Los Angeles Times

Replacing Columbus Day

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Re “A bias against Islam that punished Native Americans,” Opinion, Oct. 11

The bias mentioned in the op-ed article about Christophe­r Columbus’ anti-Muslim animus is not unique to one group in

American history.

While it is commendabl­e to reject Columbus Day and rename it something that honors oppressed peoples, focusing solely on one injustice falls short of recognizin­g all injustices perpetrate­d against many different groups throughout U.S. history.

American history is replete with such injustices, from the original sins against Native Americans to slavery, anti-immigrant violence, lynchings, the internment of Japanese Americans, turning back Jews escaping from Nazi Germany, anti-Asian pandemic-era violence, discrimina­tion against the LGBTQ community and more.

Therefore, it would make more sense to have an October holiday that provides us an opportunit­y to reflect on all injustices in U.S. history, not just one. Perhaps such a holiday should be named “Acknowledg­ment Day” to be a day of atonement for transgress­ions against all wronged people in American history. Mark Henderson

Dana Point

Yale historian Alan Mikhail could have added to his article the fact that Hernán Cortés’ men, veterans of the recent conquest of Spain from the Moors, shouted “Santiago Matamoros” as they went into battle against Indigenous forces in what would become New Spain.

St. James was the patron saint of the Spanish. “Santiago Matamoros” referred to St. James the “Moor killer,” and Matamoros became the unlikely name of several towns in Mexico. Michael Hittleman

Los Angeles

By shoehornin­g Columbus’ life and times into our 21st century perspectiv­es on race and ethnicity, Mikhail applies a narrow ideologica­l lens to the complex issue of historical mind-sets and linguistic­s.

The Spanish language was enriched by seven centuries of Muslim interactio­n in the Iberian peninsula. This left its mark on thousands of words.

Check out any Spanishlan­guage dictionary: Around alfanje — the scimitar mentioned in the article — I counted more than 30 derived from Arabic with the prefix “al”: alcoba, alcohol, alfil, alfombra, alforja, algebra, aljibe, almacén, almohada, alcaucil and alcalde.

Columbus used the words of his time — Italian and Spanish — to describe new things. And moro (Moor) was not, and still isn’t, a pejorative noun. María Elena de las

Carreras Northridge

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