Speaking to Mic, Yates said the people who booked the cabin “don’t care about the true history of that space.”
“They care about the plantation in its visual beauty. … They have the privilege of mentally removing themselves from that history because they are not affected by it in the present day,” he told Mic. “If you were to put any Black American in that space, the emotional reaction would be night and day.”
An Airbnb spokesperson responded to the backlash in an email to Mic.
“We are taking this report seriously and have deactivated all listings associated with this property as we investigate,” the spokesperson said.
The Mississippi listing, however, is one of several problematic U.S. listings advertised on Airbnb. According to Mic, there are also Airbnb listings for what’s termed a “tiny home” on a plantation, a mansion with “guest rooms to the back of the house [that] once served as slave quarters,” a “haunted” former slave cottage, a “suite” where enslaved people lived, and “historically renovated slave quarters” that feature “exposed brick walls.”