A plan to name an intersection after the first black FBI agent slain in the line of duty has angered some Bedford-Stuyvesant residents.

The funeral of Edwin R. Woodriffe, 27, who was killed in 1969, was at St. Peter Claver Church at Claver Place and Jefferson Street, where he had once been an altar boy. Brooklyn Community Board 3 voted last week to name the intersection after him.

But activists counter that the area is also known for Jitu Weusi, the founder of The East, an arts education and cultural organization once based at 10 Claver Place that was the object of FBI surveillance.

“We understand that Agent Woodriffe is a particular significant figure in African-American history. But there’s a history with the FBI and black organizations,” said Basir Mchawi, 69, one of The East’s first members. Attika Torrence, a former member of The East, said that naming a Bed-Stuy street after an FBI agent “is no different than having a Rudolf Hess monument in a Hasidic neighborhood.”