Society's Child
The Columbus statue in Chicago's Arrigo Park was splattered with red paint, and words "mass murderer" and "decolonise" were spray-painted on the sidewalk next to the monument.
The same statue had been vandalized on Saturday as well. A witness saw three men defacing the statue and confronted them, according to local police. One of them fell off the bike when trying to escape. The witness detained him until police arrived. Kyle Miskell, 30, was charged with felony counts of criminal damage to government property, and criminal defacement of property.
Police departments of three cities in Connecticut ‒ Middletown, New Haven and Norwalk ‒ said Monday they were investigating vandalism perpetrated against their Columbus statues.
Someone wrote "kill the colonizer" with red paint on the 15-century explorer's memorial in Middletown, NBC reported citing the police.
The monument to Columbus in Providence, Rhode Island was also splattered with red paint, local media reported.
Over the past several months, there have also been attacks on Columbus statues in New York and Baltimore, Maryland. The 225-year-old statue in Baltimore is said to be the oldest in the country, and possibly even in the world, dedicated to Columbus that is still standing.
Attacks on monuments across the US have intensified since a protest against the removal of the memorial to Confederate General Robert E. Lee in Charlottesville, Virginia turned violent in August.
Many US cities have since removed monuments to those who fought against the Union during the American Civil War, but in some places people took the matter in their own hands. In Durham, North Carolina eight people were charged in August with felony counts over the toppling of a Confederate soldier statue.
However, the targeting of memorials across the country was not confined to Confederate symbols. The statue of Abraham Lincoln, who led the fight against the South, was defaced in his home city of Chicago in August.
Christopher Columbus landed in America 525 years ago - over three and a half centuries before the civil war. Critics have accused the Italian-born explorer of enslaving and killing the native populations when he first arrived in the Caribbean from Spain in 1492.
The date of his landing, October 12, has been a federal US holiday since 1937. It was adjusted to second Monday in October in 1970. Since then, grassroots efforts by Native Americans have prompted many cities, including Denver, Phoenix, Seattle and Los Angeles to replace the Columbus Day celebrations with an Indigenous Peoples' Day.
New York Mayor Bill de Blasio recently announced he was forming a panel to review all possible "symbols of hate on city property," including Columbus. Italian-American groups have protested the inclusion of Columbus on that list.
Reader Comments
It is only when the status of the US American people is degraded and demeaned that more of them wake up to the selfsame treatment that has been carried out in their name around the world. But even so this is not a special curse of American culture - but part and parcel of the human psyche for millennia.
If we reclaimed our true Earth (cosmological) history from the amnesiac refusal to read the records of our collective past, we might understand why we think and behave as we do.
Control of the past is a present activity - and grievance looks for reinforcement and support - wherever it looks. At least while you hold it dear.
I first bumped into Loewen on a youtube.
I feel it offers not only a stirring of desire for uncovering the true account - but a way into how the vested interests and markets operate just like a conspiracy - and of course in many instances as directed distortions of hidden agenda.
If your history has Hollywood in it - then be sure to enjoy the ride - because you are taken for one.
Everything we see, we see through the filter of our mind.





