New Orleans mayor calls on city residents to let go of a "false narrative of history" by glorifying Confederate past

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Mitch Landrieu

Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP

New Orleans, La. Mayor Mitch Landrieu, center, flanked by Providence, R.I. Mayor Jorge Elorza, left, and Austin, Texas Mayor Steve Adler, accompanied by members of the U.S. Conference of Mayors leadership, speaks to reporters outside the Justice Department in Washington, Tuesday, April 25, 2017, following a meeting with Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

The mayor of New Orleans called on the city's residents to let go of a "false narrative of history" after four of the city's Confederate monuments came down last week.

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In a speech at New Orleans' Gallier Hall, Mayor Mitch Landrieu said that the city's monuments were "not just innocent remembrances of a benign history."

The Democratic mayor first pushed to remove four of the city's Confederate-era monuments after Dylann Roof murdered nine people at an African American church in Charleston, South Carolina in June 2015.

Statues of Robert E. Lee, P.G.T. Beauregard, Jefferson Davis, and an obelisk honoring the Battle of Liberty Place were all removed under increased security last week. While many white Southerners still see Confederate symbols as part of their local heritage, the flag's history as a system that sought to preserve slavery and racial oppression of African Americans has been strongly denounced in recent years.

"It is self-evident that these men did not fight for the United States of America," Landrieu said, adding that turning Confederate soldiers into heroes ignores the death, terror, and enslavement for which they stood. "They fought against it. They may have been warriors, but in this cause they were not patriots."

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Landrieu said that while he does not "judge anyone" for identifying with the Confederacy or their Southern heritage, the statues' removal is a necessary step in moving forward and confronting the city's racist history:

Why there are no slave ship monuments, no prominent markers on public land to remember the lynchings or the slave blocks; nothing to remember this long chapter of our lives; the pain, the sacrifice, the shame … all of it happening on the soil of New Orleans.

So for those self-appointed defenders of history and the monuments, they are eerily silent on what amounts to this historical malfeasance, a lie by omission.

While Landrieu' approval ratings among the city's white residents dropped by nearly 30 percent after announcing the push to remove the statues, he insisted that taking down monuments was the right thing to do.

FILE PHOTO - A monument of Robert E. Lee, who was a general in the Confederate Army, is removed in New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S. on May 19, 2017. REUTERS/Jonathan Bachman/File Photo

Thomson Reuters

FILE PHOTO - A monument of Robert E. Lee, who was a general in the Confederate Army, is removed in New Orleans

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"Otherwise, we will continue to pay a price with discord, with division, and yes, with violence," said Landrieu.

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