For those interested to know more about the background of Gollub (and more generally about self-hatring Jews), this 2002 SPLC article comes handy.
In the 1980s, Gollub managed to rise to the post of Mississippi state leader of the Christian Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, then led by Virgil Griffin of North Carolina. But in 1989, Griffin uncovered Gollub’s background — Gollub had been born to Jewish parents in Philadelphia — and booted him out of the Knights as a result.
To the amusement of many, Gollub angrily qualified Griffin’s account, saying that he had actually been ejected because of his religious “background and the fact that I’m against Catholics joining the Klan.” Catholics, he argued, have a primary loyalty to the pope, rather than the United States. “We can’t have an organization with 100% Americans with Catholics,” Gollub told the Jackson (Miss.) Daily News.
Unsurprisingly, his efforts to create Klan groups opposing Catholicism ended in failure and he now thinks Charlie Kirk had the right idea.
As for his present home, this proud supporter of segregation now resides in a predominantly Black neighborhood of East Biloxi.