Showing posts with label heritage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label heritage. Show all posts

Thursday, October 9, 2008

European Culture Revisited At Stone Mountain Park October 17th - 19th

Stone Mountain, GA
Many Georgians will be honoring their proud Scottish heritage next week as the 36th Annual Stone Mountain Highland Games come to Stone Mountain Park. The festival begins on Friday October 17th and runs through Sunday October 19th, with most activities taking place at the park's meadow grounds.

Popular attractions are Scottish dancing, music, storytelling and arts and crafts. The Athletics competitions will include the Caber Toss, the Stone Put, the 56 pound Weight Toss (for height), the 22 pound Hammer Throw (for distance) and other traditional Scottish favorites.

The celebration starts with a Whisky Tasting and Seminar on Friday (Oct. 17) afternoon followed later that evening by the Invitational Piping Competition featuring professional and amateur pipers from the southeastern United States.

Saturday's (Oct 18) events include the beginning of the Highland Games with the Professional Athletics competition, the Highland Dancing contest, the Solo Piping and Drumming competition and the annual Pipe Band contest. Later in the evening Alex Beaton and Smithfield Fair will host the Scottish Musical Evening at the Atlanta Hilton Northeast.

The festivities continue on Sunday (Oct 19) with the Amateur Athletics competition, Highland Dancing, Pipe Band performances, a Herding Dogs exhibition and demonstrations of the ancient art of Falconry. The final event will be Sunday evening's Parade of Tartans, featuring members of over 100 clans.

The festival's Clan Row will have tents sponsored by the Clan Graham Society, the Clan Henderson Society, the Clan Lamont Society NA, the Clan Wallace Society Worldwide, the Clan MacPherson Society USA, the Clan MacFarlane Society, the Burns Club of Atlanta, the National Trust for Scotland, the Scottish Tartans Museum, the Saint Andrews Society of Atlanta, Scottish Heritage USA and many others.

Ticket prices and more information can be found at the Stone Mountain Highland Games website.

Monday, April 2, 2007

A Half Assed Stand For Southern Heritage

Athens, GA
I have mixed feelings about this "opinion" piece from the University Of Georgia's Red&Black.com, but I'm going to blog it here anyway. The writer does raise several interesting points.

This is an opinion piece in response to a cartoon featured in the University's newspaper last week. The cartoon was in response to recent talk of the state legislature's proposal of a Confederate History Month. The cartoon depicted a White man standing in front of a swastika with a coffee mug reading "I'd rather be fishing".

Quote:
Southern pride not a racist agenda

Apparently I'm supposed to be ashamed of who I am. At least that's the impression I got from The Red & Black Opinions page last Tuesday, March 20.

If you read the paper that day, you might recall that a few opinion writers and a cartoonist chose to respond to a bill in the Georgia Senate proposing the creation of a Confederate History Month. However, instead of just stating their opposition to the bill, they decided to degrade Southern heritage.

I am not offended by people making fun of Southerners since it can be funny, but that day's "Our Take" and the daily cartoon compared my whole family to Nazis.

I support equal civil rights for all people no matter their race, religion or sexual orientation, but I also have nothing but Southern blood running through my veins. My ancestors, dating to before the Civil War, have all lived in a few adjacent counties in South Georgia.

I could care less about the Confederate History Month legislation since there are more important issues to act on. However, calling all of my ancestors dishonorable for being confederates - most were poor and none that I know of owned any slaves - and suggesting they should be sent to "the dustbin of history" is inflammatory to people like myself.

Using the editorial board's logic, we should send all history that involves slave-owning civilizations to the dustbin. On the bright side, that would make history class pretty easy considering Greeks, Romans, Russians, Arabs, Africans, Asians and Americans have all been slave-owning peoples. What if we just condemned everyone and studied only the past 140 years?

Yet, the most offensive item of last Tuesday's paper was the cartoon because it insults today's Southerners.

In the image, a man is standing in front of a swastika and holding a mug that says "I'd rather be fishing." I know there are some racist fishermen somewhere out there, but most of them are not hateful Nazis.

What a lot of people don't seem to understand is we Southerners have a unique culture just like other minority groups. Many of us like to fish, shoot guns, farm, tell romantic stories of the past and party in hay fields to the music of Lynyrd Skynyrd and Alabama.

History is important for our culture. We inherited several of our traditions from our Confederate ancestors, but one thing we did not inherit is slavery. We are not threatening to bring back segregation and slavery or to secede again. So, why does anyone care if we choose to celebrate our history the way we want?

I'm proud to have a permanent farmer's tan, speak with a drawl and I love my ancestors.

Everyone does not have to understand my way of life for it to be justified. Those who dislike my culture might like to know that if I ever have kids, they'll be raised just like me.

Insisting we suppress our heritage will only make Southerners more determined to preserve it.

Thanks, Red & Black.


Original here:
Southern Pride Not Racist Agenda