The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Could Stone Mountain unify DeKalb County?

- Jim Galloway Political Insider

As a matter of ceremony, Michael Thurmond will be sworn in as the new CEO of DeKalb County government on Friday afternoon.

By law, he has actually held the position since New Year’s Day. In fact, Thurmond has already endured a weather scare — just a little dusting last week — and his first board meeting with commission­ers.

Friday’s event will allow him to lay out his priorities and expound on the logo that appears on his celebrator­y website with the phrase, “New Day for DeKalb.”

The image shows a sun rising behind a blue profile of the walkable side of Stone Mountain.

Thurmond, a former state labor commission­er and DeKalb school superinten­dent, was elected on a promise to unite northern and white DeKalb with southern and black DeKalb. For him, Stone Mountain is where that effort starts.

“I’m going to emphasize Stone Mountain as a major and significan­t attraction, a beautiful nat-

ural resource,” Thurmond said in an interview. “Not just a state property, but a county symbol as well.”

He would like to make the granite mound a rallying point for economic developmen­t in a county that struggles to generate jobs.

The problem: Stone Mountain may be the best-known geographic feature in Georgia, but because of its Confederat­e identity, it has become the most difficult state asset to successful­ly market.

The solution: “We have to create a narrative that extricates us from this conundrum of history that we’re in,” Thurmond said. The Lost Cause of the 19th century must be reconciled with what has followed.

We have been here before. Eighteen months ago, in the days after Dylan Roof massacred nine members of a black church in Charleston, S.C., the mountain and its massive carving became a focal point for debate over Confederat­e symbolism.

The result was a pair of efforts not to remove Confederat­e iconograph­y, but to add to.

Bill Stephens, the CEO of the Stone Mountain Memorial Associatio­n, proposed the erection of a bell tower atop the mountain, to mark its mention in Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech in 1963.

When that idea stalled, the effort shifted to the creation of a museum that would detail the role African-Americans played in the Civil War. That initiative, too, has so far come to naught.

Thurmond would revive the conversati­on. In addition to a long career in politics, the DeKalb CEO is also an amateur historian who believes that we are the stories that we tell ourselves. Incomplete or inaccurate history, he argues, leaves its mark on the generation­s that follow.

“We don’t connect current issues with what, unfortunat­ely, is a very disturbing part of the history of our county. Which is Stone Mountain as the birthplace of the modern Klan,” Thurmond said.

That was in the early 20th century. But the thing about history is that it doesn’t tend to stop. Everyone knows the tale of how Martin Luther King Jr. was arrested in 1960 at a demonstrat­ion in Atlanta.

“So when Dr. King spoke about freedom ringing from Stone Mountain, he was speaking about it metaphoric­ally, but he also had that experience,” he said. “In many ways it’s recent history,” he said. “And in many ways, we have to make peace with it — before we can really embrace all the opportunit­ies that now exist for DeKalb in the early part of the 21st century.”

Again, Thurmond is about adding history to the park, not obliterati­ng it. “That carving is nothing to be ashamed of, but we need to put it in the proper context,” Thurmond said.

This isn’t about cultural retaliatio­n. Thurmond is about piecing a broken DeKalb back together. And if he can successful­ly recast the Stone Mountain discussion

Michael Thurmond DeKalb County CEO

in economic terms, he may do everyone a favor.

Details on how Thurmond intends to accomplish that will have to wait until Friday. He has a bully pulpit, but whatever he attempts, the new CEO will need Republican help — specifical­ly, northern DeKalb help. And certainly some assistance from certain quarters in the state Capitol as well.

For instance: Perhaps the board of directors of the Stone Mountain Memorial Associatio­n shouldn’t be all white. Minorities have been appointed to it before. And an African-American member or two might offer some interestin­g perspectiv­es on the stories we tell ourselves.

‘We don’t connect current issues with what, unfortunat­ely, is a very disturbing part of the history of our county. Which is Stone Mountain as the birthplace of the modern Klan.’

 ??  ?? The logo for DeKalb County CEO Michael Thurmond’s inaugurati­on festivitie­s is a rising sun behind a profile of Stone Mountain.
The logo for DeKalb County CEO Michael Thurmond’s inaugurati­on festivitie­s is a rising sun behind a profile of Stone Mountain.
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