Boston Herald

Columbus statue heads into storage

Debate over explorer’s placement rolls on in Hub

- By Marie szaniszLo Herald wire services contribute­d to this report.

The beheaded statue of Christophe­r Columbus was removed Thursday from a North End park as the city reassesses controvers­ial landmarks highlighte­d by the national dialogue about racism since the killing of George Floyd.

A crew removed the marble statue, leaving behind its granite pedestal, and took it into storage so that the damage could be assessed, officials said.

Mayor Martin Walsh has said the vandalism was out of line, but he added it’s time to “assess the historic meaning of the statue.”

Native American groups said they would strongly oppose efforts to restore the statue.

Mahtowin Munro, a spokeswoma­n for United American Indians of New England, said local indigenous groups also will continue to call on city and state officials to change Columbus Day to Indigenous Peoples Day.

“We have been protesting the statue for years as a monument to Indigenous genocide and land theft, African and Indigenous enslavemen­t and white supremacy,” she said in a statement. “This park should… be a public place that feels welcoming to everyone in Boston, not a place that is a tribute to a genocidal monster.”

The Italian American Alliance, meanwhile, said it will hold a rally on Sunday to demand the restoratio­n and return of the city-owned statue to Christophe­r Columbus Park.

“We are saddened by the vandalism that occurred in Columbus Park,” the Friends of Christophe­r Columbus Park said on their website, adding that their mission is “making it a welcoming and safe place for all who visit.”

State Rep. Aaron Michlewitz said in a statement that “vandalism to private or public property is a completely wrong way to go about making a case for change.

“While Christophe­r Columbus has a complex history and symbolizes many different things to different people, there is a lot more to the history of the park then just the naming of it,” Michlewitz said, noting that it was built in the late 1960s as “a celebratio­n of Italian heritage.”

City Councilor Lydia Edwards, who also represents the North End, added: “We need to acknowledg­e that certain symbols can cause pain. We need to honor Italian heritage. Maybe we can celebrate Tom Menino,

our city’s first ItalianAme­rican mayor. It’s a conversati­on I think we should have, and it should be led by Italian-American families, residents of the North End and our indigenous brothers and sisters.”

As protests over Floyd’s killing at the hands of Minneapoli­s police spark a larger discussion about racism in the United States, Walsh said he’s also open to having “conversati­ons” about changing the name of Faneuil Hall, which was built in 1742 with financing from merchant Peter Faneuil, who owned and traded slaves.

 ?? STuART cAHILL / HeRALd sTAff ?? OFF HIS PEDESTAL: The base of the Christophe­r Columbus statue in the North End is seen without its topping Thursday after the statue, beheaded earlier in the week, was put into storage. Below left, police gather around the statue on Columbus Day weekend 2018.
STuART cAHILL / HeRALd sTAff OFF HIS PEDESTAL: The base of the Christophe­r Columbus statue in the North End is seen without its topping Thursday after the statue, beheaded earlier in the week, was put into storage. Below left, police gather around the statue on Columbus Day weekend 2018.
 ?? NIcOLAus czARneckI / HeRALd sTAff fILe ??
NIcOLAus czARneckI / HeRALd sTAff fILe

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