Clarence Lusane
It
is perhaps a sign of millennium madness that the century will end
with the bizzare phenomena of an African American lawyer defending
in court the right of a member of the Ku Klux Klan – whose name
ironically is Black – to burn crosses. However, it seems that some
sense of sanity prevailed in that both the lawyer and his client
lost.
This
unnatural event occured in the recent trial of Barry Elton Black,
who in August 1998, in his role as the Imperial Wizard of the
International Keystone Knights of the KKK, held a rally and burned a
cross in Carroll County Virginia. The inferno, but not the rally,
violated a 1930s state law that specifically prohibits cross burning
by the Ku Klux Klan. The International Keystone Knights, one of
about 50 Klan groups nationally, is thought to have less than 200
members.
Arguing
that Black had a constitutional right to carry out this act was his
lawyer David P. Baugh, who is African American and a member of the
Virginia chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union. Among the
many irrational and naive statements made by Baugh justifying his
defense of Black was his view, "If I can’s protect him, I can’t
protect anyone else." Baugh apparently believes that Black and
the Klan have a right to verbally and physically terrorize others
which is exactly the purpose of these rituals. It is extremely
doubtful that Black used an African American lawyer for anything
other than tactical purposes, or that his views on race relations
were progressively altered.
Nobody
was buying Baugh’s argument. Significantly, an all-white jury took
on 25 minutes to return a verdict of guilty. In addition, testimony
against the Klansman came from three whites – the sheriff who
witnessed the event and arrested Black, his deputy, and Rebecca
Sechrist, a white woman whose lives in a trailer adjacent to the
property where the cross was burned. Sechrist breaks the stereotype
of poor whites who are routinely portrayed as unrepentant racists
waiting for Pat Buchanan, David Duke, or the local militia to
recruit them into racism’s army. While these "ordinary"
citizens did the right thang and said no to intolerance and
discrimination, the same can not be said for the so-called liberals
around this affair.
An
important political battle among liberals is going on here. On the
surface, it appears to be a conflict between two principles. On the
one hand, liberal groups such as ACLU, the Southern Poverty Law
Center, and others, argue that freedom of speech and of expression
should not be breached under any circumstances. On the other hand,
there is also the principle of anti-racism, racial equality, and
protection of human rights, which these groups also strongly
support.
In
fact, there is no conflict. What the KKK is all about, whether in
white hoods or blue suits, is not freedom of expression or freedom
of speech. In the post-Civil Rights Era, racist groups such as the
Klan no longer have the bold-face protection of local sheriffs who
use to let them violate the Constitution without nary a whisper of
opposition. Now, these groups attempt to employ constitutional
protections as they continue to advocate and, in many instances,
seek the elimination of people of color, gays and lesbians, Jews,
trade unionists, and others who fall outside of their narrow notions
of worthiness.
While
the Klan remains numerically small, estimated to be less than 5,000
nationwide, what they represent should not be casually dismissed,
nor have they surrendered the agenda of violence and coercion that
has marked Klan history from the mid-1860s to the present. Racist
violence continues to raise it vicious head. Only two years ago, in
the same county where the Klan rally occured, a black man was burned
alive and then beheaded by a white laborer. To view the Klan and
other organized racists as only fringe politics misses the role they
play in perpetuating an atmosphere of intolerance where old
stereotypes can fester and grow.
Not
only has the Klan continued to represent the most repugnant racist
views here in the United States, but has expanded its international
reach. Various Klan leaders, such as David Duke and Bill Wilkerson,
have long had ties to racists in Europe. In France, the neo-fascist
National Front, led by Jean Marie Le Pen, has invited Klan members
to meetings and conferences for a number of years. In England, the
modern Klan has worked with fascists and racists organizations such
as the British National Front and the National Socialist Movement,
since at least the early 1960s. In the 1990s, U.S.-based Klan
leaders have facilitated the creation of a small Klan chapters in
England, Wales, and Scotland. According to the anti-fascist
magazine, Searchlight, their activities have mainly been confined to
defacing synagogues, some fist fights, and passing out racist
literature. Though marginalized in the United States and elsewhere,
the Klan has not disappeared and neither should the opposition to
its purposes and goals.
So
the decision by 12 white jurors in a small town in Virginia may be
only a small footnote in the contemporary political passions of the
present, but it signifies an important statement against racism. The
Virginia case once again underscores the view that when faced with a
radical option liberals duck and run for cover.
Clarence
Lusane, Ph.D. "Chance Favors the Prepared" American
University School of International Service (202) 885-1674