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For 126 years, this was Mississippi's state flag.
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A triband of red white and blue .
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And in the top left corner, a blue X lined with white stars on a red square.
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This is the Confederate Battle flag.
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The most recognizable lasting symbol of the American Civil War, a failed four-year campaign
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of Southern states to preserve slavery in the US.
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Today, the Confederate battle flag is often used as a symbol of Southern pride.
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But it's also synonymous with white supremacy.
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As part of Mississippi's state flag, it flew outside state buildings and hung in the
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halls of the US Capitol.
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And for decades, people across the state have fought for its removal.
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It made us feel like second class citizens. That you can be comfortable flying a flag
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that represented enslavement of my people. Of my ancestors.
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“Take it down. Take it down.”
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On November 3rd, 2020, as the US was deciding its next president, a long-awaited special
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election in Mississippi voted to adopt a new flag.
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This one.
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It's called the “In God We Trust” flag.
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The symbols in its design speak to Mississippi's history...
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...and its future.
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Almost immediately after the South lost the Civil War and over 4 million enslaved Black
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people living there were freed, influential white supremacist groups started a campaign
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to popularize Confederate imagery.
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They built memorials, altered history textbooks, and used the flag to honor Confederate veterans.
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Mainstreaming it as a symbol of Southern heritage and pride.
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When state legislatures began adopting state flags in the late 1800s and early 1900s,
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Georgia and Mississippi adapted the first national flag of the Confederacy and the
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Confederate battle flag, respectively.
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The Confederate battle emblem has been a prominent feature of Mississippi's flag ever since.
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While some Mississippians have fought to keep the flag intact, activists, led primarily
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by Black Southerners, fought to have it removed.
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My name is Genesis Be.
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I'm an art-activist from Biloxi, Mississippi.
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And my fight in this battle to change the Mississippi state flag, you know it definitely
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started with my ancestors.
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But in 2001 is the first time I remember it coming to a referendum vote.
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A 2001 referendum would have changed Mississippi's flag to remove the Confederate battle emblem
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and introduce a new design.
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I was like in high school or middle school at the time.
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And it was divisive because a lot of my friends whose ancestors fought in the Confederate
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Army, they revered that flag.
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Some people like myself, saw it as a direct threat to our survival and a direct disrespect
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to our ancestors.
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In the referendum, Mississippi voters overwhelmingly chose to keep the old flag.
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And when Georgia changed its flag from this to this in 2003, Mississippi became the only
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remaining state flag with the Confederate emblem.
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This symbol does not represent nearly 40 percent of the population of Mississippi and needs
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to go.
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Pressure to change the flag got renewed attention in 2015, when photos began circulating showing
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white supremacist and mass murderer Dylann Roof, who killed nine people at a historic
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Black church in South Carolina, holding the Confederate battle flag.
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Cities and public universities around Mississippi began removing the state flag from public
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display.
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I'm Carlos Moore and I'm a lawyer in Greater Mississippi.
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I'm also municipal judge and Clarksdale, Mississippi.
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In 2017, my first day on the bench, I took the flag down.
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I had the flag removed.
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“A flag that he abhors, and one that has been the subject of fierce debate in the state
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for decades.”
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There were counties that removed it from their counties, cities, municipalities, universities,
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colleges.
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I believe it took the Emanuel nine to get the conversation started again in earnest.
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And I believe it took George Floyd to seal the deal.
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In May of 2020, George Floyd, an unarmed black man, was killed by police in Minneapolis,
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Minnesota, sparking widespread protests against police brutality and systemic racism.
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It was during those protests where all across the world people were forced to look at what's
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happening and what has happened here in America when it comes to state-sanctioned violence
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against black people.
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The conversation has always been: “this symbol represents heritage, not hate.”
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I saw that conversation change within a week during these protests.
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In June, mounting pressure following Floyd's murder finally compelled Mississippi legislature
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to abolish Mississippi's flag, and order it taken down from government buildings.
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The conversation then shifted to, okay, we understand that this symbol is hate.
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What are we going to do about it?
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The state formed a commission to redesign the flag, led by former Mississippi Supreme
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Court Justice Reuben Anderson.
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And planned to put the final decision on the ballot in the November election.
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The commission opened it up to the public to submit designs, with two requirements:
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add the words “In God We Trust,” the official motto of the United States.
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And remove the Confederate battle emblem.
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My name is Sue Anna Joe, and I'm a Mississippi native.
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Sue Anna Joe submitted one of the over 3,000 Mississippi flag redesigns.
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The guidelines were in fact simple, they wanted the design to be simple.
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And basically I just took a big sheet of paper, and I drew a bunch of designs to submit to
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the commission.
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And the ones that I felt were the strongest, I went to my computer, and I remember having
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this Illustrator document open and there was just a bunch of different flags littered all
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over the place.
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After narrowing it down, this was Sue Anna Joe's final submission.
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And the magnolia in her design ended up as the centerpiece of the new flag.
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Which features elements combined from a select few of the submissions the commission received.
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The elements in the final flag all hold individual significance for Mississippi.
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The red and blue colors are, in fact, the official colors of the state of Mississippi.
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And these 20 white stars signify that Mississippi was the 20th state to enter the Union.
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And this gold star is divided into diamond shapes.
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That star represents the Choctaw Indian Tribe, the only federally-recognized Native American
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tribe living in Mississippi.
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Who frequently make use of diamond shapes in traditional basketry and beadwork.
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And, of course, the magnolia, Mississippi's state flower and state tree.
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It symbolizes longevity and perseverance.
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Magnolias are over 95 million years old, which make them among the earliest plants to exist
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on Earth.
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That kind of speaks to the strength of the state, I believe, and the people there.
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So that's the reason why I chose the Magnolia for my original designs, because I felt like
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it was such a great reflection of the people in Mississippi.
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And on November 3rd, 2020, the people of Mississippi agreed, and voted to adopt the “In God We
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Trust” flag, as the new state flag.
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It was a continuum, it was a relay race.
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I ran my leg of the race, others ran the leg of the race, and we eventually got it done.
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It was a huge victory for our ancestors, and the descendants.
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I felt, wow, my three nieces who haven't graduated yet don't have to walk underneath that flag.
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Mississippi can begin to move forward now that we've actually acknowledged the past.