A historic black church just north of Charleston, South Carolina was on fire Tuesday night, making it the sixth predominantly black church in the United States to burn in the less than two weeks since a white supremacist massacred nine people, all of them African-American, at their parish.
This is not the first time the Mount Zion African Methodist Episcopal church in Greeleyville, a town of 400 people, has caught ablaze. In 1995 the Klu Klux Klan burned it down, almost 20 years to the date before Tuesday’s inferno.
It is believed that no one was inside at the time of Tuesday’s fire. The chief of the South Carolina Enforcement Division, Mark Keel, told the New York Times that it was too early to determine cause of the blaze.
Many suspect that the string of fires is part of an anti-black backlash in the wake of the white supremacist killings at Charleston’s Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal church on June 17.
The NAACP said in a tweet on Tuesday that “State Conferences and Units are now alerting black churches to take necessary precautions.”
Meanwhile, the hashtag #WhoIsBurningBlackChurches has been trending on Twitter:
#WhoIsBurningBlackChurches Tweets
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