The Loyal White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan calls itself the largest Klan group in America. But it doesn’t take much these days to claim that mark.
The Knights, who on Saturday will rally at the steps of the South Carolina Capitol to protest the removal of the Confederate battle flag, claims a few thousand active members nationwide, a figure that researchers say is exaggerated but remains a tiny fraction of the 5 million Americans who were on the rolls of Klan chapters 90 years ago.
Now the Loyal White Knights says the Klan is poised for a return from the extreme fringe of American culture.
The group is trying to tap into anger among many Southern whites over a backlash against the flag that followed the killing of nine black church parishioners by a white man last month. The Klan says the reaction was excessive, and has fueled a broader feeling of dispossession among those who believe their country is abandoning “white heritage.”
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If that’s true, then the rally in Columbia, South Carolina, will be a pivotal test for today’s KKK, which is less a cohesive organization than a collection of disjointed mini-Klans that pop up and die off.
The Klan, which has historically relied on public displays of violence and intimidation, is struggling to find its place within the contemporary white supremacist movement’s think tank-style organizations and sophisticated-looking websites that argue for “white civil rights.” The groups advocate for complete separation of the races — Jews included — and a return to white-dominated communities where separatist symbols like the Confederate flag continue to fly.
The KKK has publicly denounced the Charleston, South Carolina, church killings, allegedly carried out by a young man who visited white supremacist websites, posted photos online of himself posing with the Confederate flag and is believed to have written a manifesto that griped about the weakened state of the white supremacist movement, including what he described as “no real KKK” and “no one doing anything but talking on the Internet.”
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But the Klan became enraged when the state legislature reacted to the killings byremoving the Confederate battle flag from the front of the State House.
“They cannot punish everyone for what one man did,” Amanda Barker, Imperial Officer of the Pelham, North Carolina-based Loyal White Knights, told NBC News.
Barker said the move to take down the flag has inspired many to reach out to her group, which she says has received over 6,000 membership applications in the past two weeks.
She says the Loyal White Knights has also gotten thousands of calls in support of Saturday’s march.
But in its application to hold a rally on the Capitol grounds, the group said it expected only 100 to 200 to participate. And a few dozen of the marchers will be members not of the Klan but of the National Socialist Movement, a Michigan-based group that calls itself a white civil rights political action organization.
Will Quigg, California Grand Dragon for the Loyal White Knights, said it was difficult to predict how many would show up. “That’s why we are called the Invisible Empire,” Quigg said.
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Gov. Nikki Haley, who led the effort to take down the flag, has urged people to stay away from Saturday’s rally. Authorities are beefing up security for the event, which will coincide with a march in support of the flag’s removal, raising concerns of a violent clash.
Black Educators for Justice, a Florida organization with links to the New Black Panther Party, will hold a rally nearby on the Capitol grounds to urge for more action beyond the removal of the flag. A leader of that group, James Mohammed, said members of the New Black Panther Party, Nation of Islam and Black Lawyers for Justice also will attend.
He said the black groups were not expecting violence. “But if any person of color is harmed in any way we have no choice, obviously, but to defend ourselves and to expose who are under those hoods,” Mohammed told NBC News.
The Klan remains a secretive organization, allowing it to make unverifiable claims about its size. Leading Klan researchers say the group’s claims of membership and influence are overstated.








