The
cultural, ethnic, and moral tug of war
between the American holiday Columbus
Day and an insurgent Indigenous
People’s Day has taken over new dimensions
in this year of Black Lives Matter
protest which have widened to include other persecuted and endangered minorities
and the stifling, isolating Coronavirus pandemic. The Indigenous celebration continue to roll
on gathering momentum as more municipalities,
school districts, states, and other
jurisdiction drop the old holiday for the new observance. This summer as BLM activists began pulling down Confederate monuments, Native Americans and their allies were
inspired to do the same to the arch
symbol of colonialist oppression, the
alleged Great Navigator. Several monuments were torn down,
defaced, or removed by local authorities.
After it was attacked and defaced by protestors this summer,Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot order the Grant Park Columbus statue covered and ultimately removed.
In
Chicago where marchers failed to
pull down a prominent statue on Columbus
Drive in Downtown lakeshore Grant
Park and tagged it with graffiti Mayor Lori Lightfoot ordered
the statue temporarily removed along
with two others in neighborhood parks. Naturally there was also a backlash uproar from the Italian-American community, simple traditionalists, and promoters of
respect for “European culture” A/K/A White nationalists.
Meanwhile
most annual Columbus Day observances including those ubiquitous parades and cultural events have been canceled due to the pandemic. That might prevent some of the confrontations that have become
common. When they return, and they inevitably will, most will not have government sponsorship or official approval. They will be private, First Amendment
protected affairs.
The
ultimate fate of those monuments is unclear although it is highly unlikely
the Grant Park statue will ever be returned.
Perhaps the statues could be donated
to some Italian American civic
organization or museum for display on private property. Some think
that at least one of the other statues might be quietly restored to a
neighborhood park where it might not draw much attention.
International Indigenous People’s Day is celebrated
on August 8 in most of the Americas and in other parts of the world. I
have blogged the still spreading and growing recognition that has its official origins in the United Nations Declaration of the Rights of
Indigenous Peoples in 2007. But in
the United States Native Americans have been staging actions, protests, and alternative
events to Federal Holiday on the
Second Monday in October for decades.
That’s
right, your calendar probably marked
yesterday, October 9, as Columbus Day
in recognition of Cristoforo Colombo/Cristóbal Colón/Christopher
Columbus. I’ve blogged about him,
too, and his alleged discovery—alleged
because he didn’t know where he was
going, “found” what was never lost, claimed what wasn’t his to
take, and didn’t even know where the
hell he was. When just about
everyone else in Europe had figured out that he never reached the East Indies or Asia he continued to lie about it.
None-the-less
the mercenary mariner was rewarded with fancy titles—Admiral of the
Ocean Sea for one—and made Viceroy
over half the damned world. And he screwed
that up by being so brutal that
he virtually wiped out the once numerous Carib peoples who inhabited
the islands under his immediate effective sway. He also bullied and oppressed potential
rivals—would be Conquistadors of even richer
realms on the mainland, many of
whom had better connections at Court
than a Genoan hireling. He was stripped of his titles,
wealth confiscated, and shipped to Spain
in disgrace and chains.
Not
much to celebrate there.
Yet
despite the fact that Columbus never set
foot in North America—the closest he got was wandering around portions of Central
America after being abandoned by
mutineers and quite typically lost—he somehow became an iconic folk figure and symbol
of the New World to the English and the overwhelmingly Protestant colonists hugging to the Atlantic shore far to the north of any
of his voyages.
Amerigo Vespucci, another Italian sailor with even less to justify it, swooped in and got his name attached to two continents just because he knew
the right cartographer. But Columbia
was a popular alternative name for
Western Hemisphere lands and some Patriots wanted to adopt it officially for their new country. Think of the song, once almost an unofficial national anthem, Columbia the Gem of the Ocean and
other evidence. When Thomas Jefferson’s pal Joel Barlow, a diplomat and literary dabbler, wanted to create a national epic poem he churned
out The Columbiad, a turgid contemplation
of Columbus and the new world.
Around
the 400th anniversary of the alleged discovery in 1892 interest in him was elevated by events
around the world, but particularly at Chicago’s
World Columbian Exposition. American
Catholics—a struggling and despised
minority—looked to the notoriously
pious Columbus who had slaughtered all
of those natives in the guise of converting
them to the One True Church to
establish their bona fides as worthy
Americans. Thus the Knights of Columbus became the Catholic answer to the WASP Masonic Lodges.
But
it was urban Italians, among the
last European immigrants to become White, in the big cities of the East Coast
and Midwest who made Columbus
Day and lavish annual parades an answer to the earlier immigrants—especially the Irish—in their struggle for
a fat slice of the patronage and privilege pie of the Democratic
Party machines.
As
protests against honoring a figure who represented centuries of land theft,
colonial subjugation, genocide, and cultural
annihilation has grown, support
for the holiday has waned. City after City and several States have officially dumped Columbus Day and most have adopted some form on
Indigenous Peoples Day in its stead.
Support had dwindled to indignant
Italian civic organizations and the kind of cultural fuddy-duddies who cannot stomach change of any kind.
More
recently, however, a sub-set of the Alt-Right and neo-fascist movements who claim
to honor and preserve European culture and secure its dominance in American society, have begun to make war on the anti-Columbus
Day warriors, especially attacking Native Americans and a “cultural elite of race traitors”.
Anyway,
all of that is more than I intended to write about Columbus. By now you know the story. So I celebrate Indigenous Peoples Day today. I hope you do too.
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