Weekend Herald

Calls grow to remove Lincoln statues

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Calls are intensifyi­ng for the removal of twin Emancipati­on memorials in Washington DC, and Boston that depict a freed slave kneeling at Abraham Lincoln’s feet.

The Emancipati­on Memorial, also known as the Emancipati­on Group and the Freedman’s Memorial, was erected in Washington’s Lincoln Park in 1876. Three years later, a copy was installed in Boston, home to the statue’s white creator, Thomas Ball.

Protesters gathered earlier this week to demand the removal of the original in Washington, where the Army activated about 400 unarmed National Guard personnel ahead of calls circulatin­g on social media to tear it down yesterday.

And in Boston, where a petition is circulatin­g for the copy to be taken down, the city’s arts commission was to hold public hearings yesterday and Wednesday to discuss its fate.

What originally was intended in 1876 to celebrate liberation, critics contend, unwittingl­y depicts subservien­ce and supremacy.

“I’ve been watching this man on his knees since I was a kid,” said Tory Bullock, a Black actor and activist leading the campaign to get the

Boston memorial removed.

“It’s supposed to represent freedom but instead represents us still beneath someone else. I would always ask myself, ‘If he’s free, why is he still on his knees?”’

The memorial has been on Boston’s radar at least since 2018, when it launched a review of whether public sculptures, monuments and other artworks reflected the city’s diversity.

Black donors paid for the original in Washington; white politician and circus showman Moses Kimball financed the copy on a downtown square a block away from Boston Common. The inscriptio­n on both reads: “A race set free and the country at peace. Lincoln rests from his labours.”

But Black people weren’t part of the design process, and the memorial’s central visual takeaway – a Black man with broken shackles kneeling before his white saviour, with a whipping post and chains in the background – has had people cringing for years.

“How can you say you care about Black lives and then leave a statue up for decades that actually promotes a disgusting and demeaning image of those very lives?” asked Lilian McCarthy, among more than 12,000 people who signed Bullock’s petition.

Similar scorn has dogged the original in Washington since it was unveiled.

At its dedication nearly a century and a half ago, abolitioni­st and Black statesman Frederick Douglass spoke critically of the freed slave’s depiction as kneeling before Lincoln.

The memorial’s defenders contend removing it is tantamount to erasing their history.

“We haven’t reached peak insanity, but setting an appointmen­t to tear down an Abraham Lincoln statue known as the Emancipati­on Memorial in the name of racial equity has to be getting close,” conservati­ve commentato­r Rich Lowry said on Twitter.

But Eleanor Holmes Norton, the District’s non-voting delegate in the US House, said the monument is historical­ly inaccurate because it ignores the fact that Black Americans played a pivotal role in securing their own freedom.

“Blacks, too, fought to end enslavemen­t,” Norton tweeted, saying she was introducin­g a bill to move the statue to a museum.

 ?? Photo / AP ?? Protesters gathered earlier this week to demand the removal of the memorial in Washington.
Photo / AP Protesters gathered earlier this week to demand the removal of the memorial in Washington.

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