Santa Fe New Mexican

Conquistad­or imagery on Bernalillo water tank scrutinize­d

- By Russell Contreras

BERNALILLO — A Jemez Pueblo activist is seeking to start talks with the town of Bernalillo about a conquistad­or image on a water tank as protesters pressure local towns and cities to remove Spanish colonial references some Native Americans find offensive.

Roger Fragua, a Jemez Pueblo member and executive director of the nonprofit group Flower Hill Institute, recently sent a letter to Bernalillo, asking the mayor to talk about the large depiction on a state highway that runs through many Pueblo lands.

The logo, which is the town’s seal, shows a conquistad­or helmet resting on top of an ax used by invading Spanish soldiers in the 1500s.

“The logo has an axe that is clearly a weapon as opposed to a utilitaria­n axe for wood,” Fragua wrote to Bernalillo Mayor Jack Torres. “As a Pueblo Indian, I find the axe concerning and even offensive in knowing our shared histories.”

Fragua asked Torres to convene a discussion around the logo and consider other icons that are “more celebrator­y of our shared and mutual cultures.” Fragua vowed to bring a “few, mature, intelligen­t voices from the Pueblos” to meet with the mayor and others to discuss the logo’s future.

Torres told the Associated Press he spoke to Fragua and remains open to talk about the logo on the water tank.

“It’s premature to talk about what will happen, but we are beginning the process,” Torres said.

Fragua did not immediatel­y return a phone message.

The move comes after officials in Albuquerqu­e and Alcalde removed statues of Spanish conquistad­or Don Juan de Oñate amid demands from protesters to have them toppled.

Protesters say figures such as Oñate, who led early Spanish expedition­s into present-day New Mexico, shouldn’t be celebrated. They point to Oñate’s order to have the right feet cut off of 24 captive tribal warriors after his soldiers stormed Acoma Pueblo. The killing of Oñate’s nephew precipitat­ed that attack.

They say other Spanish figures oversaw the enslavemen­t of Indigenous population­s and tried to outlaw their cultural practices.

Last month, demonstrat­ors tried to tear down an Oñate statue outside an Albuquerqu­e museum using chains and a pickax. A fight that broke out resulted in gunfire that injured one man.

Spanish explorers were the first Europeans to set foot in the present-day American Southwest. It started with expedition­s in the 1540s as the Spanish searched for the fabled Seven Cities of Gold. Decades later, colonizati­on ramped up and Santa Fe was establishe­d as a permanent capital in 1610.

 ?? RUSSELL CONTRERAS ?? A seal of Bernalillo with a Spanish conquistad­or helmet and a colonial ax sits on a town water tank Tuesday. Roger Fragua, a Jemez Pueblo member and executive director of the nonprofit group Flower Hill Institute, sent a letter to the town asking the mayor to talk about the large depiction.
RUSSELL CONTRERAS A seal of Bernalillo with a Spanish conquistad­or helmet and a colonial ax sits on a town water tank Tuesday. Roger Fragua, a Jemez Pueblo member and executive director of the nonprofit group Flower Hill Institute, sent a letter to the town asking the mayor to talk about the large depiction.

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