Baltimore Sun

Young decries toppling of statue

Warns those involved ‘will be brought to justice’

- By Yvonne Wenger and Phil Davis

Baltimore Mayor Bernard C. “Jack” Young said Thursday he was not going to tolerate the destructio­n of the Christophe­r Columbus statue, warning those who toppled the monument near Little Italy that “if we identify them, they will be brought to justice.”

Young’s comments are the strongest reaction from the administra­tion since the Fourth of July incident.

“We support peaceful protest. This is not a peaceful protest,” Young said. “It is unacceptab­le.”

The mayor — who lost last month’s Democratic primary and will leave office in December — said the protesters cannot “erase history. You learn from it.” Monuments, such as ones to the 15th-century Italian explorer, “should have something there to talk about what happened in the dark past.”

Last week, on Independen­ce Day, a crowd pulled down the Columbus statue, dragged it to the edge of the Inner Harbor and rolled it into the water.

Dedicated in 1984, the statue has become a recent issue for many in the city as the legacy of Columbus has become increasing­ly focused on his violent enslavemen­t of native people. Throughout much of history, however, he was characteri­zed as a hero who discovered America.

A spokesman for Young said July 4 that the destructio­n of the statue was part of a “re-examinatio­n taking place nationally and globally around some of these monuments and statues that may represent different things to different people.”

Lester Davis, a longtime Young aide, also said, “We understand the dynamics that are playing out in Baltimore are part of a national narrative. We understand the frustratio­ns.

“What the city wants to do is serve as a national model, particular­ly with how we’ve done with protesting. We’ve seen people who have taken to the streets, we have supported them. We are going to continue to support it. That’s a full stop.”

The statue’s fall divided many as to how the city should handle the legacy of Columbus, a famous explorer for Europe who brut alized and enslaved nonwhites during his colonizati­on of what is now the Dominican Republic.

U. S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Thursday “people will do what they do” when asked about the statue, before adding that “from a safety standpoint,” she’d rather see statues taken down through a public process.

Pelosi is a Baltimore native who grew up in Little Italy as part of the D’Alesandro family, a Democratic political dynasty with two former mayors to its name.

“So, let’s just think about what are the values, the vision, the perspectiv­e that we enshrine and how that benefits our children rather than having a big fight about, ‘ Was somebody worth it?’ ” she said.

“We know they’re not worth it if they committed treason against the United

States,” she added, an apparent reference Confederat­e war memorials and statues.

Others have echoed Young’s call for police to arrest those responsibl­e.

Police Commission­er Michael Harrison said the department continues to investigat­e and will “hold those violators accountabl­e.”

Some officials voiced their displeasur­e with the department and city leaders for the lack of response. Harrison said “it was tactically unsafe” to position officers in front of the statue.

Gov. Larry Hogan, a Republican, decried the statue’s toppling, calling on Baltimore’s leaders to “regain control of their streets” on Sunday. He was joined by fellow Republican­s Del. Kathy Szeliga and Del. Nino Mangione, who both said that the protesters should not escape prosecutio­n.

A group aided by John Pica, a former state senator and an Italian-American from Baltimore, retrieved the statue Monday from the water. Pica said that Columbus’ violent and racist behavior toward nonwhites should not completely take away from his accomplish­ments as an explorer.

The day after the statue fell, Baltimore BLOC, a grassroots activist group, issued a list of 10 demands, including the removal of statues that honor “white supremacis­ts, owners of enslaved people, perpetrato­rs of genocide and colonizers.” The group also seeks a redesign of the state flag, which uses a symbol adopted by Confederat­e sympathize­rs during the Civil War.

“We salute our kinfolk who toppled and deported the Columbus monument, and we reaffirm the demands that the organizers are calling for moving forward. Symbols and systems of white supremacy have no place in Baltimore City and must be collective­ly dismantled,” the group said in a statement.

Democratic City Councilman Ryan Dorsey, meanwhile, tweeted the same night the statue was removed about a Baltimore City Fraternal Order of Police Memorial a few blocks away. He asked, “as consistent­ly awful as the FOP is, how is the FOP memorial not on the list of monuments to remove?”

Mike Mancuso, president of FOP Lodge 3, which represents city officers, said in a statement Wednesday that Dorsey’s comments are “an insult to our fallen and to their families left behind.” Hogan jumped into the issue Thursday, issuing a statement calling Dorsey’s suggestion to remove the memorial “vile” and “shameful.” Hogan said Dorsey should apologize to the families of dead officers.

Dorsey did not respond Thursday to a request for comment, but tweeted a statement saying he asked “a question inviting debate and nothing more.” He said he has never called for removing the city’s memorials to officers and that the governor and the FOP have misconstru­ed his comments as a “call to action.”

Dorsey has introduced legislatio­n to rededicate another monument to Columbus in Herring Run Park to instead honor victims of police violence.

 ?? JERRY JACKSON/BALTIMORE SUN ?? The torso of the Christophe­r Columbus statue is loaded onto a flatbed truck after being recovered from the harbor.
JERRY JACKSON/BALTIMORE SUN The torso of the Christophe­r Columbus statue is loaded onto a flatbed truck after being recovered from the harbor.

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