Please don’t take down a city’s history. I don’t care what happened centuries ago. This statute has been in it’s present place for as I can remember
Ben Walsh – Shall we take down everything?
Each historical figure is a product of his or her milieu. If we judged each by our PC lens of today the walls of our National Portrait Gallery would be bare. We must learn from history lest we repeat it .
Recognize Columbus for his skill and courage as a seaman and explorer and make note of shortcomings. At least have this discussion or ‘that history book on the shelf’
will keep repeating itself.
Leave our Statue Alone
To whom it may concern: I see your covering the story on Christopher Columbus. I’m 100% Sicilian both parents migrated here from Sicily. Christopher Columbus is to us as Martin Luther King is to the African Americans. We are proud of him and will always be. He was a smart, strong man who never let anyone change what he felt in his gut.
Millions of others from everywhere wouldn’t have came to America as quickly, if it wasn’t for Christopher proving the earth was round. We would have never came together as one nation under God, as it used to be, but we had to change all that too.
Leave our statue alone it represents all of the America people. Italians and Sicilians are proud because he is one of our own.
Broken heart America/Sicilian,
Ben Walsh uninterested in culture, history, or running the City.
History is extremely complex, full of details, opinions, facts and half truths…Columbus opened up a line of communication at a vital moment in human history. That much is fact. Did he do bad things? Most likely, but terrible things were happening all over then and are today. Columbus had nothing to do with what was going on in the northeast. The Iroquois were engaged in constant warfare and making slaves of Algonquin and Huron. That was the nature of the world. Yet nowadays people are bound to listen to pop condensed history through the opinions of temporary political opportunists (Walsh) who has little interest in culture, true history, or apparently running a city.
Ben Walsh was elected as a custodian, not as a king
The Mayor is supposed to be the conservator of our city assets. He was not elected to curate what he likes and what he doesn’t like. Changes to the Columbus Monument – or any of Syracuse’s public art, for that matter – is not his decision to make. The city attorney should explain this to him. Otherwise the courts will need to explain this to him.
The fight is on!
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Mayor Walsh – you are hurting, and solving nothing!
The statues are not problems. We learn from them and history. Take a better look at what is being taught in schools pertaining to the history of the statues.
Response to Commentary submitted by Tarki Heath of Tully
Certainly, differing responses to the Columbus Monument controversy should be allowed and respected. But when there are serious misstatements that do not represent the truth, then those must be addressed.
I am in sympathy with and respectful of our Italian American “brothers and sisters” who are The Federation of Italian American Societies in Buffalo, NY for having to make the devastating decision to remove their Columbus Statue from their Buffalo Park. There was fear that the Columbus Statue would be destroyed.
While the 21 women suggest altruistic reasoning was the Federation’s rationale, it is clearly fear that pushed them. The 21 women ascribe integrity, grace and honesty as the motives.
“We don’t want our statue destroyed. We want to prevent its destruction,”said Don Alessi, past president of the Federation. Let these words speak the truth. Anarchic vandals “won the day.” Does one truly think Alessi was pleased to have to change locations?
The 21 women wish to “correct history.” The proper term used today is “cancel history.” Columbus is being used as a scapegoat by these “cancel artists.” How does a man who died in 1506, fourteen years after setting foot in a new hemisphere, get all the blame for over the next five hundred years of history? In fact, he never knew he landed in a different hemisphere truly thinking he was on the shores of China, India or the islands near Japan. These “21” need to read history and learn the truths. They are really concerned about the global impact America has had on the world for over five centuries and they want that erased for some reasons they never discuss. It is “symbolic murder.”
They allude to the 19,000 supportive signatures they have from a website—Change.org. What they don’t tell you is that site is an international site created for thousands of worldwide issues people from around the globe support. All of the Columbus Monument supporters are local in Syracuse and Central New York. The vast majority of their signers have never even seen our Monument nor know where Syracuse is.
The “21 women” espouse that Mayor Walsh’s decision is not solely his decision. It certainly is. The mayor’s Dialog Circles were a subterfuge for a decision he always intended to make with little or no bearing coming from the wasted time Interfaith Works put into months of wasted labor. Just look at the 2019 and 2020 reports on City Hall website. There are suggestions there, not conclusive actions. It is the mayor’s decision and only his.
Their historical comments about Columbus are totally worthless stemming from a brief excursion into fallacious “online history.” I would truly like to know their actual historical references so a debate can be had instead of arguments based on “sand.” What do the terms, “genocidal figure” and “the necessary evils of Columbus” mean? I’m not sure they know.
Finally, I find they are disingenuous in labeling themselves as “21 Italian American women” as though they are writing from that arrogant perspective. Why don’t they state their real perspectives are from the political organizations they belong to such as the Syracuse Peace Council and Neighbors of the Onondaga Nation? Only then can we fully understand who they are and what they truly represent.
Walsh is being hurtful.
Syracuse has a great Italian community. They have contributed much to our city and Onondaga Co. The statue should remain in front of the cathedral in their honor. |
A President thought it important, but Mayor Walsh does not
President Roosevelt – who designated October 12 as Columbus Day – was involved in the Syracuse Columbus Monument effort.