LatestTop NewsWorld

White House installs statue of Christopher Columbus on its grounds

A part of a campaign, which has been launched against an ideology Trump calls “anti-American”

White House Columbus statue. PHOTO: X

The White House has installed on its grounds a statue of Italian explorer Christopher Columbus in the latest bid by President Donald Trump’s administration to reshape depictions of US history and culture.

The campaign, which is against an ideology Trump calls “anti-American”, has encompassed the dismantling of slavery exhibits, restoration of Confederate statues and other moves that civil rights advocates say could reverse decades of social progress.

“The statue is now residing on the north side of the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on the White House campus,” Trump told the Conference of Presidents of Major Italian American Organisations in a letter on Sunday.

He thanked the group for its gift of the statue to the government.

Read: Deadline for Trump’s ultimatum nears as Iran vows retaliation if power plants destroyed

During the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests after the killing of George Floyd, several US cities took down statues of the Italian navigator, whose Spanish-funded voyages from the 1490s onward paved the way for Europe’s conquests of the Americas.

Floyd’s killing led to a worldwide re-examination of the colonial era and the legacy of slavery.

Protesters for racial equality challenged heroic portrayals of Columbus, saying they downplayed or ignored his cruelty toward indigenous people of the Americas.

Trump called Columbus “the original American hero and one of the most gallant and visionary men to ever walk the face of the Earth,” in the letter made public on Sunday.

The statue at the White House is a reconstruction of one unveiled by the late President Ronald Reagan in Baltimore in 1984.

In 2020, that statue was dumped into the city’s harbour by protesters whom Trump called “anti-American rioters” in his letter.

Last week, the Interior Department said a statue of Caesar Rodney, an enslaver and signer of the Declaration of Independence, will be displayed in Washington after it was taken down amid racial justice protests in Delaware in 2020.

⁠A statue ​of Confederate General Albert Pike, ​overturned during 2020 protests, was reinstalled last year in Washington.



Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button