US President Donald Trump is to hold his first re-election campaign rally for several months in Tulsa, Oklahoma on the date that African Americans celebrate the end of slavery.
The rally will take place on 19 June, known as “Juneteenth”.
The Trump campaign said his Republican Party was proud of its role in winning the Civil War and ending slavery.
The news follows weeks of anti-racism protests sparked by the death of George Floyd, a black man, in police custody.
In 1921 the city of Tulsa was the site of one of the worst massacres of black people in US history.
Mr Trump’s rallies, seen as vital for energising his base, were suspended due to the coronavirus outbreak in March.
He faces re-election in November but is lagging behind his Democratic rival, Joe Biden, in the polls.
Correspondents say that while the virus remains a threat, Mr Trump’s campaign considers that large crowds at the recent protests will make it harder for his opponents to criticise his rallies.
Announcing the venue, Mr Trump alluded to the low rate of coronavirus infections in Oklahoma – at 7,500 cases one of the lowest in the country.
“We’re going to be starting our rallies,” he said. “The first one… will be in Oklahoma, in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Beautiful new venue, brand new and they’re looking forward to it. They’ve done a great job with Covid, as you know, in the state of Oklahoma.
He said further rallies would take place in Florida, Texas and Arizona, but he made no mention of what safety precautions would be taken and whether social distancing would be applied.
Also on Wednesday, Mr Trump rejected calls to rename military bases named after Confederate generals.
Why are the date and venue controversial?
Juneteenth is an annual commemoration of the end of slavery. While not a federal holiday, it is celebrated widely by African Americans.
It celebrates the reading of the Emancipation Proclamation to enslaved African Americans in Texas.
Texas was the last state of the Confederacy – the slaveholding southern states that seceded, triggering the Civil War – to receive the proclamation, on 19 June 1865, months after the end of the war.
The location of the rally in Tulsa is also highly significant.
In May and June 1921 a white mob attacked the prosperous black neighbourhood of Greenwood, known as the “Black Wall Street”, with guns and explosives – killing up to 300 people and destroying about 1,000 businesses and homes.
Defending the timing of the rally, Trump campaign aide Katrina Pearson said in a statement, quoted by Bloomberg, “that the party of [Civil War victor Abraham] Lincoln, Republicans are proud of the history of Juneteenth”.
She added that Mr Trump had “built a record of success for black Americans”.
But the Biden campaign criticised the decision, with senior aide Kamau Marshall calling Mr Trump a racist.
Source:Â bbc.com