3 minute read

Columbus Exposed

Columbus

Exposed!

Advertisement

How will you observe Columbus Day? Will you be one of the millions that will go shopping downtown or at a mall, taking advantage of the many holiday sales? Will you attend a parade or participate in any of the scores of celebrations around the nation? Or will you join the thousands of Native Americans to protest the holiday?

The statue of Christopher Columbus at the entrance to Tower Grove Park in the center of St. Louis has stood there for more than 130 years. There has been discussion recently about removing the statue after the removal of a Confederate monument in nearby Forest Park.

Tower Grove Park announced that it will form a commission to study the presence of a statue of explorer Christopher Columbus. The Columbus statue commission will issue longterm recommendations to the park’s board of commissioners.

Martin Gardner once wrote, ‘biographical history, as taught in our public schools, is still largely a history of ridiculous kings and queens, compulsive voyagers, and ignorant generals. The men, who radically altered history, are seldom mentioned, if at all’.

Cities have been named Columbus or Columbia in Connecticut, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois Maryland, Mississippi, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Indiana, etc. We have a federal holiday informing us when we’re to celebrate Christopher Columbus’ birthday.” There are statues of Christopher Columbus all over America. His portrait has been on postage stamps. There is a huge figure of Columbus and Queen Isabella of Spain towering above the ground floor rotunda of the California Statehouse in Sacramento.

Our history books tell us that ‘In 1492, Columbus Sailed the Ocean Blue’. Actually, Columbus never saw or set foot on the mainland of the New World until his third voyage 6 years later on August 5, 1498. Historians

note that Columbus landed on the island of Hispaniola, site of present-day Haiti and the Dominican Republic, and the native people maintain that he was responsible for the systematic murder of nearly nine million indigenous people over the course of 40 years after his arrival there in the

pg. 22

late 15th century. They assert that in less than a normal lifetime, Columbus and his invaders destroyed a whole culture.

Moreover, 1492 was not a good year! In the spring of 1492, the Moors were banned from Granada, and Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain expelled all the Jews from their lands, ending the largest and most distinguished Jewish settlement in Europe.

The United States is a nation of immigrants. During the mass emigration from Italy during the century between1876 to 1976, the U.S. was the largest single recipient of Italian immigrants in the world, so naturally Columbus is a hero

the eyes of indigenous peoples.

Two hundred Native demonstrators were arrested while protesting a Columbus Day parade in Denver, and educators and students at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln staged a huge demonstration, as well as thousands of indigenous people across the United States, and in Central and South America.

American Indian Movement insists the divisive Columbus Day holiday be replaced by a celebration that is much more inclusive and more accurately reflective of the cultural and racial richness of the Americas. They demand that federal, state, and local authorities begin the removal of anti- Indian icons throughout the country, beginning with Columbus. They also want the elimination of statues, street names, public parks, and any other public object that seeks to celebrate or honor devastators of Indian peoples.

Perhaps it would be better to celebrate the explorations of Amerigo Vespucci, the man America and South America was named. Most native people contend that to dignify Columbus and his legacy with parades, holidays and other celebrations is intolerable.

~Bernie Hayes

to the Italian community. Every ethnic group in America is proud of its roots. Race and ethnicity are subjects of great importance today throughout the U.S. and, indeed, throughout the world, but Columbus might be the wrong idol, particularly in

Copyright © 2017 - All rights reserved.

www.the-arts-today.com

Volume 5.6 December 31, 2018

This article is from: