Daily Press

Stanford to expel saint from address

School cites 18th-century priest’s abuse of Native Americans at Calif. settlement­s

- By Meagan Flynn The Washington Post

For decades, if you wanted to mail a letter to Stanford University you would send it to 450 Serra Mall. It was named after Junipero Serra, the Spanish colonist who built a network of Catholic missions in California in the 18th century.

And for a long time, it was a noncontrov­ersial mailing address.

Then, the Catholic Church made Serra a saint — and his mistreatme­nt of Native Americans fell under harsh light.

Now, Stanford University is seeking permission from the U.S. Postal Service and Santa Clara County to wipe Serra from its mailing address. It’s seeking to change the address to “Jane Stanford Way” in honor of the school’s co-founder.

The announceme­nt comes after a Stanford committee concluded that Serra’s contributi­ons to the decimation and abuse of native people who lived — sometimes forcibly — on his Catholic settlement­s rendered Serra’s name unworthy of prominent display on campus.

In addition to the address change, the university will remove Serra’s name from one dormitory and one academic building.

As the Stanford committee noted: “Though we have no doubt about Serra’s piety and good intentions, it is also a fact that the mission system pervasivel­y mistreated and abused California’s Native Americans.”

The decision marks Serra as the latest historical figure to be exiled from college campuses, city parks or buildings for deeds of the past that have fallen under renewed scrutiny.

In the last three months, for example, Duke University removed a statue of Robert E. Lee and Florida State booted a statue of its slave-owning founder from its front entrance. Just this month, a University of California, Berkeley School of Law committee recommende­d removing various references on campus to John Boalt, who helped shepherd the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 into law.

In the Stanford committee’s report, dated Aug. 18 but released last week, the committee said the input of Native American students and tribes was integral to the decision to remove Serra’s name from most places on campus. Students had been protesting since March 2016, when a student assembly voted to remove his name from the mailing address, the Stanford Daily reported.

“The committee called for renaming several features on campus that recognize someone who had no direct role in Stanford’s history and lived a century before the university was even founded,” Jeff Raikes, chairman of the Stanford board of trustees, said in a statement, “yet whose role as the recognized leader of the mission system provides an acute reminder to our Native American community of the profound impact of the mission system on indigenous people.”

Pope Francis named Serra a saint in 2015 over the protests of Native Americans. It was the same year the pope extended an apology on behalf of the Catholic Church for Spanish mistreatme­nt of indigenous people in Latin America, which he called “grave sins.”

In naming Serra a saint, Pope Francis described Serra as a priest who protected “the dignity of native communitie­s” from abusers as he grew Catholicis­m in the New World — but this depiction of Serra has been disputed among historians.

Ahead of Serra’s canonizati­on, the National Catholic Reporter wrote that “strong disagreeme­nt exists between those who promoted his sainthood and those who oppose it. Each side lays claim to a version of history, advanced in each case by historians of note, and each side accuses the other of failing to see the full picture.”

Serra founded the first nine Catholic settlement­s from San Diego to San Francisco in 1769, with the hope of herding native people onto the farms and baptizing them. Once baptized, they were not allowed to leave, causing overcrowde­d conditions that contribute­d to rapid spread of disease, according to the paper “Junipero Serra’s Canonizati­on and the Historical Record,” published in The American Historical Review in 1988 after the Catholic Church beatified Serra.

Native people were forced to work on the settlement­s and those who tried to escape were subjected to beatings, according to the article, which cites Serra’s own statements as evidence. Serra supported corporal punishment because, he wrote in 1780, saints have endorsed it too.

“That spiritual fathers should punish their sons, the Indians, with blows appears to be as old as the conquest of these kingdoms (the Americas); so general in fact that the saints do not seem to be any exception to the rule,” he wrote in a 1780 letter to then-governor of the California­s, Felipe de Neve. “... In the life of Saint Francis Solano ... we read that, while he had a special gift from God to soften the ferocity of the most barbarous by the sweetness of his presence and words, neverthele­ss, ... when they failed to carry out his orders, he gave directions for his Indians to be whipped.”

The author, James Sandos, also cites correspond­ence from Serra in which he asks other priests not to beat Indians “excessivel­y.”

But Robert Senkewicz, professor of history at Santa Clara University and author of “Junipero Serra: California, Indians, and the Transforma­tion of a Missionary,” told the National Catholic Reporter that Serra should not be used as a “stand-in for the entire 65 years of mission experience in California.”

“In Junipero Serra’s willingnes­s to sacrifice the comforts of a very successful career,” Senkewicz told the outlet, “to forego climbing the academic and ecclesiast­ical ladders, to travel halfway around the world to live the rest of his life among people he had never seen but whom he deeply and genuinely loved, and to go without many advantages he could easily have gained, one sees qualities that are very consistent with what the church has long held up as indication­s of sanctity.”

The Stanford committee said it interviewe­d a group of Latino Catholics as part of its review. They overall favored renaming the buildings and mailing address, saying the “pain of the Native American community should be prioritize­d” over the loss of a saint’s name on campus.

“For many of the participan­ts” in interviews, the committee wrote, “Serra’s name evokes the entire history of oppression of Native Americans.”

There’s also a “Serra Street” on the campus but the university said that the “ordinary street” would not be renamed. The university intends to develop a sign or plaque on Serra Street to explain who Serra was and why he’s controvers­ial.

 ?? DAVID ROYAL/THE MONTEREY COUNTY HERALD 2015 ?? Stanford University announced it will drop the name of 18th-century priest Junipero Serra — seen in a painting above his grave — from two dormitorie­s and its mailing address.
DAVID ROYAL/THE MONTEREY COUNTY HERALD 2015 Stanford University announced it will drop the name of 18th-century priest Junipero Serra — seen in a painting above his grave — from two dormitorie­s and its mailing address.

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