The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Mayor blasts group ‘protecting’ Columbus statue

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PHILADELPH­IA » A group of people gathered around a statue of Christophe­r Columbus in south Philadelph­ia over the weekend, saying they intended to protect it from vandals amid the recent protests — despite criticism from the mayor.

The Philadelph­ia Inquirer reported that about 100 people clustered around the statue of the explorer at Marconi Plaza on Saturday, at least two with guns and others with baseball bats. Thomas Easterday, 50, said the goal of the gathering was simple.

“Protecting the statue from these rioters who want to take it down,” he said.

On Sunday, Mayor Jim Kenney said in a Twitter post that officials were aware of “groups of armed individual­s ‘protecting’” the statue.

“All vigilantis­m is inappropri­ate, and these individual­s only bring more danger to themselves and the city,” he said. “We are also aware of an apparent assault caught on video tape, as well as possible restrictio­ns placed on journalist­s filming the event. These incidents are under investigat­ion at this time.”

Easterday and others said they hoped not only to ward off any vandals, but also to send a message to the mayor that they wouldn’t approve of removing the statue in the middle of the night — as the mayor did with the statue of former mayor Frank Rizzo from a building near City Hall earlier this month.

In Philadelph­ia, a city with a deep Italian heritage, Columbus is celebrated with an annual holiday parade, and supporters at the statue said they considered him an emblem of their heritage.

“It would be over my dead body before they got to this statue,” said Anthony Ruggiero, 41, wearing an Italia jersey. “This is a part of history.”

Statues of Columbus were earlier removed in nearby

Camden, New Jersey and Wilmington, Delaware.

In Richmond, Virginia, a statue of Christophe­r Columbus was torn down, set on fire and thrown into a lake last week. On Friday in Columbia, South Carolina, the first U.S. city named for Columbus, a statue of the explorer was removed and placed into storage for safekeepin­g after it was vandalized several times in a week.

Across the nation, statues of Columbus are often vandalized on Columbus Day in October as the 15th-century explorer has become a polarizing figure. Native American advocates have also long pressed states to change Columbus Day to Indigenous Peoples Day over concerns that Columbus spurred centuries of genocide against indigenous population­s in the Americas.

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