Global Times

Statue of Lincoln and kneeling black man removed from Boston

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A statue of Abraham Lincoln next to a kneeling, newly freed slave was removed on Tuesday in Boston by order of the mayor’s office, local television news reported.

The contrast of the fully clothed Lincoln and a nearnaked black man on his knees was considered demeaning, and the city’s arts council ruled in June 2019 in favor of its removal.

“The decision for removal acknowledg­es the statue’s role in perpetuati­ng harmful prejudices and obscuring the role of black Americans in shaping the nation’s fight for freedom,” the mayor’s office said in a statement.

A petition launched by a local artist had gathered 12,000 signatures to remove the statue, entitled the Emancipati­on Group.

Put up in 1879 in a square in the state capital of Massachuse­tts, it was a replica of a statue installed in Washington

DC in 1876.

While it was funded by a group largely made up of former slaves, they did not have the final say on the monument’s design, which was meant to honor Lincoln’s proclamati­on of emancipati­on.

The 16th president of the US, dubbed “Honest Abe” and the “Great Emancipato­r,” banned slavery with the edict in 1863, in the middle of the Civil War that had been triggered by the secession of southern states intent on maintainin­g slavery.

In the wake of massive race demonstrat­ions in summer 2020 over the killing of a black man by police in Minneapoli­s, statues of Christophe­r Colombus, Theodore Roosevelt and the secessioni­st general Robert E Lee – have been removed or vandalized, including in Boston, New York, and Washington DC.

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