An idea harbored by Democrat New
Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu that
he made public almost six months ago advocates removal of statues of three
historical figures – Robert E. Lee at the top of a column within Lee Circle,
P.G.T. Beauregard at the main entrance to City Park, Jefferson Davis at the
intersection of Canal Street and the eponymous Parkway – and the Battle of
Liberty Place monument, which doesn’t actually reside at the location where the
Reconstruction-era fracas occurred, from city grounds, with installation of them
perhaps in museums. All of these fixtures having existed a minimum of a
century, many
don’t want them removed (including
a healthy minority of blacks) even as some special interests have argued
that somehow these offend because they appear to valorize figures and events
that promote racism.
The meeting turned raucous with
bombastic displays from representatives of both sides of the argument, but with
the excitability heavily weighed towards the monument opponents, demonstrating
again that in robust democracies that the right to take offense at some assumed
slight exists only because full political rights and protection against
discrimination already have been achieved by the group claiming aggrieved
status. No one has the right not to feel offended in our system of government,
but as the objects in question reside on public property, informed democratic
vetting by policy-makers as to whether the city should allow these to stand
their grounds should prevail.
That begins by balancing the emotional
preferences of the community with the nature and purpose of the present siting
of the objects. As one portion of it may see these as overall negative, another
may deem them in the aggregate as positive. Evaluations must go beyond the
emotive and incorporate the value their placements in public bring to society
as a whole.
For example, one easily could take “offense”
at the Marx-Engels Forum in Berlin. Karl Marx in particular held some
reprehensible prejudices about certain people and the ideology he manufactured appeals
to the worst in people, stressing envy, division, and the use of power to take
from people what rightfully is theirs, both the fungible and spiritual. Its
application has caused hundreds of millions of deaths and had billions live in
a miserable denial of their human rights. Berliners suffered that personally
for over four decades, and the commemorative area created under communist
governance is but a short distance to the wall also built by communism where in
that area dozens died trying to gain freedom.
Yet such a place should continue to
stand. Forcibly it became part of Berlin’s history and can serve as a reminder
of evil. Monuments that in their original conception and placement may intend
to valorize the noxious need not retain those meanings, for free societies have
the wherewithal to make these serve their own purposes rather than in the
reflexive adopting of the imperative of Pol Pot that demands a return to the
year zero.
So when applying an intellectually
more rigorous analysis to the question in New Orleans, the case to remove them
from outdoor public view largely disappears, most easily discerned in the case
of the displaced Battle of Liberty Place monolith. Ostensibly built to
celebrate a victory by white supremacist forces (in the guise of state forces
battling the integrationist federal government, although the reasons for
national government support of integration often weren’t the most noble), its
removal in 1989 for street repairs and subsequent shunting away to a more
obscure location presaged the present controversy.
There’s no reason that it should
not serve as a signal laying bare the bankruptcy of the white supremacist
argument now in the dustbin of history as well as reminding of a regrettable
incident the very happening of which shows the meritorious evolution of America
to match its deeds to its words, even if a century late. Not only should it
remain, it needs restoration at its old prominent location with signage
educating the public about the disastrous consequences of the event and how
over the decades brave and farsighted people overcame these. Reminding the wayfaring
public of the historical importance of the event benefits the community.
The generals’ statues also deserve
to rest in peace. Unlike the monument that focuses on an event, they represent
individuals who fought in the service of an enterprise that had its salutary
aspects but had these overwhelmed by an inherent evil underpinning its
formation. Yet the historical value of them merits their retention: both were
important figures in the Civil War (if Lee not being the most important for the
entire Confederacy) and the city has evolved for a century and more with their
statues in their places, these becoming part of its fabric. Also note their
sculpting, with their intended present locations in mind in that process, by
one of the most famous sculptors of the period, Alexander Doyle, whose work
appears in several other outdoor locations in the New Orleans area.
Beauregard, because of his area
lineage, has the better justification, while Lee had little connection with the
area. Still, the latter has a good case for his overall impact on the post-war
South’s coming to terms with its defeat and necessity of change (as described
well here).
And, both monuments have a National Register
of Historic Places designation, in their current spots.
Which also raises the question of
consistency. For example, the 160 such places in the New Orleans area include
Jackson Square with its depiction of the seventh president – slave owner and massacrer
of Indians Andrew Jackson. If the Confederate generals, who both owned slaves
at one time and fought for a government seeking to perpetuate that custom,
receive opprobrium for that, why doesn’t General Jackson receive the same,
whose loyalty to the Union not only licked the Indians but afterwards and then
as president prompted actions that, for example, encouraged a walking genocide?
So why does Jackson’s
representation get a pass? Because the real-life figure was president? Because those
of American Indian descent make up a tiny portion of New Orleans’ population? Because
he was a Democrat? Or perhaps, even as this gets ignored concerning the
Confederate generals, he was a significantly historic figure whose actions had
some impact on New Orleans and his statue has become intertwined with the city’s
history and existence. Thus, why should their statues get treated any differently
than his?
This leaves the Davis statue, who
had little connection to the area other than the period of his Confederate
presidency over the city and going there to die. Already a memorial exists at
the location of his expiration (First and Camp Streets), and a marker in
Metairie Cemetery indicates his temporary burial site. The monument isn’t on
the historic register and doesn’t signify a notable location. Moving it neither
detracts from the charm of the city nor erases anything of historical
significance.
The Islamic State of Iraq and the
Levant is in the business of destroying symbols it thinks offensive; New
Orleans policy-makers need not take a similar if less drastic approach. The continued
existing presences of these markers can educate and serve as reminders that, by
our countenancing these as they are, we have grown beyond the intolerant
attitudes expressed by many in their desire to have these fashioned in the
first place. Mimicking that intolerance through these removals does not become
an enlightened society.
No comments:
Post a Comment