Confederate flags in NYC window met with rocks, suit, tarp
NEW YORK — The Confederate flags had been in a Manhattan apartment’s windows for over a year. And then, in a matter of days last week, they were met with hurled rocks, a punched-out window, a tarp hung over them and legal action.
By this week, the lighted flags were no more to be found in the seventh-floor windows in the East Village neighbourhood, where the Confederate symbol had been displayed alongside an Israeli flag and a colonial-era American one.
They’d attracted new attention after an Aug. 12 white nationalist rally to preserve a Confederate statue in Charlottesville, Virginia, spiraled into violence that left a counter-protester dead and stirred debate over where or whether Confederate statues and symbols belong in 21st-century America.
The flags’ owner, William Green, said by email Tuesday that the reaction reflects a misunderstanding of their meaning.


