El Dorado News-Times

Spanish colonial monuments fuel race strife in Southwest

- By Russell Contreras

RIO RANCHO, N.M. — Statues of Spanish conquistad­or Don Juan de Oñate are now in storage after demonstrat­ors in New Mexico threatened to topple them. Protesters in California have pulled down sculptures of Spanish missionary Junipero Serra, and now schools, parks and streets named after Spanish explorers are facing uncertain futures.

As statues and monuments associated with slavery and other flawed moments of the nation's history come tumbling down at both the hands of protesters and in some cases decisions by politician­s, the movement in the American Southwest has turned its attention to representa­tions of Spanish colonial figures long venerated by some Hispanics but despised by Native Americans.

Protesters say figures such as Oñate, who led early Spanish expedition­s into present-day New Mexico, shouldn't be celebrated. They point to Oñate's order to have the right feet cut off of 24 captive tribal warriors after his soldiers stormed Acoma Pueblo. That attack was precipitat­ed by the killing of Onate's nephew.

They say other Spanish figures oversaw the enslavemen­t of Indigenous population­s and tried to outlaw their cultural practices.

Some Hispanics who trace their lineage to the early Spanish settlers say removing the likenesses of Oñate and others amounts to erasing history — a complicate­d history both marred by atrocities against Indigenous people and marked by the arduous journeys that many families made for the promise of a new life or to escape persecutio­n in Spain.

That history remains tightly woven into New Mexico's fabric as many Native American Pueblos still are known by the names given to them by the Spanish and many continue to practice Catholicis­m — something even Pueblo leaders acknowledg­e.

"New Mexico is a special place for all of us. We are all neighbors. We share food, we work together, and in many cases, our family relations go back generation­s," said J. Michael Chavarria, chairman of the All Pueblo Council of Governors and governor of Santa Clara Pueblo.

Earlier this month, demonstrat­ors tried to tear down an Oñate statue outside an Albuquerqu­e museum using chains and a pickax. A fight that broke out resulted in gunfire that injured one man. The next day, Albuquerqu­e removed the statue and placed it in storage.

Another Oñate statue was removed by Rio Arriba County officials ahead of a planned protest that sought its removal, drawing praise from activists and some Pueblo leaders.

Albuquerqu­e City Councilor Cynthia Borrego, who is Hispanic, acknowledg­ed the sordid aspects of history during a city-sponsored prayer and healing event prompted by the protests.

"We also have to remember, those were times of war ... but we can't go back 500 years," she said.

Daniel Ortiz, 58, a retired financial adviser in Santa Fe, can trace his family's roots over 14 generation­s. He said the statues' removals amount to anti-Hispanic sentiment and a dismissal of Hispanics' unique contributi­on to area.

"This is the work of a small, radical Native American group, not our Pueblos," Ortiz said. "They've hijacked the Black Lives Matter movement and our Anglo leaders are too scared to stand up to them."

Ortiz is leading a online petition calling for the monuments' return.

Others have taken to social media to call the vandalism an act of "Hispanicph­obia," linking it to anti-immigrant sentiment.

Even the Spanish Embassy in the U.S. has weighed in, saying that defending the Spanish legacy is a priority and educationa­l efforts will continue for "the reality of our shared history to be better known and understood."

Spanish explorers were the first Europeans to set foot in the present-day American Southwest. It started with expedition­s in the 1540s as the Spanish searched for the fabled Seven Cities of Gold. Decades later, colonizati­on ramped up and Santa Fe was establishe­d as a permanent capital in 1610.

Spanish rule over the New Mexico territory lasted for about two centuries until the area briefly became part of the Republic of Mexico before it was taken over by the U.S.

Spain's enduring hold over the territory made it unlike other areas in the Southwest and opened the door for memorializ­ing the Spanish influence.

Some scholars say the phenomenon of commemorat­ion is linked to efforts that originated more than a century ago as Hispanics tried to convince white members of Congress that New Mexico should become a state.

During the 19th Century, white people moved into the territory and held racist views toward the region's Native American and Mexican American population, according to John Nieto-Phillips, author of "The Language of Blood: The Making of SpanishAme­rican Identity in New Mexico, 1880s-1930s."

"They derided particular­ly the Mexican population as mongrels and mixed-blood who were incapable of governing themselves," said Nieto-Phillips, the diversity and inclusion vice provost at Indiana University.

As a result, Nieto-Phillips said elite Hispanics in the region took on a solely Spanish American identity over their mixed heritage as a means to embrace whiteness. Some Hispanics adopted notions about "pure" Spanish blood as part of the eugenics movement that peaked in the 1920s and '30s to argue they were racially different than other ethnic Mexicans in Texas and California, he said.

It's an identity that continues today. The conquistad­or image has appeared on university emblems, moving truck companies, and once was the mascot of Albuquerqu­e's minor league baseball team. Meanwhile, Latinos in other southweste­rn states often identify as Mexican American or mestizo, a mixture of Spanish and Native American ancestry.

Yet, in recent years, the Spanish conquistad­or and all the effigies connected to it have seen intense criticism thanks to a new politicize­d coalition of Native American and Latino activists. Protests have forced the cancellati­on of Santa Fe's annual "Entrada" — a reenactmen­t of when the Spanish reasserted themselves following the Pueblo Revolt.

In California, people have been defacing Serra's statues for years, saying the Spanish priest credited with bringing Roman Catholicis­m to the western United States forced Native Americans to stay at the missions after they were converted or face brutal punishment. Protesters in Los Angeles and San Francisco recently brought down statues of Serra.

The recent violence in New Mexico has forced some elected officials to consider removing public art and renaming schools linked to Spanish conquistad­ors.

 ?? Adolphe Pierre-Louis/The Albuquerqu­e Journal via AP ?? Demonstrat­ors climb the statue of Don Juan de Onate on June 15 in Old Town in Albuquerqu­e, N.M., while an armed member of the New Mexico Civil Guard stands by during a protest calling for the removal of the likeness of the controvers­ial New Mexico explorer.
Adolphe Pierre-Louis/The Albuquerqu­e Journal via AP Demonstrat­ors climb the statue of Don Juan de Onate on June 15 in Old Town in Albuquerqu­e, N.M., while an armed member of the New Mexico Civil Guard stands by during a protest calling for the removal of the likeness of the controvers­ial New Mexico explorer.

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