Times of Malta

Monument to Malta’s republican independen­ce

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A wry smile stretches across my face when I read uninformed harangues such as those penned by Charles Gauci (April 6) wherein he cynically proposes the statue of Napoleon replacing Queen Victoria’s in Valletta. His colonial mentality – that is believing that foreigners should adorn our public spaces – reveals the inferiorit­y as inculcated in certain Maltese minds during the past two centuries.

Like most papers, including Times of Malta, he must have missed the new president’s recent assessment of British colonisati­on of Malta. Quoted in this free translatio­n, her excellency held that “there was always a section of our people who retained heart pangs after the British power’s protection sought by the Maltese in 1800, transmuted into a colonial rule intent to serve the interests of the rulers.” The 34 colonial monuments in Valletta, including

propaganda ones such as several royal large insignias and Queen Victoria in one square kilometre around the President’s Palace, manifest this poignant statement.

Allow me to correct a point arising from insufficie­nt research by your correspond­ent: General Napoleon Bonaparte in 1798 brought over the French Revolution’s 1794 pioneer abolishmen­t of slavery, when on June 15 he succeeded

to liberate scores of Maltese captives from Tunis, Tripoli and Algiers while locally freeing more than 2,000 Turkish and North African slaves.

This unfortunat­ely could have worked against his troops in Mdina when in September of the same year, the peasants’ revolt, led by a Maltese canon of the Cathedral and the rector of St Joseph’s fraternity, massacred 60 Christian French soldiers, sliced open their bellies, cooking and eating their livers in public as a sign of domination.

In 2021 I corrected the same correspond­ent’s misinforma­tion in this paper with this data: In 1802, Consul Bonaparte decided to re-establish slavery in certain Caribbean islands to restore public order.

These new orders affected St Domingue (Haiti), Guadeloupe and French Guyana. Haitians defended their island and became independen­t in 1804.

In lieu of Victoria in the public space of Republic Square in Valletta, I strongly recommend a monument to Malta’s long path to freedom and republican independen­ce.

Compared to the scanty associatio­n of Victoria to Malta, ironically enough Bonaparte’s short stay in Malta, saw him enacting 160 civil orders dispensing ‘democratic’ reforms in education, health, administra­tion (including the first local municipali­ties) and justice.

Some years ago, a monument to the Republic in another Valletta location was commission­ed to Austin Camilleri, after a public contest, but bizarrely, it never materialis­ed. CHARLeS XueReB – Sliema

 ?? ?? The scene on St George’s Square on April 4 when the new president took oath of office. The symbolical­ly national ceremonies on the square were taking place under the aegis of the British royal insignia on the Main Guard. PHOTO: DOI
The scene on St George’s Square on April 4 when the new president took oath of office. The symbolical­ly national ceremonies on the square were taking place under the aegis of the British royal insignia on the Main Guard. PHOTO: DOI

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