Lynyrd Skynyrd and the Confederate flag

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      The Rebel flag. The Southern Cross. Stars and Bars. 

      Whatever you call it, the battle flag of America's former Confederate states has been getting a lot of attention lately—most of it in the wake of last June's mass shooting of black churchgoers in Charleston, South Carolina. Nine parishioners were killed by 21-year-old Dylann Roof, a white supremacist who had posed for photos with a gun in one hand and a Confederate flag in the other.

      Immediately following that hate-driven slaughter there were fervent calls from the American public and politicians alike to finally take down the divisive banner. Even staunch Republicans agreed it was time for the Stars and Bars to go. The age-old argument that it was more a symbol of Southern pride and heritage than one of racism and slavery was not holding up any more.

      All the controversy got me ponderin' my own thoughts on the Southern Cross—which weren't too deep, to be honest. My main connection to it was through southern-rock bands like Lynyrd Skynyrd. Like other Canadians who were teenagers and fanatical rock fans in the '70s, I just took the band's waving of the Rebel flag as a tribute to its roots in Jacksonville, Florida, and a salute to its southern brethren like the Allman Brothers.

      I remember even sending away for a Lynyrd Skynyrd T-shirt that featured a skull wearing a cowboy hat and a Confederate bandana that looked something like this, except it also had pistols:

      My 17-year-old mind thought it was badass.

      It was my fierce loved of bands like Lynyrd Skynyrd that drove me to pursue music-writing professionally, and back in 1997 I was thrilled to interview guitarist Rickey Medlocke in advance of a show in Vancouver with Paul Rodgers and Kenny Wayne Shepherd. Knowing Medlocke was of Blackfoot ancestry—he'd even had a band named Blackfoot, which ruled—I asked him about the stereotype of southern-rock fans as Confederate flag–waving rednecks.

      “Being that I am part Native American, I have to consider this thing," he said, "and I think people have a misconception about the South. A lotta people will look at us and say, ‘Hey, you fly the rebel flag; the rebel flag was a symbol of oppression,’ and all that. Nah, not really. To us, it’s just a symbol of where we came from—the South—and whatever happened during that time, you know, now we should look past that stuff. We’re all here on this land together, and we should try to make the best of what we’ve got before it’s too late."

      Fifteen years later, Skynyrd was humming a different tune as far as the flag went. In a September 2012 interview on CNN the band appeared to be folding it up for good:

      Original member Gary Rossington stated: “Through the years, you know, people like the KKK and skinheads and people have kind of kidnapped the Dixie or Rebel flag from the southern tradition and the heritage of the soldiers, you know, that’s what it was about. And they kinda made it look bad in certain ways. So we didn't want that to go to our fans or show the image like we agreed with any of the race stuff or any of the bad things.”

      Shortly after that headline-making announcement, though—and perhaps in response to a pro-flag backlash from its hardcore southern base—the band members backtracked a bit with a video of their own in which they professed to still using the flag in a limited capacity onstage.

      The last time I saw Skynyrd in concert—just last March at Hard Rock Casino Vancouver—I didn't notice the Confederate flag at all. Or maybe I missed it. I saw a helluva lot of American flag-waving, and some Canadian flag-waving too—mostly in jingoistic tribute to the two countries' soldiers, out there putting their lives on the line for our "freedom". But the Southern Cross not so much. 

      And you know what? I didn't miss it one bit.

      I like what Patterson Hood—Alabama-bred singer-guitarist for one of my other alltime favourite bands, the Drive-By Truckers—said in an essay for the New York Times Magazine last month. His group had brilliantly contemplated "the duality of the Southern thing" on its 2001 double-album, Southern Rock Opera.

      "The album wrestled with how to be proud of where we came from while acknowledging and condemning the worst parts of our region's history," Hood wrote.

      "If we want to truly honor our Southern forefathers," he concluded in the piece, "we should do it by moving on from the symbols and prejudices of their time and building on the diversity, the art and the literary traditions we’ve inherited from them.

      "It’s time to quit rallying around a flag that divides. And it is time for the South to—dare I say it?—rise up and show our nation what a beautiful place our region is, and what more it could become."

      Comments

      7 Comments

      Starkov

      Aug 27, 2015 at 5:05pm

      I would bet 10-1 that the American flag is a lot more offensive to a lot more people the world over than the Stars and Bars is.

      First and Foremost it must be understood that the Confederate flag is not a symbol of slavery. Those who revere it do not revere it because slavery existed in the South any more than Americans revere the American flag because it flew over states that had slavery in the North during the War.

      Southerners and Patriotic Americans revere the Confederate flag and the honor of men like Robert E. Lee and Jefferson Davis because they are part of American history, and because they were men of honor who strove for accepted principles of freedom valued around the world.

      The United States of America was founded on the principle that every people has the right to be free, to chose and determine their own government. This is exactly what the people of the South did. They felt exploited by the Capitalist bankers and Industrial robber Barons of the North who were taking economic and social policies that they believed were harming the Southern people.

      The men who fought for the South such as the noble Robert E. Lee said it time and again that he believed slavery would be ended, that he was not fighting for slavery but for the freedom of the Southern people. That since they overwhelmingly voted for their independence, they had the right to be independent just as the colonies evoked that same right.

      The attack on the Confederate flag is spurred on by vicious racist hatred and amounts to nothing more than cultural genocide against people of European descent in the South, in America and around the world.

      Kiskatinawkid

      Aug 27, 2015 at 6:35pm

      Good article. But easy to like cause I'm almost part of it. Only in the fact that the show in '97 kicked ass! And, DBT is definitely one of the best band in the world. Hell, they are the best!

      out at night

      Aug 28, 2015 at 12:07pm

      @ Starkov

      The Confederate flag is a symbol of slavery and oppression. It is because an overwhelming majority of black people in the United States say it is, to them. Since almost all of them are directly descended from slaves, and because black people are still crawling out of the murderous, hateful and deeply damaging history of slavery, then they get to be right. White boys in Canada, well, they don't really get to have any opinions on this.

      You know what your so-called "cultural genocide of against people of European descent in the South" amounts to next to the legacy of slavery as it pertains to African-Americans? Do you?

      Ahhhh, I'm not going to convince you of anything am I? Go on back to your many other comment boards you share with guys names Kurt who use the word "proud" way too often..

      @out at night

      Aug 28, 2015 at 3:02pm

      Q: What sort of person lets another person, or another group tell him how to think?
      A: A slave.

      Flying a flag is free expression, and all of the little eichmanns of the world who want to stop people from flying whatever flag they want---or no flag---they're not victims of oppression, they're evil oppressors.

      Starkov

      Aug 28, 2015 at 5:21pm

      @ Out At Night

      Every race and tribe, every nationality, and every governmental in the long sweep of history existed along slavery. Slavery may have existed the United States of America for about 90 years and about 5 years in the entity of the Southern Confederation, but slavery has existed for at least 9,000 years in the history of mankind. If the South or for that matter the United States or the European American people must be condemned for the institution, then every race must be condemned for much longer and much more brutal examples of it.

      Not to mention the fact that it was White Europeans who were on the forefront of abolishing slavery. And the United States fought a fratricidal civil war (650,000+ dead) in order to end it.

      If one people, one race, is condemned for a history which is actually universal history, (which is precisely what you are doing) then that is the promotion of racism and racial hatred. It is both intolerant and hateful.

      Angry Postman

      Aug 30, 2015 at 4:48pm

      Lest we forget, after the US Army defeated the CS Army and freed the African-American slaves, the US Army began murdering and terrorizing Native Americans, forcing them out west onto "reservations". The flag flying over this racist, hate filled army? Old Glory