John Mellencamp’s new song and video, “Jena,” has struck a nerve with the town’s mayor, Murphy R. McMillin.
“The town of Jena has for months been mischaracterized in the media and portrayed as the epicenter of hatred, racism and a place where justice is denied,” Jena Mayor Murphy R. McMillin wrote in a statement on town letterhead faxed on Friday to The Associated Press.
He said he had previously stayed quiet, hoping that the town’s courtesy to people who have visited over the past year would speak for itself. “However, the Mellencamp video is so inflammatory, so defamatory, that a line has been crossed and enough is enough.”
The mayor is particularly upset with, what he sees, as the song’s characterization of his town, and the video’s juxtaposition of the current controversy with images from the civil rights struggles of the 1960s. “To put the incident in Jena in the same league as those who were murdered in the 1960s cheapens their sacrifice and insults their memory,” McMillan said.
In response to such criticism, Mellencamp posted a statement on his website, Mellencamp.com (where one can also find the song lyrics and video).
I am not a journalist, I am a songwriter and in the spirit and tradition of the minstrel, I am telling a story in this song.
The story is not, strictly speaking, about the town of Jena or this specific incident but of racism in America.
The song was not written as an indictment of the people of Jena but, rather, as a condemnation of rasicm, a problem which I’ve reflected in many songs, a problem that still plagues our country today.
The current trial in Jena is just another reflection of prejudice in our nation. If the song strikes an emotional chord with people and if they examin it and interpret as they will, something will have been accomplished. The aim here is not to antagonize but, rather, to catalyze thought.
As for the lyrics, here is how the song begins.
An all white jury hides the executioner’s face
See how we are, me and you?
Everyone here needs to know their place
Let’s keep this blackbird hidden in the flueOh oh oh Jena
Oh oh oh Jena
Oh oh oh Jena
Take your nooses down
UPDATE: As noted in the comments, while Mayor McMillin does not like John Mellencamp’s suggestion that Jena is a racist community, this story suggests he was not so upset about receiving “moral support” from white supremacist groups.