The Columbus Dispatch

Monuments targeted during Thanksgivi­ng

‘Land back’ spray-painted on statues, buildings

- Elinor Aspegren

Historical monuments and statues have been graffitied or toppled in four cities since Wednesday – seemingly in protest of America’s past.

The statues and buildings vandalized on Wednesday and Thursday appear to have been targeted in protest of colonialis­m, gentrification and capitalism.

The words “land back” were spraypaint­ed on statues and buildings in multiple cities. The LANDBACK campaign is an Indigenous movement against white supremacy and for Indigenous food sovereignt­y, housing, and clean air and water.

In Chicago, vandals tried but failed to topple a park statue of President William Mckinley early Wednesday using a rope tethered to a car, police said.

Mckinley was president from 1897 to 1901 and his push for westward expansion is now widely criticized as racist, for pushing Indigenous people off their land, WBBM-TV reported.

In Portland, Oregon, protesters broke windows and sprayed graffiti, including the words “land back,” on several markets early Thursday, according to a police press release announcing three arrests.

A monument at Portland’s Lone Fir Cemetery, dedicated in 1903 to the veterans of the Civil War, Mexican, Spanish, and Indian wars, was tagged with anti-colonialis­m graffiti and its statue toppled and sprayed with red paint.

Photos of the vandalism spread on social media on Thanksgivi­ng Day, though police did not immediatel­y confirm the reports.

An Abraham Lincoln statue in Spokane, Washington, was also vandalized with red paint late Wednesday or early Thursday, the Spokane Police Department said.

And, in Minneapoli­s, two statues were graffitied on Thursday, CBSN Minnesota reported. One of George Washington was toppled and splattered with paint, and on another statue, the words “no thanks,” “no more genocide,” “decolonize,” and “land back” were spraypaint­ed on it.

A number of monuments have been removed from places around the U.S. since Memorial Day, though most removals have been of Confederat­e monuments, according to data released in August by the Southern Poverty Law Center.

The accelerate­d removal of statues has been fueled by widespread protests against systemic racism and police brutality, with more people linking Confederat­e monuments to white supremacy, according to Lecia Brooks, Southern Poverty Law Center chief of staff.

Contributi­ng: The Associated Press

 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR/AP ?? A statue of Christophe­r Columbus in Pittsburgh, which was wrapped to protect it from vandalism ahead of Columbus Day in October, remained in a protective covering on Thanksgivi­ng Day.
GENE J. PUSKAR/AP A statue of Christophe­r Columbus in Pittsburgh, which was wrapped to protect it from vandalism ahead of Columbus Day in October, remained in a protective covering on Thanksgivi­ng Day.

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