“I was disheartened about it,” Mr. Harris said. “People are outraged that people choose to vandalize a statue that represents peace, prosperity, inclusion, education, and the life and true fabric of the country: children.”
“It lets us know that there are folks out there that don’t believe in being inclusive,” he continued. “They believe in discriminatory acts and racism still.”
Mr. Ashe, a world-class tennis player, believed his trailblazing success provided him with the duty to stand against privilege, poverty and racism.
When Mr. Ashe died in 1993, he was lain in state at the Executive Mansion in Richmond. His statue on Monument Avenue was dedicated three years later to memorialize him and to provide a balance with the statues on the avenue dedicated to Confederate leaders.
When asked what he thought his uncle would say about the current climate in the United States, Mr. Harris did not hesitate.
“I don’t think he would be too surprised, but I think he would understand the nature of what the people are upset about, what the people are fighting for,” Mr. Harris said.
“I think he would support Black Lives Matter because what we are dealing with is not police brutality, it is a myriad things that has been woven into the fabric of America,” he said. “Some of those threads need to be yanked out.”