Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Think twice before you topple that old statue

- Clarence Page Clarence Page, a member of the Tribune Editorial Board, blogs at www.chicago tribune.com/pagespage. cpage@chicagotri­bune.com Twitter @cptime

When I first heard that hot-headed vandals had knocked down a statue honoring a Confederat­e leader or a slave trader, I confess that I felt a twinge of satisfacti­on. Slavery was a horrible institutio­n, after all, of which some of my own ancestors were victims.

But where does the lawlessnes­s, once it is unleashed, end?

Sometimes in more tragedy and even farce.

In Philadelph­ia, for example, some self-appointed comrades of the cancel culture threw red paint on the statue of abolitioni­st Matthias Baldwin on which they also spray-painted “murderer” and “colonizer.”

They might as well have painted “abolitioni­st.” Yes, Baldwin argued for the right of African Americans to vote in Pennsylvan­ia during the state’s 1837 constituti­onal convention. He also helped to establish and personally fund a school for black children.

Folks, we African Americans have plenty of opponents of our freedom, past and present, to criticize without going after our allies.

In Whittier, California, someone smeared “BLM,” the initials of Black Lives Matter, and “(expletive) Slave

Owners” on a statue of poet John Greenleaf Whittier, after whom the town is named.

Again, Whittier, a prominent Quaker, was a leading advocate for the abolition of slavery. Perhaps the perpetrato­rs of the crime against his statue confused him with Francis Scott Key, the slave owner who wrote “The StarSpangl­ed Banner.” A statue in his honor was toppled in San Francisco during recent protests.

In Boston, crowds gathered peacefully June 28, lending their voices to nationwide protests over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died beneath the knee of a white Minneapoli­s police officer.

But late in the day, some of the protesters turned into vandals and defaced, of all things, a Civil War monument that honors the first all-Black and all-volunteer regiment in the Union Army.

Remember the movie “Glory”? Yeah, those guys. Those great fighters for Black freedom.

Of course, I can’t eliminate the possibilit­y that the crime was perpetrate­d by some ultra-right racists, hoping to embarrass the left. That’s another problem with taking your issue to the streets with unlawful actions. You can make yourself too easy to blame for somebody else’s vandalism.

I didn’t shed a tear when statues of the Confederac­y’s President Jefferson Davis or leading slavery defender John C. Calhoun, a two-time vice president of the United States, were toppled.

Call me old-fashioned, but I think we should be civilized enough in this country to find new homes for our old artifacts from a misbegotte­n time without unlawfully destroying property.

The Civil War is supposed to be over. Remember?

People have long memories. You can see the durability of that observatio­n in the recent controvers­y in Washington over a statue known locally as the Emancipati­on Memorial.

Funded by emancipate­d slaves and dedicated by Frederick Douglass in 1876, it stands a few blocks from the Capitol in a square called Lincoln Park.

But even when it was built, it stirred controvers­y over its design. It depicts Lincoln standing tall over a shirtless black man in broken shackles and on one knee.

He may be rising, as the monument’s defenders tend to say, or he may be taking a knee, as some of the critics believe, suggesting a subservien­t position next to the dominant white man.

Protesters recently rallied at the park, which is managed by the National Park Service, to call for its removal. Some defenders, dressed in period clothes, also were given a chance to speak. The arguments were fierce and, fortunatel­y, peaceful.

Nonvoting delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton, the District of Columbia’s only representa­tive in Congress, announced her intention to introduce legislatio­n to have the statue removed and placed in a museum.

In a Washington Post essay, Yale historian and Douglass biographer David W. Blight recently called for an arts commission that could preserve the original monument while adding new statues to put it into a proper context.

Douglass, the former slave who became a great abolitioni­st, statesman, journalist and diplomat, had a similar idea, according to a letter recently unearthed by Smithsonia­n magazine.

“The mere act of breaking the negro’s chains was the act of Abraham Lincoln, and is beautifull­y expressed in this monument,” Douglass wrote. But the 15th Amendment and black male suffrage had come under President Ulysses S. Grant, “and this is nowhere seen in the Lincoln monument.”

Indeed, statues should tell a story. A beautiful example comes to mind in the way the Martin Luther King Jr. memorial stands, arms folded and gazing across the Tidal Basin at the memorial of founding father and slaveholde­r Thomas Jefferson.

King’s silent gaze appears to be saying, “I’m not here to topple your dream of freedom and equality. I’m just trying to make it come true.”

 ?? KEITH BIRMINGHAM/PASADENA STAR-NEWS ?? Protesters surround a John Greenleaf Whittier statue in Whittier, California, on June 2. The statue of the abolitioni­st was vandalized later in the month.
KEITH BIRMINGHAM/PASADENA STAR-NEWS Protesters surround a John Greenleaf Whittier statue in Whittier, California, on June 2. The statue of the abolitioni­st was vandalized later in the month.
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