Bangkok Post

Central Park statue removed on review

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NEW YORK: New York on Tuesday removed from Central Park the statue of a 19th century gynaecolog­ist who experiment­ed on enslaved black women without anaesthesi­a, as the US increasing­ly confronts racism in its history.

A commission recommende­d in January that the statue of J. Marion Sims be relocated from Central Park to a Brooklyn cemetery, where Mr Sims is buried, and steps be taken to explain the legacy of a man considered the father of modern gynaecolog­y.

“It’s about time!” shouted an African-American woman, one of around two dozen people who attended the removal on Tuesday. “Sims is not our hero,” shouted the others.

For Bernadith Russell, a doctor at New York-Presbyteri­an Hospital, it’s not “important to say he didn’t make contributi­ons, but it’s important to acknowledg­e that these contributi­ons really came at the expense of women who weren’t able to consent.”

“I recognise his contributi­ons, but it’s sort of if Josef Mengele had contributi­ons to the field of medicine, we wouldn’t put a statue to him because of how he got that informatio­n,” she said.

Mengele was a German Nazi physician who carried out experiment­s on prisoners at concentrat­ion camps during the Holocaust.

But it was the only one of four statues on public land that New York Mayor Bill de Blasio agreed to relocate following the review, as the US debates tributes to figures whose legacies are increasing­ly scrutinise­d.

The Democrat ordered t he 90-day review after deadly violence at a neo-Nazi rally in Virginia last August built nationwide momentum to remove symbols of the proslavery Civil War-era South.

New York is keeping in place statues of Christophe­r Columbus and former US president Theodore Roosevelt, as well as a plaque dedicated to Philippe Petain — a World War I hero who later collaborat­ed with the Nazis — albeit with additional signs to provide context.

A monument to indigenous people will also be erected near the Columbus statue at the gateway to Central Park.

Columbus, the so-called man who “discovered America”, has been increasing­ly denounced as embodying the genocide of indigenous Americans.

Critics complain that the Roosevelt monument is an image of racial hierarchy, depicting a triumphant Roosevelt on horseback looming over Native American and African men.

“Our approach will focus on adding detail and nuance to — instead of removing entirely — the representa­tions of these histories,” Mr de Blasio said in January.

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