From the BBC:
“Statues of Queen Victoria and
Queen Elizabeth II torn down in Canada”
A prominent statue of Queen
Victoria has been torn down by protesters in Canada as anger grows over the
deaths of indigenous children at residential schools. The protesters cheered as
the statue at the legislature in Manitoba's capital Winnipeg was toppled on
Thursday. A smaller statue of Queen Elizabeth II was also upended nearby. Local
media say police used a stun gun to arrest a man at the scene but the protest
was largely peaceful. The toppling of the statues came on Canada Day, an annual
celebration on 1 July that marks the country's founding by British colonies in
1867. The recent discoveries of unmarked indigenous Canadian graves at
residential schools had prompted calls for national celebrations to be called
off. The British government condemned the toppling of the two statues. "We
obviously condemn any defacing of statues of the Queen," a spokesman said.
"Our thoughts," the spokesman added, "are with Canada's
indigenous community following these tragic discoveries and we follow these
issues closely and continue to engage with the government of Canada with
indigenous matters."
More than 150,000 indigenous
Canadian children were taken from their families and forced to attend the
schools during the 19th and 20th Centuries with the aim of forcibly
assimilating them into society. An estimated 6,000 children died while
attending these schools. Students were often housed in poorly built, poorly
heated and unsanitary facilities. Municipalities across Canada cancelled
celebrations and statues of figures involved with residential schools have been
vandalised or removed. In Winnipeg, thousands took to the streets to honour
victims of residential schools and rally support for indigenous communities. A
group of protesters had marched on the Manitoba Legislature as part of a
demonstration against the deaths of indigenous Canadian children at residential
schools.
Monarch of the UK, Canada and
other territories from 1837 until her death in 1901, Queen Victoria was on the
throne during the founding of the Canadian confederation. The British Crown
negotiated treaties with indigenous First Nations in Canada and the government
enacted its residential schools policy during her reign. At the protest in
Winnipeg, the statue of Queen Victoria was daubed in red paint while a sign
saying "we were children" was left nearby. A survivor of a
residential school, Belinda Vandenbroeck, told Canadian broadcaster CBC she
felt no remorse about the toppling of the statue, which she had had no part in.
"She [Queen Victoria] means nothing to me except that her policies and her
colonialism is what is dictating us right to this minute as you and I
speak," Ms Vandenbroeck said. Symbols of empire, colonialism and slavery
have been targeted by protesters at demonstrations against racial injustice
across the globe in the past year. Those demonstrations exploded worldwide
following the death of African-American man George Floyd in May 2020.
The stories behind the statues
targeted in protests Last year, several prominent statues of Confederate
leaders and slave owners were torn down and vandalised in the US, generating
heated debate about monuments. Similar scenes were seen in the UK, where
Black Lives Matter demonstrators tore down a statue of slave trader Edward
Colston and threw it into a harbour during a protest in the city of Bristol.
^ I am all for the removal of Confederate
statues and monuments, but by peaceful means and not by vigilante protesters –
many who don’t even understand history. I am ok with the peaceful removal of
other statues and monuments for various reasons. I am not sure about these
statues of Queen Victoria and Queen Elizabeth II though. I understand that Queen
Victoria is the British Government symbol of bad to some because during her
reign these Residential Schools were forced upon the Indigenous Canadians. I
also understand that Queen Elizabeth II is the Canadian Government symbol for bad
to some because during her reign these Residential Schools continued to exist. I do think, however, that those kinds of statues
and monuments need to be removed peacefully and kept in museums and in other places
so that we remember that we once celebrated these men/women and their deeds. If
you simply destroy them then you make them into symbols instead of lessons. ^
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.