Donna Ladd

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Thomasa and Evangela on the Confederate Flag: ‘Stop letting it control you’

08.06.2018 by Donna Ladd // Leave a Comment

Thomas Massey says the Confederate represents her life as a poor southerner, and that of people of other races as well. She designed this T-shirt, which she wore in the interview. Courtesy Thomasa Massey

One of my most fascinating interviews on the Confederate flag of Mississippi was with two close friends, one white and black. I didn’t know that Thomasa Massey was going to bring Evangela Hentz to our appointment, which happened to be in the rain in Pearl Park in Rankin County. But she did.

Massey was wearing her “Pride, Not Prejudice” T-shirt with Confederate butterflies (!) that she had designed herself. The two women finished each other’s sentences, while telling us under a pavilion that being concerned about the Confederate and Mississippi flags is a waste of time better spent trying to solve other problems.

Hentz called the flag just an “inanimate object,” adding, “Stop letting it control you.”

“If you don’t breathe life into something, it will die,” Massey aaddedds.

The friends reject being offended over what Hentz calls “just a piece of cloth.”

“If everyone, I promise you, would take one hour out of every day worldwide, for 60 minutes and did not hate, the world would change,” Massey interjects.

Hentz cuts in. “Overnight, just about. Because you might discover the person you hated …”

“… is the person you need the most in your life …,” Massey said.

“… to complete you, to get you to that next step,” Hentz added. “I wouldn’t be as far as I am without her.”

“Same with me.”

“If I let that she’s a white person that likes the flag divide us, all that distance for what?” Hentz said.

“… a piece of cloth,” Massey finished as the rain hits the pavilion.

Categories // Confederate Flag, Race, The South, Uncategorized

Apparently, ‘Confederate Man Caves’ are a thing in 2018.

08.06.2018 by Donna Ladd // 1 Comment

Joe Barnes’ guest room. Photos by Donna Ladd

We didn’t see the caves coming. On our first day of our Mississippi road trip in May 2018 to talk to people about why they fly the Confederate flag, Kate Medley and I were having trouble finding flags in yards. In fact, we were driving up and down Jefferson Davis Street in Greenwood, which seemed an obvious place to start, peering inside open garages from the street to see if we could spot either a Mississippi or Confederate flag. But, nada.

As soon as we arrived for our nearby appointment with Larry McCluney Jr., he ushered us immediately into his attic, which was filled with Confederate items—even a North-vs.-South chess set, among his ancestors’ photos, Confederate flag curtains, re-enactor costumes, books and Civil War Stratego game. We were surrounded by more Confederate emblems than we could take in all at once.

[Read more…]

Categories // Confederate Flag, Race, The South, Uncategorized

Been Podcastin’ My Face Off

06.22.2017 by Donna Ladd // Leave a Comment

It seems that every time I turn around of late, I’m doing one or another podcast. Here are three I did in recent months, each focusing in a slightly different direction. I enjoyed them all. It’s great to get a chance to talk about bigger issues. The best podcasts are about ideas, as any storytelling is, not gossip. OK, maybe the Roguish Gent and I did gossip just a little—about the late Mayor Frank Melton, whom he knew as a young man, and I covered intensely in a way no other journalist dared to. What a time that was.

In this Let’s Talk Jackson episode, I’m well talking about Jackson, and Mississippi and, of course, the Youth Media Project. I talk about some of my heroes, too, with the delightful Chellese Hall.

This Faith & Reason podcast on “Women’s Voices in Religion, Journalism and the Workplace” was big fun—and an honest conversation with three fabulous and outspoken women—Debo Dykes, Kate McNeel and Ann Phelps—about the crap women still face in 2017 and shouldn’t. That includes women perceived to be “powerful” enough to have strong voices, which really pisses off too many people still. I talked about some stuff here that I’ve just recently become willing to say out loud in public. And that in itself is kind of sad.

OK, this is the one where we dish about Frank Melton. He also gets me to talk a lot about being a club DJ in five states, my hometown’s racist and violent history, and of course the Youth Media Project.

Categories // Uncategorized

Donna Ladd

I’m Donna Ladd, a writer, journalist and editor from Philadelphia, Mississippi. I write about racism/whiteness, poverty, gender, violence and the criminal-justice system. I regularly contribute long-form features and essays to The Guardian, and I’m the editor-in-chief of the Jackson Free Press, which I co-founded in 2002 after returning to my home state after 18 years in exile. I also write occasional columns for NBC News Think.

I am currently a Logan non-fiction fellow with an upcoming writing residency at the Carey Institute in upstate New York in March and April 2018 to work on a book about race in Mississippi.

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