Times Standard (Eureka)

Tearing down Serra statues in California

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My new cartoon depicts the bear on the California flag pulling down a statue of Father Junípero Serra, the controvers­ial Catholic saint who oversaw the opening of nine missions in colonial California.

Serra participat­ed in the Spanish Inquisitio­n and enslaved native Americans, imprisonin­g them at his missions. Statues of Serra have been vandalized recently as many protests toppling statues commemorat­ing racist historical figures have swept the nation, and the world, in the wake of George Floyd’s killing while in Minneapoli­s police custody. Last week two Serra statues were toppled, in Los Angeles and San Francisco.

The California bear is something of an “everyman” character. I like seeing the movement to purge symbols honoring racist historical figures. Perhaps it is a bit of wishful thinking on my part to see California’s “everyman” tearing down Serra since there is quite a bit of support for defending the many Serra statues that dot our state like a pox.

President Donald Trump is using an executive order to boost penalties for defacing racist historical monuments. My depiction of the California flag is more a symbol of hope that these protests succeed than a depiction of today’s reality.

The statue is based on one located in San Juan Capistrano that was relocated recently to protect it from protesters. I lifted Serra’s robe a bit so that I could get some Saddam Hussein action going with his ankles.

When I was in third grade, I was required to build a model of a California mission and I was taught a false, fairy-tale story about Padre Serra. Thirty years later my kids went through the same thing in school.

California students have been required to build those models and have been fed a whitewashe­d version of history for many decades. That may be changing now as the protests continue. Maybe our “everyman” state bear will finally see those Serra statues taken down legally.

Daryl Cagle is an editorial cartoonist and columnist; see his work at DarylCagle.com. Cagle runs the CagleCarto­ons. com newspaper syndicate distributi­ng editorial cartoons to more than half of America’s daily, paid-circulatio­n newspapers, including the paper you are reading now. Comments to Cagle may be sent to editor@ cagle.com.

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