Los Angeles Times

City Council eliminates Columbus Day

L. A. lawmakers vote to replace holiday with new Indigenous Peoples Day.

- By David Zahniser

The Los Angeles City Council voted Wednesday to eliminate Columbus Day from the city calendar, siding with activists who view the explorer as a symbol of genocide for native peoples in North America and elsewhere.

Over the objections of Italian American civic groups, the council made the second Monday in October a day in L. A. to commemorat­e “indigenous, aboriginal and native people.” It replaces a holiday that served as a touchstone for Italian Americans, marking the arrival of Christophe­r Columbus in the Caribbean.

Italian Americans voiced anguish over the proposal, telling council members it would erase a portion of their heritage. Some said they supported the creation of Indigenous Peoples Day as long as it is held on a different date.

“On behalf of the Italian community, we want to celebrate with you,” said Ann Potenza, president of Federated Italo- Americans of Southern California, speaking in a room packed with Native American activists. “We just don’t want it to be at the expense of Columbus Day.”

That idea was unacceptab­le to Chrissie Castro, vice chairwoman of the Los Angeles City- County Native American Indian Commission. She argued that city lawmakers needed to “dismantle a state- sponsored celebratio­n of genocide of indigenous peoples.”

“To make us celebrate on any other day would be a further injustice,” Castro said.

The day will remain a paid holiday for city employees, regardless of the name.

Wednesday’s debate had been driven by two men with different visions of how to replace Columbus Day, which was establishe­d as a federal holiday in 1937. Councilman Mitch O’Farrell, a member of the Wyandotte Nation tribe in Oklahoma, argued that the replacemen­t of Columbus Day with Indigenous Peoples Day would provide “restorativ­e justice.”

Councilman Joe Buscaino, a first- generation Italian American raised in San Pedro, had sought to replace Columbus Day with a different name, one that celebrates “all of the diverse cultures in the city.” Buscaino said many had forgotten the prejudice faced by Italian Americans in the United States — and asked his col- leagues not to “cure one offense with another.”

“All of our individual cultures matter,” said Buscaino, who represents neighborho­ods from Watts to San Pedro.

Buscaino and three colleagues — Gil Cedillo, David Ryu and Mitchell Englander — pushed an alternativ­e plan to hold Indigenous Peoples Day on Aug. 9, a date selected by the United Nations for recognizin­g native peoples. The council rejected that proposal on an 11- 4 vote.

Councilman Mike Bonin, the great- grandson of Italian immigrants, said he felt genuinely pained at having to disagree with Buscaino. But he argued that Columbus Day diminishes the accomplish­ments of his ancestors, who came to the U. S. to “build something and not to destroy something.”

“This gesture of replacing Columbus Day with Indigenous Peoples Day is a very small step in apologizin­g and in making amends,” said Bonin, who represents coastal neighborho­ods from Westcheste­r to Pacific Palisades.

The council’s vote comes at a time of heated discussion over the nation’s holidays and historic monuments.

Activists have been pushing for the removal of statues honoring military leaders who served the Confederac­y. Two weeks ago, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio called for a 90- day review of “all symbols of hate” on city property.

Several U. S. cities — including Seattle, Albuquerqu­e and Denver — have already replaced Columbus Day with Indigenous Peoples Day.

O’Farrell, who represents an Echo Park- to- Hollywood district, said his plan for Indigenous Peoples Day also establishe­s Oct. 12, the date of Columbus’ arrival in 1492, as Italian American Heritage Day at City Hall. It would not be a day off for paid employees.

Replacing Columbus Day, O’Farrell said, would right a “historical wrong.”

“We are not creating a racial conf lict,” he said. “We are ending one.”

The council replaced Columbus Day with Indigenous Peoples Day on a 14- 1 vote, with Buscaino opposed. The move followed a fractious hearing, with Italian Americans and Native Americans cheering and jeering at different moments.

One opponent of the holiday name change called it “a slap in the face” to Italian Americans. Another called it racially divisive.

John Giovanni Corda, a Beverly Hills resident who identified himself as Sardinian, told the audience to “shut your mouths” after they began heckling. He told the council that O’Farrell’s proposal was anti- Italian.

“Why don’t you stop picking on Christophe­r Columbus as though you’re picking on our people,” he said. “We never hurt you. We never wanted to hurt you.”

Backers of the name change spoke of newcomers to the Caribbean and North American enslaving, raping and killing Native Americans. They argued that the human cost has not been accurately described in schools and public life.

“We’ve been erased from education. We’ve been erased from the history books,” said Joseph Quintana, developmen­t director for United American Indian Involvemen­t, which supports Native Americans in the Los Angeles area.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? THE NEW CITY holiday will commemorat­e “indigenous, aboriginal and native people.” Above, a Native American heritage celebratio­n last year at L. A. City Hall.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times THE NEW CITY holiday will commemorat­e “indigenous, aboriginal and native people.” Above, a Native American heritage celebratio­n last year at L. A. City Hall.

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