Los Angeles Times

Out with Serra, in with Starr King

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Re “Recognitio­n of a great wrong,” editorial, Oct. 13, and “L.A. making amends to Indigenous people,” Oct. 12

I read with interest your articles about the renaming of sites honoring Father Junipero Serra and the removal of public statues of him.

Your editorial failed to mention that one of California’s two statues in the U.S. Capitol’s Statuary Hall is of Serra. Perhaps its fate will be the same as that of Thomas Starr King, whose likeness in the Capitol was replaced by a statue of Ronald Reagan.

Frankly, it would be a fine gesture if Starr King’s statue was returned to the Capitol, where his legacy of support for national unity before the Civil War could be re-appreciate­d. Since that war, the need for unity in the Capitol and across this land has never been greater. Richard Stanley

Los Feliz

Another candidate to replace Serra’s name might be Toypurina, the Indigenous medicine woman who was an organizer and leader of the 1785 San Gabriel Mission revolt.

The fact of that revolt challenges the fiction of placid Indigenous people happily toiling in sugar cube missions and replaces it with a recognitio­n of Tongva anger about Spanish land theft, Spanish enslavemen­t of Indigenous people, and growing Spanish destructio­n of Indigenous culture.

Toypurina’s name on that park would recognize the courage of California’s Indigenous Joan of Arc while it would direct our attention to the facts of Spanish colonialis­m in California. Brian Roberts

Covina

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