Friday, June 12, 2020
EDITOR, The Tribune.
Nothing is black and white; there are always areas of grey. Columbus’ statue is no exception.
Columbus was a courageous Italian explorer who changed the course of history. On the flip side, he was a terrible man who enslaved many West Indian natives and subjected them to extreme violence and brutality.
His statue in front of Government House was a gift from slaves to Governor Sir James Carmichael Smyth, according to Bahamian historian Dr. Keith Tinker.
Symth was governor here during Pompey’s 1830 rebellion. An abolitionist governor, he left the colony in 1833, scornful of the local white elite and oligarchy.
According to Dr Tinker, various people of colour collected a considerable amount of funds used to sculpt the statue (re: Bahamas Handbook). The gesture was in appreciation of the governor’s pro-emancipation views and his efforts to improve the general treatment of slaves.
Besides being a priceless work of art, the statue represents an important part of our history, including the role the slaves played in its creation.
The statue should remain.
Rather than trying to sanitise history, add an informational stand at the base of the statue that tells the full Columbus story. Place a statue of Pompey in a prominent spot with an informational telling of his great role in history.
Create a new group of statues to highlight the evolving story of the Bahamas.
Our country is a rich tapestry, woven together by a diverse group of people from various backgrounds and their offspring and each one has a story to tell.
On another note, while the past is very important, what of events that are happening today? Where is the public outrage over the tragic death of Lorencia Simmons Walkes, the beautiful 10-year-old who was shot and died 10 days ago?
BAHAMIAN PATRIOT
Nassau,
June11, 2020.
Comments
DDK says...
Concur, fellow patriot!
Posted 13 June 2020, 7:25 p.m. Suggest removal
truetruebahamian says...
We are in total agreement - the Columbus statue must stay for all reasons in the two letters in print today.
Posted 14 June 2020, 9:57 a.m. Suggest removal
JokeyJack says...
I disagree. His statue should be removed. Let's also pass a law that no history should be taught about and no discussion should be made about anything whatsoever that occurred prior to 1973. The Americans can do the same and remove everything from their schools and society that either is or references anything prior to 1964.
Then there will be nothing to argue about - and life can be bliss. I do recall a phrase that says something or the other is bliss - but we can just ignore that too.
Posted 15 June 2020, 7:50 p.m. Suggest removal
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