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Writer's pictureUrban Kapital

Chicago takes down other statues, plans to review all monuments

The US seems not to find peace with slavery-related linked statues. In Chicago, two statues of Christopher Columbus on Friday were temporarily removed and the city also announced it would reassess the appropriateness of all its monuments, a week after protesters had tried to topple one of the statues, leading to a violent clash with police.


The Chicago demonstrations, which resulted in several arrests and injuries, were among those that broke out across the US to protest for racial equality and against police brutality, sparked by the May 25 horrible murder of George Floyd in police custody in Minneapolis.


Chicago’s mayor Lori Lightfoot’s office declared in a statement that “This step is about an effort to protect public safety and to preserve a safe space for an inclusive and democratic public dialogue about our city’s symbols”.

Christopher Columbus statue is being removed from the Grant Park in Chicago, Illinois, U.S. Image credit REUTERS/Kamil Krzaczynski

Protesters for racial equality have targeted Columbus monuments across many cities in the United States, challenging heroic portrayals of him in American education that downplay or ignore the explorer’s cruelty towards indigenous people of the Americas.


After consulting with “stakeholders,” Lightfoot ordered the removal of statues in Grant Park, Chicago’s large recreation area, and another in the Little Italy district, the statement added.

Crews are using cranes to remove the statues in the predawn darkness, news video showed, leaving bare pedestals.


“It comes in response to demonstrations that became unsafe for both protesters and police, as well as efforts by individuals to independently pull the Grant Park statue down in an extremely dangerous manner,” the statement reads.

Screenshot of Chicago protesters while ripping down a statue of Columbus. Image credit Fox News Chicago

Columbus, the 15th-century Genovese-born explorer who sailed for the Spanish crown, remains a powerful symbol for some Italian-American groups that severely oppose to the downgrading of his status.


“We as a community feel betrayed,” Pasquale Gianni of the Joint Civic Committee of Italian Americans told Chicago’s ABC7 television in reaction to the removals. “We feel that part of our heritage has been stripped from us. These statues represent much more than just mere objects but the blood, sweat and tears of all the contributions of Italian-Americans to this great city.”


However, Chicago said it would soon announce a formal process to address all its monuments, memorials and murals, part of a review underway in many cities to diversify monuments that have overwhelmingly honoured white men.

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