southern Heritage? [View all]FourScore
(9,704 posts)About how my family literally lost everything during the Civil Rights movement...
How my father was a figure on national television in my childhood as a Civil Rights worker...
How he worked as an attorney to desegregate the south...
How I have historical lineology books from both sides of my family - and some of the photos are of my ancestors and their slaves, and the wills contain who shall inherit them...Sad...
How we had a "maid" named Mimi and we adored her... How great Mimi could cook!!! Am I to be ashamed that my family needed her help and we hired her?
How my Aunt showed me how to make an antebellum doll out of azaleas when I was a child...
How I am not ashamed of slavery - because I do not inherit the burden of guilt just because of where I was born...Although I do find it abhorrent just like anyone else.
Southern Heritage comes in all shapes and sizes. People who are not from the south have a very stereotypical view of what "Southern Heritage" looks like. It's narrow. They think Southern Heritage is wrapped in the Confederate flag and guns. Yes, there are many idiots on this planet, and some of them are Southern. They are the stereotype. But there is a whole gamut of heritage that Southerners appreciate. We have a bond to the red clay dirt and the fauna and flora and even the ginormous bugs. We understand tradition and Gone with the Wind romanticism. This has nothing to do with slavery. If you were to ask a black person from the south, they would tell you also of their Southern heritage and pride, and it would have a very different meaning for them than it does for me or for Uncle Joe (who started this thread). Each southerner has their own story, but we share an environment unlike any other.
Oh, treestar, I am trying to explain it... but it is so hard. It is not a one-sentence answer. It is an experience. It is a feeling; an essence. It is memory and blood. It is heritage - with all it's Doric columns and warm biscuits and grits and key lime and ceiling fans. It is home of Jimmy Carter and Martin Luther King. And then it has that which most Southerners despise of Jim Crow, KKK and John Birch. It is Ray Charles and Otis Redding. It is hot and heated and sad and torn and beautiful and brutal. It is gentile. It is moonlight through the pines...
I could write a book...I hope this helps.
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