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The Day the Klan Came to Town (2021)

von Bill Campbell (Writer), Bizhan Khodabandeh (Artist)

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"The year is 1923. The Ku Klux Klan is at the height of its power in the US as membership swells into the millions and they expand beyond their original southern borders. As they grow, so do their targets. As they continue their campaigns of terror against African Americans, their list now includes Catholics and Jews, southern and eastern Europeans, all in the name of "white supremacy." But they are no longer considered a terrorist organization. By adding the messages of moral decency, family values, and temperance, the Klan has slapped on a thin veneer of respectability and has become a "civic organization," attracting ordinary citizens, law enforcement, and politicians to their particular brand of white, Anglo-Saxon, and Protestant "Americanism." Pennsylvania enthusiastically joined that wave. That was when the Grand Dragon of Pennsylvania decided to display the Klan's newfound power in a show of force. He chose a small town outside of Pittsburgh named after Andrew Carnegie; a small, unassuming borough full of "Catholics and Jews," the perfect place to teach these immigrants "a lesson." Some thirty thousand members of the Klan gathered from as far as Kentucky for "Karnegie Day." After initiating new members, they armed themselves with torches and guns to descend upon the town to show them exactly what Americanism was all about. The Day the Klan Came to Town is a fictionalized retelling of the riot, focusing on a Sicilian immigrant, Primo Salerno. He is not a leader; he's a man with a troubled past. He was pulled from the sulfur mines of Sicily as a teen to fight in the First World War. Afterward, he became the focus of a local fascist and was forced to emigrate to the United States. He doesn't want to fight but feels that he may have no choice. The entire town needs him-and indeed everybody-to make a stand"--… (mehr)
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In an interesting moment in history in 1923, the citizens of Carnegie, Pennsylvania, fought back with force when the Ku Klux Klan picked their small town for a demonstration of their white supremacy. Unfortunately, this fictionalized narrative of the event gets tangled up in extended flashbacks for one character set in Sicily and Italy and barely introduces the rest of its jumble of Carnegie residents. The page-by-page flow was confusing and muted the excitement of the climactic confrontation for me. ( )
  villemezbrown | Apr 26, 2022 |
(Full disclosure: I received a free e-ARC for review through Edelweiss. Trigger warning for racist violence.)

Named after Andrew Carnegie (who donated a library for the honor), Carnegie, Pennsylvania is a small borough that's part of Pittsburgh metropolitan area. On August 25, 1923, it was the site of "Karnegie Day," during which 10,000-30,000 members of the KKK - many imported from other states, like West Virginia and Kentucky - descended on the borough for a celebration of violence, terror, and white supremacy. The Klan targeted Carnegie because it was majority Catholic; their intended victims were Black, Irish, Italian, Sicilian, Jewish, Chinese, and Armenian, in keeping with Klan 2.0's new and expanded list of "undesirables." They also arguably had the blessing of local law enforcement, which looked the other way.

The diverse citizenry of Carnegie were abandoned to defend themselves - and so they did. Using guns, knives, bats, fire, bricks, and rocks, they coordinated and launched a counteroffensive, driving the Klan from their borough. The resistance killed one Klan member during the battle and injured many others.

Sadly, like so may acts of resistance (and oppression), Carnegie's victory over the Klan was largely lost to history - a near-inevitability foretold by Freeman near the story's end. Indeed, in the afterward, author Bill Campbell relates that "Research wasn’t easy. A chapter or two in a monograph here and there, a brief mention in some old articles. Oddly enough, the actions of the Klan and government officials that day have been chronicled. All we really know about the people who fought them is that they were 'Irish and others.'" Wikipedia's entry on "Karnegie Day" is a paltry two sentences, nestled in Carnegie, PA's article.

THE DAY THE KLAN CAME TO TOWN is thus "a fictionalized account of an actual historical event" - but one that's no less compelling for its fabrications (or maybe educated guesses is a better term?). It's damn exhilarating to see people from different marginalized groups band together to fight a common enemy (if not the real enemy?: which is just to say that poor white working class folks need to get their heads out of their collective asses and see that the actual enemy isn't working class black and brown people - or other "nonwhites," which in the 30s included the Irish and Italians - but the politicians and billionaires who use hate, othering, and in group/out group membership to distract from the ever-widening wealth gap and erosion of democracy.)

Still, the volume is necessarily slim, and I can't help but wish we had more details about what transpired that day.

