Westminster Presbyterian Church

Wayne County Fair

Uphold the welcome, family atmosphere, and diversity of Wayne County, Ohio and the Wayne County Fair!

In the aftermath of the shooting by white supremacist Dylann Roof on June 17, 2015 in the Emanuel AME Church in South Carolina, the Fair Minded Coalition of Wayne County, Ohio, led by the Wooster/Orrville NAACP, has been petitioning the Wayne County Fair Board to prohibit the sale and display of the Confederate flag to no avail.

What is asked of them is very simple and in line with a policy adopted by the Ohio State Fair in 2015:

“The Ohio State Fair has long held a policy that prohibits the sale of merchandise that contains offensive wording, lettering or graphics. As such, beginning with the 2015 Ohio State Fair, the sale or display of Confederate flags and/or Confederate flag merchandise shall be prohibited. Any vendors found to be selling any items featuring the image of the Confederate flag will be asked to promptly remove those items.”

Roof’s unspeakable act (and other more recent acts of racially-motivated domestic terrorism) served as a wake-up call to people of conscience across our nation. It is no longer possible to maintain the fiction that the Confederate battle flag is simply an innocuous symbol of a nostalgic version of “Southern pride.” In recent years, participation in White supremacist groups has risen sharply and has been more present, even in our backyards in Northeast Ohio. ALL of these groups cherish and display the Confederate flag; ALL of them openly advocate racial discrimination; and some of them actively promote violence. Dylann Roof himself adopted it as his emblem.

We feel it is time to put this divisive symbol of hatred and racism behind us. In South Carolina and Mississippi, Republicans and Democrats agreed to remove the flag and its image from government institutions. Large corporations such as Walmart, Target, Amazon, eBay, and Sears are banning the sale of Confederate flag merchandise from all online and brick and mortar stores. Here in Ohio, the flag has been banned from our State Fair, and now unfortunately, county fairs, including the Wayne County Fair, and small town festivals have become the last-stop shop for Confederate memorabilia.

It is time for us to stand together as a community, and for all those concerned, to uphold the welcome, family atmosphere, and diversity of Wayne County, Ohio and the Wayne County Fair. Please cease approving the sale or display of Confederate flags and/or Confederate flag merchandise by vendors at the Wayne County Fair as it has no place at a family and community event that is welcoming to ALL people.

Advocacy Opportunities

Education

See Mark Potok’s, Senior Fellow at the  Southern Poverty Law Center, presentation at Westminster on Sunday, June 26, 2016 entitled: The Confederate Battle Flag and the Wayne County Fair: Making Sense of a Symbol That Still Divides Us 

Mark is one of the country’s leading experts on the world of extremism and serves as the Editor-in-Chief of the SPLC’s award-winning, quarterly journal, The Intelligence Report and its investigative reports. A graduate of the University of Chicago, Mark has appeared on numerous television news programs and is quoted regularly by journalists and scholars in both the United States and abroad. In addition, he has testified before the U.S. Senate, the United Nations High Commission on Human Rights and in other venues. Before joining the SPLC staff in 1997, Mark spent 20 years as an award-winning journalist at major newspapers, including USA TodayThe Dallas Times Herald, and The Miami Herald. While at USA Today, he covered the 1993 Waco siege, the rise of militias, the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing and the trial of Timothy McVeigh.