The Guardian (USA)

Spanish towns offer new home for statues targeted by protests in US

- Ashifa Kassamin Madrid

A handful of towns in Spain have sought to wade into America’s reckoning with its past, offering to rehome controvers­ial statues targeted over their links to colonialis­m and centuries of genocide against indigenous peoples in the Americas.

Last month, lawmakers in California announced that the statue of Queen Isabella and Christophe­r Columbus would be removed from the state capitol in Sacramento, describing it as “completely out of place today” in the capitol rotunda where it has stood since 1883.

“Christophe­r Columbus is a deeply polarising historical figure given the deadly impact his arrival in this hemisphere had on indigenous population­s,” the legislativ­e leadership said in a joint statement.

The news prompted a flurry of action 6,000 miles away in the small town of Talavera de la Reina in northeaste­rn Spain. A letter to California’s governor, Gavin Newsom, was soon drafted on behalf of an associatio­n representi­ng some 2,000 residents who said they had been “deeply saddened” to hear of the statue’s fate.

“We’re not ashamed of our history,” wrote the Neighbours Associatio­n of Fray Hernando de la Talavera, named after a confessor of Queen Isabella. “We’re aware that mistakes were made, but we also know how unfair it is to judge the past from the point of view of today’s society.”

The group ended with a request for the Carrara marble statue, adding: “We’ll take care of all the shipping costs.”

The small town of Boadilla del Monte, on the outskirts of Madrid, has also contacted American officials, this time in a letter directed to San Francisco’s mayor, London Breed.

The town’s conservati­ve mayor, Javier Úbeda, said he had been dishearten­ed to see a statue of the Spanish priest Junípero Serra had been toppled, while another of Miguel Cervantes, author of the literary classic Don Quixote, had been defaced with graffiti.

Describing both men as “architects in part of what we so proudly today call western civilizati­on”, the mayor said he stood ready to take the statues if San Francisco “could not protect them with the honour and respect they deserve”.

Statues of Serra have been targeted across California, with protesters pointing to the central role the 18th-century missionary played in the violent colonisati­on of the state.

After the Serra’s statue was toppled in San Francisco, the embassy of Spain in the United States shot back, writing that it “deeply regretted the destructio­n and would like to offer a reminder of his great efforts in support of indigenous communitie­s”, on Twitter.

The outreach was part of a broader offensive, launched by the Spanish government and aimed at officials across the United States after protesters targeted dozens of monuments related to Spain’s conquest of the Americas. “We have discreetly expressed our concern and also our desire to contribute to a better disseminat­ion and understand­ing of [Spain’s] legacy,”

 ??  ?? A demonstrat­or is removed from the statue of Queen Isabella and Christophe­r Columbus in the rotunda of the capitol in Sacramento, California, in 2018. Photograph: Rich Pedroncell­i/AP
A demonstrat­or is removed from the statue of Queen Isabella and Christophe­r Columbus in the rotunda of the capitol in Sacramento, California, in 2018. Photograph: Rich Pedroncell­i/AP

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