New Mexico statue defenders oppose 'pueblo revolt of 2020'
Send a link to a friend
[July 08, 2020]
By Andrew Hay
TAOS, N.M. (Reuters) - Some Hispanics and
Native Americans in a New Mexico valley want to reinstate the statue of
a Spanish colonial ruler that officials removed in June as anti-racism
protests swept the nation.
Rio Arriba County authorities carried off the Juan de Oņate sculpture on
June 15, fearing its destruction, as Native American activist group Red
Nation planned a protest. It came down the same day a protester 60 miles
(97 km) southwest in Albuquerque was shot by a man protecting another
Oņate sculpture.
The death of unarmed black man George Floyd in police custody in
Minneapolis in May sparked widespread racial justice protests.
Demonstrators across the country have defaced or toppled dozens of
statues of European colonizers, Confederate generals and figures who
subjugated native peoples.
The Oņate statue was unveiled in 1994 in Alcalde, around 30 miles (48
kms) north of Santa Fe.
Red Nation organizer Elena Ortiz, of the nearby Ohkay Owingeh Native
American community, declared its removal part of "the pueblo revolt of
2020," comparing it to the 1680 indigenous uprising that drove Spanish
settlers from the area.
The statue had long outraged those who trace Oņate's brutal 1598
colonization of New Mexico to contemporary problems ranging from gender
inequality to institutional racism.
But Ohkay Owingeh Governor Ron Lovato and Rio Arriba's Democratic state
representative Joseph Sanchez, who is Hispanic, opposed removal in a
joint statement. The two noted that their communities had lived in
harmony for centuries.
This group thats pushing for this movement, theyve created something
that didnt exist, creating tensions between some of the people," said
Sanchez. "Onate did bad things, but he helped settle the Hispanics, that
was a different time."
ELECTION-YEAR ISSUE
U.S. President Donald Trump has made memorials to the pro-slavery Civil
War Confederacy an election issue. Other statues that have fallen
include monuments to Spanish Jesuit Junipero Serra who founded missions
in California; and explorer Christopher Columbus, long credited with
discovering America but also accused of engendering genocide against
Native Americans.
Oņate statues popped up along the Rio Grande in the 1990s as communities
celebrated the 400th anniversary of his arrival. At the time, folklorist
Enrique Lamadrid advised Albuquerque on the celebrations and urged
organizers to steer clear of Oņate. He recalled that many cities chose
the statue of the "wrong guy."
"We shook our heads in dismay and said 'this is going to explode at some
point.'" said Lamadrid, noting that the frontiersman soldier was
convicted and exiled in his own time for executing his men and a
massacre at Acoma Pueblo.
[to top of second column]
|
A vehicle carries away a bronze statue of Spanish colonial ruler
Juan de Onate in Alcalde, New Mexico after county authorities
ordered that it be removed to prevent its possible destruction,
during a planned protest by Native American activists demanding it
be taken down, in this still image from video taken June 15, 2020.
Handout via REUTERS
TEACHING HISTORY
It is now up to Rio Arriba's county commission and residents to
decide the future of the Alcalde statue. Espaņola personal trainer
April Marie Moya-Salazar started an online petition to reinstate the
sculpture and has over 600 signatures.
Most of the younger generation has no idea what is going on, they
think were celebrating genocide," said Moya-Salazar, 41, who traces
her Spanish ancestry back 14 generations.
Roberto Valdez, an Espaņola college history lecturer, went to the
Alcalde site on June 15 to try to explain Oņate's significance to a
young protester dancing on the empty plinth.
"The statues arose because we were keenly aware of the erosion of
our culture and heritage," said Valdez, who is Hispanic.
For Hispanic community advocate Fred Sandoval, the Oņate sculpture
needs to go in a new museum for "reconciliation."
"We have to tell the entire story from different perspectives, the
good, the bad and the ugly," said Sandoval, director of a Latino
behavioral health group.
Ohkay Owingeh's Lovato said the valley should be focused on its
opioid crisis and the coronavirus pandemic rather than taking down
monuments.
"Im more concerned with, call them the Oņates of today, the enemies
of today, than bronze statues that can't hurt me anymore," said
Lovato.
But he said the Oņate statue could go back up with one of Popé, the
Ohkay Owingeh religious leader who started the 1680 Pueblo Revolt,
to represent both Hispanics and Native Americans.
(Reporting by Andrew Hay in Taos, New Mexico; Editing by Bill
Tarrant and David Gregorio)
[Š 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |