New York Daily News

March on!

Blaz is a go for columbus day parade

- BY JILLIAN JORGENSEN

MAYOR DE BLASIO isn’t sure if Christophe­r Columbus is still statue-worthy, but a parade is a different story.

“I will definitely be marching in the Columbus Day Parade,” de Blasio said Monday in Brooklyn.

“The parade is a moment to express our pride in our Italian heritage, for all of us who are Italian, and for others to recognize the contributi­ons Italian-Americans have made to New York City and the whole country. So I am absolutely comfortabl­e continuing to march.”

Hizzoner’s promise comes as he’s under fire from fellow Italian-Americans for refusing to rule out the removal of statues of Christophe­r Columbus — the Italian explorer who landed in the Americas in 1492 while searching for a route to India.

While Columbus has been a source of pride for Italian immigrants, others — including Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito — note his arrival was disastrous for native people and led to their colonizati­on and have called for monuments to him, including the towering one in Columbus Circle, to be removed.

But de Blasio argued those people were getting ahead of themselves.

The commission that will review the city’s monuments has yet to be appointed, he said, though they will likely be named “in a matter of days.”

“We’ll put together a group of people, they will listen to ideas and concerns of their fellow New Yorkers they will determine a set of criteria by which we will consider these different monuments on city-owned land, and make proposals to me about how to handle the specific situations,” he said. Options could include removing a statue, doing nothing to it or something in between — like adding a plaque to provide further history and balance, de Blasio said. He argued the commission would allow for a “thoughtful” process that would avoid “one-off” considerat­ions based on a single person’s values. The Columbus Circle statue was donated to the city by Italian immigrants, and de Blasio noted that in the face of serious discrimina­tion in the past and continued unfair stereotype­s today, many Italian-Americans seek out sources of pride for their culture. “I think we were all taught that Columbus was a source of pride because of his achievemen­ts,” de Blasio said. “There are some things G to be proud of, there are O some things to not be N A K proud of.” A M U R A

 ??  ?? Mayor de Blasio will be waving the Italian flag on Fifth Ave.
Mayor de Blasio will be waving the Italian flag on Fifth Ave.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States