The pols in Connecticut, a state that has in it more Italians
per square inch than most others, still need Italian votes. Will Italians,
during the next elections, turn on anti-Columbus moth-ballers such as Mayor
Justin Elicker of New Haven and Mayor Luke Bronin of Hartford? Italians,
everyone knows from reading Puzo, like their revenge cooled in the fridge.
Both mayors have given Columbus statues the boot. Bronin
said, “When the statue of Columbus was erected in Hartford a hundred years ago,
it was meant to symbolize the fact that Italian Americans, who had faced intense
discrimination, had a place in the American story. But surely we can find a
better way to honor the immense contributions of the Italian American community
in our country and in our community. I’ll also be working with our Italian
American community in Hartford and throughout the region to find an appropriate
way to honor their incredibly important place in Hartford’s and our nation’s
history.”
And Elicker concurred: “The Christopher Columbus statue for
many Italians is a celebration of Italian heritage. But the statue of
Christopher Columbus also represents a time of colonialism and atrocities
committed. It is the right decision to remove the statue. After the statue is
removed, I believe it is important that we, as a community, have a conversation
about how to best honor the heritage of so many Italians who have made New
Haven their home.”
Whomever these mayors have in mind for suitable stand-ins
for Columbus – no names have been mentioned – none of the stand-ins will have
been credited with opening the new continent to European exploration, the real irritant
in the craws of Columbus haters.
The assault on Columbus by "Black Lives Matter" is particularly annoying because it is so wrong-headed. Columbus sailed the ocean blue in 1492, as we were taught to recite in schools long before it became fashionable to celebrate tribal differences in the United States under the rubric of diversity. We are quickly becoming “many out of one,” reversing the E Pluribus Unum motto on our increasingly worthless coinage.The first slaves were brought to what later became the United States – now the clannish dis-United States – about two centuries after the death of Columbus. Certainly Columbus is less responsible for slavery and the oppression of African Americans than, say, Thomas Dartmouth “Daddy” Rice, the original Jim Crow.
Jim Crow was a fictional character created by “Daddy” Rice,
around 1830, a little more than three decades before the father of the
Republican Party, President Abraham Lincoln, issued his Emancipation Proclamation
abolishing slavery in the midst of a bloody, corpse filled Civil War
waged, among other reasons, to end slavery.
Rice was a “black face,” white minstrel artist who introduced
Jim Crow, a fictional stereotypical slave, into his act. As his show became
more and more popular, the expression “Jim Crow” became a widely used designation
for blacks, and later, around the time Republican President Dwight Eisenhower federalized the Arkansas
National Guard to facilitate the desegregation of public schools, the
expression became a battle cry against racial discrimination in the south – not
that the north was Simon-pure with respect to a poisonous tribalization of
races that militated against E Pluribus
Unum.
Hey, they don’t teach this sort of stuff anymore in Yale or
Harvard; or, for that matter, in Hartford and New Haven high schools.
The whole business of discrimination still resonates with
many Italians. The largest lynching in the United States occurred in 1891 --
385 years after Columbus, certainly among the greatest navigators of his age
and the man responsible for opening the Americas to a European discovery, died in obscurity,
bleeding from his eyes at his home in Spain – when a New Orleans mob murdered
11 Italian Americans following a trial of the Catholic “dagoes,” accused of murdering a
police chief, that had produced six not-guilty verdicts and three mistrials.
New Orleans was impatient for the justice of the rope, and so the innocent men were strung up.
Ah well, stuff happens. Scripture tells us none of us are
perfect, and history, we know, is pockmarked with imperfections. Democrat President
Barack Obama used to tell us that the details of history were less important
than the arc of history. Modern historians and students -- engaged, like
air-brusher Joseph Stalin, in the art of revising history through the murder of
his political opponents – seem to think that the arc of history is less
important than their own fictional version of the way things ought to have been
during the days of Columbus.
The above named mayors of major cities in Connecticut have
all claimed they are performing a public service by ridding public squares of Columbus
statues to prevent vandalism, which is on a par with closing banks to prevent
bank robberies or closing police stations to prevent arsonists from burning them
down or tolerating the vandalization of the Lincoln Memorial by historical amnesiacs
who have not, before despoiling the memorial, read the words of Lincoln’s second
inaugural address engraved on the north wall of the memorial.
In merry old England a statue of Churchill – who, along with President Franklin
Roosevelt, wiped the noses of real fascists in the dust – has been vandalized,
likely by European anti-fascist-fascists, brothers and sisters in arms with
domestic terrorists such as ANTIFA here in the USA.
Are there no video cameras that might be deployed around
Columbus statues to apprehend and arrest the vandals? Are we truly incapable
of making proper distinctions between peaceful, lawful protesters and the
thugs who shield themselves behind licit protests to liberate Louis Vuitton stores
of bags that may be sold on the black market to finance, among other things,
the toppling of Columbus statues in Connecticut?
An Italian from New Haven writes me, that he wishes someone
would say something “to let the public know that not everyone is complicit” in what he and most Italians regard as the usual, time honored anti-Italian, anti-Catholic historical revisionism.
Done.
My correspondent tells me he plans to vote in the upcoming
November elections – after cool, revengeful deliberation -- to strike a blow
for historical lucidity, liberty under law and those few politicians in
Connecticut who find distasteful the destruction of public monuments in the
state’s urban cultural war-zones.
Comments
Mr.Pesci I salute you.