Nearly six years after violent throngs of white nationalists descended on Charlottesville, spreading terror at a torch-lit march on UVA Grounds on Aug. 11, 2017 and at the Unite the Right rally in downtown Charlottesville the next day, two recently published books explore new angles around the lead-up to those events and their aftermath.
24 Hours in Charlottesville: An Oral History of the Stand Against White Supremacy by UVA alum and former NBC29 reporter Nora Neus collects the oral histories of approximately 100 people who issued warnings about likely violence long before that weekend, and who stood up to hate.
“The first interview I have is from the morning of August 13, and some of those original tapes made up the original oral history, but then a lot of it is actually conducted after the fact, about five years later, which I think gives an ability for people to see the events more clearly,” says Neus, who was working for CNN in the summer of 2017.
She says the biggest takeaway from her book was the fact that so many people had attempted to warn government and university officials.
“We knew this would happen. We knew that the white nationalists, white supremacists wanted to create violence and wanted to carry out violence in our community, and the warnings were not heeded,” she told Charlottesville Right Now.
Listen to the full interview with Nora Neus and Aniko Bodroghkozy here.