Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

War against the dead

- Victor Davis Hanson

The 21st century is in danger of becoming an era of statue smashing and historical erasure. Not since the iconoclast­s of the Byzantine Empire or the epidemic of statue destructio­n during the French Revolution has the world seen anything like the current war on the past.

In 2001, the primeval Taliban blew up two ancient Buddha statues in Afghanista­n on grounds that their very existence was sacrilegio­us to Islam.

In 2015, ISIS militants entered a museum in Mosul, Iraq, and destroyed ancient pre-Islamic statues and idols. Their mute crime? These artifacts predated the prophet Muhammad.

The West prides itself in the idea that liberal societies would never descend into such nihilism. Think again.

In the last two years there has been a rash of statue toppling throughout the American South, aimed at wiping out memorializ­ation of Confederat­e heroes. The pretense is that the Civil War can only be regarded as tragic in terms of the present oppression of the descendant­s of Southern slaves, 154 years after the extinction of the Confederat­e states.

There is also a renewed crusade to erase the memory of Italian explorer Christophe­r Columbus. Los Angeles removed a Columbus statue in November based on the premise that his 1492 discovery of the Americas began a disastrous genocide in the Western Hemisphere.

Last month, the Northern California town of Arcata did away with a statue of former president William McKinley because he supposedly pushed policies detrimenta­l to Native Americans.

There have been some unfortunat­e lessons from such vendettas against the images and names of the past.

1. Such attacks usually reveal a lack of confidence. The general insecurity of the present could supposedly be remedied by destroying mute statutes or the legacies of the dead, who could offer no rebuttal.

The subtext of most current name-changing and icon-toppling is that particular victimized groups blame their current plight on the past. They assume that by destroying long-dead supposed enemies, they will be liberated—or at least feel better in the present.

2. Opportunis­m, not logic, always seems to determine the targets of destructio­n.

This remains true today. If mass slaughter in the past offered a reason to obliterate remembranc­e of the guilty, then certainly sports teams should drop brand names such as Aztecs. Likewise, communitie­s should topple statues honoring various Aztec gods, including the one in my hometown: Selma, Calif.

After all, the Aztec empire annually butchered thousands of innocent women and children captives on the altars of their hungry gods. The Aztecs were certainly far crueler conquerors, imperialis­ts and colonialis­ts than was former President McKinley. Yet apparently the Aztecs, as indigenous peoples, earn a pass on the systematic mass murder of their enslaved indigenous subjects.

Stanford University has changed the name of two buildings and a mall that had been named for Father Junipero Serra, the heroic 18th-century Spanish founder of the California missions. Serra was reputed to be unkind to the indigenous people whom he sought to convert to Christiani­ty.

Stanford students and faculty could have found a much easier target in their war against the dead: the eponymous founder of their university, Leland Stanford. He was a 19th-century railroad robber baron who brutally imported and exploited Asian labor and was explicit in his low regard for non-white peoples.

Yet it is one thing to virtue-signal by renaming a building and quite another for progressiv­e students to rebrand their university and thereby lose the prestigiou­s Stanford trademark that is seen as their gateway to career advancemen­t.

3. In the past there usually has been a cowardly element to historical erasure. Destructio­n was often done at night by vandals, or was sanctioned by extremist groups who bullied objectors.

So too in the present. Many Confederat­e statues were torn down or defaced at night.

4. Ignorance accompanie­s and explains the arrogance of historical erasure, past and present.

Recently, vandals in North Carolina set fire to a statue of General Lee. But they got the wrong Lee. Their target was not a statue of Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee, but a statue of World War II Maj. Gen. William C. Lee, who campaigned for the creation of a U.S. Army airborne division and helped plan the invasion of Normandy.

The past is not a melodrama but more often a tragedy. Destroying history will not make you feel good about the present. Studying and learning from it might. Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institutio­n, Stanford University.

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