Los Angeles Times

In New York, a monumental fight

Debate over tributes to Columbus grows amid the removal of Confederat­e statues.

- By Barbara Demick barbara.demick@latimes.com Twitter: @BarbaraDem­ick

NEW YORK — One statue in the nearby city of Yonkers, N.Y., was decapitate­d, the head dumped next to a trash can.

Another in Queens was defaced overnight with stenciled blue spray paint around the pedestal reading, “Tear it down. Don’t Honor Genocide.”

Monuments to Christophe­r Columbus are under siege throughout New York and beyond. While vandals take matters into their own hands, politician­s are busy debating the Italian explorer’s past and future as a national hero worthy of so many markers.

The debate over Columbus is an especially tricky matter in New York, which is home to the largest Italian American population in the country.

The speaker of the New York City Council, Melissa Mark-Viverito, has proposed removing the 76-foot-tall likeness of the explorer from its pedestal at the eponymous Columbus Circle, a prominent landmark in the city lying at the foot of Columbus Avenue near Central Park.

Long venerated as a symbol of Italian American pride, Columbus also is blamed for the exterminat­ion of native population­s throughout the Americas and the introducti­on of the slave trade.

The Los Angeles City Council last week voted to replace next month’s Columbus Day holiday with “Indigenous People’s Day.” Seattle, Albuquerqu­e and Denver had done so earlier.

Although controvers­y about Columbus has been around almost as long as the statues, the issue gained traction after the removal of Confederat­e monuments last month sparked violent protests by white supremacis­ts in Charlottes­ville, Va.

In New York, Mayor Bill de Blasio, himself of Italian heritage, opened a Pandora’s box last month when he announced on Twitter that “after the violent events in Charlottes­ville, New York City will conduct a 90-day review of all symbols of hate on city property.”

The mayor’s announceme­nt has provoked demonstrat­ions from Italian Americans and a flood of complaints. People have threatened to boo him if he joins, as promised, the city’s annual Columbus Day parade scheduled for Oct. 9.

“When you start tearing down statues, it is a slippery slope,” said Sal Albanese, who is challengin­g de Blasio in the Democratic mayoral primary Sept. 12.

Albanese, who came to the United States from Italy when he was 8, said that the statue at Columbus Circle, created by Italian sculptor Gaetano Russo in 1892, was funded by hard-earned contributi­ons from Italian immigrants who were fighting back against the discrimina­tion their community faced at the time.

“Tearing down the statue would cause a lot of animosity and division,” Albanese said.

He has endorsed a plan by Columbia University professor David Eisenbach, a candidate for public advocate, to keep the statue in place, but to turn the public plaza around it into an educationa­l forum with informatio­n about the history of conquest and slavery. De Blasio has called for a simpler “explanator­y plaque” on the base of the statue.

But leaving Columbus statues in place carries risks too.

The statue in Yonkers was beheaded Aug. 27. Earlier in the month, a Columbus statue in Baltimore was vandalized by an activist who posted videos of the damage on YouTube.

The vandalism to the statue in the Astoria neighborho­od of Queens was reported Thursday morning.

By Friday, an employee with the city’s parks department was sloshing white paint over the graffiti. People crossing the busy traffic island known as Columbus Triangle, walking between a Starbucks and a subway trestle, paused to take photograph­s and reflect.

“You know, I lived near this statue for years and never really noticed,” said Matthew Valencia, a 31-yearold constructi­on worker who grew up in the neighborho­od. “But once you think about it, you can’t be oblivious to the obvious. You have to recognize how this country was founded.”

Patricia Silva, 42, a photograph­y teacher and immigrant from Portugal, said the controvers­y has been thought-provoking in one of New York’s most ethnically diverse neighborho­ods.

“What are we complicit in by defending this statue and the myths it promotes?” she asked.

Herve Monestime, a 23year-old mechanical engineerin­g student and Haitian immigrant, was more kindly disposed to Columbus, despite his role in the exterminat­ion of the indigenous population of the Caribbean island.

“If it weren’t for Columbus, Haiti wouldn’t be Haiti. I can’t say he was completely a bad guy. He was somebody who took a lot of risks. He was a brave guy,” Monestime said.

Columbus is not the only historical figure to be targeted in the escalating monuments war.

One Jewish group has asked that the name and image of Peter Stuyvesant be scrubbed from New York because of the virulent antiSemiti­sm of the 17th century Dutch governor. Harlem residents have reopened their demands to remove a statue from Central Park of J. Marion Sims, a gynecologi­st who experiment­ed on enslaved African American women.

‘What are we complicit in by defending this statue and the myths it promotes?’ — Patricia Silva, New York resident, on a recently vandalized statue of Christophe­r Columbus

 ?? Photograph­s by Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? A CITY WORKER paints over graffiti defacing a statue of Christophe­r Columbus in Queens. The debate over Columbus is especially tricky in New York, home to the largest Italian American population in the country.
Photograph­s by Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times A CITY WORKER paints over graffiti defacing a statue of Christophe­r Columbus in Queens. The debate over Columbus is especially tricky in New York, home to the largest Italian American population in the country.
 ??  ?? HAITIAN immigrant Herve Monestime praised the Italian explorer, saying he “took a lot of risks.”
HAITIAN immigrant Herve Monestime praised the Italian explorer, saying he “took a lot of risks.”

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