I mostly enjoyed Khodabandeh's artwork, though I won't be the first or last to comment on his tendency to give everyone weirdly oversized hands. The black and white is striking, though a part of me wishes THE DAY THE KLAN CAME TO TOWN was rendered in full color, to help counter our tendency to dismiss this stuff as having occurred in the "distant past." ( )
  smiteme | Jul 12, 2021 |
Note: I accessed a digital review copy of this book through Edelweiss.
  fernandie | Sep 14, 2022 |
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AutorennameRolleArt des AutorsWerk?Status
Campbell, BillWriterHauptautoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Khodabandeh, BizhanArtistHauptautoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Clark, P. DjèlíVorwortCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
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Originaltitel
Alternative Titel
Ursprüngliches Erscheinungsdatum
Figuren/Charaktere
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Wichtige Schauplätze
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Wichtige Ereignisse
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Zugehörige Filme
Epigraph (Motto/Zitat)
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The Song of the Emigrants (Il Canto Degli Emigranti)

Wolves have warmed themselves on our fleece and eaten our flesh.
We are
the generation of sheep
Wolves have sheared us to the bone while we protested only to
God.
In time of peace we sickened in hospitals or jails
In time of war we were cannon
fodder
We harvested bales of grass, one blade for us, the rest for the wolves.
One day a rumor
spread – there was a vast and distant land where we could live meno male.
Some sheep went
and returned, transformed, no longer sheep but wolves and they associated with our
wolves.
‘We want to go to that vast and distant country,’ we sheep said.
‘We want to
go.’
‘There is an ocean to cross,’ the wolves said.
‘We will cross it.’
‘And if you are
shipwrecked and drowned?’
‘It’s better to die quickly than suffer a lifetime.’
‘There are
diseases…’
‘No disease can be more horrible than hunger from father to son.’
And the wolves
said, ‘Sheep, there will be deceivers…’
‘You’ve been deceiving us for centuries.’
‘Would you
abandon the land of your fathers, your brothers?’
‘You who fleece us are not our brothers.
The land of our fathers is a slaughterhouse.’
In tatters, in great herds we in pain beyond belief
journeyed to the vast and distant land.
Some of us did drown.
Some of us did die of
privation.
But for every ten that perished a thousand survived and endured.
Better to choke in
the ocean than to be strangled by misery.
Better to deceive ourselves than be deceived by the
wolves.
Better to die in our way than to be lower than the beasts.

- Ferdinando Fontana (1881)
Widmung
Erste Worte
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Hoooooo! Hoooo! Hoooo!

Now, fellas, here we are, out on a coon hunt, and we done caught us a guinea instead.
Zitate
Letzte Worte
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Hinweis zur Identitätsklärung
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Contents: Foreword by P. Djèlí Clark -- The Day the Klan Came to Town / Written by Bill Campbell, Art by Bizhan Khodabandeh -- Afterword by Bill Campbell -- Acknowledgements -- Additional Art -- Biographies
Verlagslektoren
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"The year is 1923. The Ku Klux Klan is at the height of its power in the US as membership swells into the millions and they expand beyond their original southern borders. As they grow, so do their targets. As they continue their campaigns of terror against African Americans, their list now includes Catholics and Jews, southern and eastern Europeans, all in the name of "white supremacy." But they are no longer considered a terrorist organization. By adding the messages of moral decency, family values, and temperance, the Klan has slapped on a thin veneer of respectability and has become a "civic organization," attracting ordinary citizens, law enforcement, and politicians to their particular brand of white, Anglo-Saxon, and Protestant "Americanism." Pennsylvania enthusiastically joined that wave. That was when the Grand Dragon of Pennsylvania decided to display the Klan's newfound power in a show of force. He chose a small town outside of Pittsburgh named after Andrew Carnegie; a small, unassuming borough full of "Catholics and Jews," the perfect place to teach these immigrants "a lesson." Some thirty thousand members of the Klan gathered from as far as Kentucky for "Karnegie Day." After initiating new members, they armed themselves with torches and guns to descend upon the town to show them exactly what Americanism was all about. The Day the Klan Came to Town is a fictionalized retelling of the riot, focusing on a Sicilian immigrant, Primo Salerno. He is not a leader; he's a man with a troubled past. He was pulled from the sulfur mines of Sicily as a teen to fight in the First World War. Afterward, he became the focus of a local fascist and was forced to emigrate to the United States. He doesn't want to fight but feels that he may have no choice. The entire town needs him-and indeed everybody-to make a stand"--

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