- Bree Newsome
"I removed the flag not only in defiance of those who enslaved my
ancestors in the southern United States, but also in defiance of the
oppression that continues against black people globally in 2015,
including the ongoing ethnic cleansing in the Dominican Republic. I did
it in solidarity with the South African students who toppled a statue of
the white supremacist, colonialist Cecil Rhodes. I did it for all the
fierce black women on the front lines of the movement and for all the
little black girls who are watching us. I did it because I am free.
“To all those who might label me an “outside agitator,” I say to you
that humanitarianism has no borders. I am a global citizen. My prayers
are with the poor, the afflicted and the oppressed everywhere in the
world, as Christ instructs. If this act of disobedience can also serve
as a symbol to other peoples’ struggles against oppression or as a
symbol of victory over fear and hate, then I know all the more that I
did the right thing.
“Even if there were borders to my empathy, those borders would most
certainly extend into South Carolina. Several of my African ancestors
entered this continent through the slave market in Charleston. Their
unpaid toil brought wealth to America via Carolina plantations. I am
descended from those who survived racial oppression as they built this
nation: My 4th great grandfather, who stood on an auction block in South
Carolina refusing to be sold without his wife and newborn baby; that
newborn baby, my 3rd great grandmother, enslaved for 27 years on a
plantation in Rembert, SC where she prayed daily for her children to see
freedom; her husband, my 3rd great grandfather, an enslaved plowboy on
the same plantation who founded a church on the eve of the Civil War
that stands to this day; their son, my great-great grandfather, the one
they called “Free Baby” because he was their first child born free, all
in South Carolina.
“You see, I know my history and my heritage."
- Bree Newsome
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