
Mon 10/10/2011
Columbus Day Is More Complex Than
It Looks
Our American
Anglo Centric and Northern European Centic Society and the Push Back By
Native Americans has made Columbus an unfair symbol of Conquest,
rather than for the Unimaginable Navigation Feat of Courage.
Columbus Day Is More Complex Than
It Looks
The Chicgo Sun Times; By Neil Steinberg;
Oct 10, 2011
Once upon a time, American history
was a simple story we told to feel good about ourselves. George Washington
chopped the cherry tree; Columbus sailed the ocean blue. Problems arrived
only to be solved ? slaves were hardly mentioned until right before Lincoln
freed them.
The nation was run by white Anglo-Saxon
men, and naturally they cast themselves in all the hero roles.
Eventually, the forgotten supporting
cast grew tired of being in the shadows ? women got the vote, blacks demanded
civil rights, immigrant groups inserted themselves into the American story.
That?s why Monday is Columbus Day, one of just 10 federal holidays.
?I?ll tell you how it happened,? said
Dominic Di Frisco, president emeritus of the Joint Civic Committee of Italian
Americans. ?The Italian immigrants arrived after the German immigrants,
after the Irish immigrants. They saw events like the Von Steuben parade
and decided they needed a political hero. Christopher Columbus is not much
of a figure in Italy. They said, my God, this country is named after him
? the District of Columbia, Columbus in Ohio, in Georgia. He was the hero,
a symbol of Italian pride, the first immigrant.?
Columbus was on coins and stamps.
Chicago held its World?s Columbian Exposition.
So what changed? Why is Columbus now
frequently a villain? Well, the same process that put Columbus Day on our
calendar ? heretofore marginalized people insisting their part in the story
be told ? kept going, to include Native Americans. They don?t feel Columbus
discovered anything ? the Indians knew they were here all along ? and given
how quickly the Europeans began murdering, enslaving and pushing aside
indigenous peoples here, to them there isn?t much to celebrate, which is
why there?s a card widely posted on Facebook: ?Let?s celebrate Columbus
Day by walking into someone?s house and telling them we live there now.?
A fair synopsis of what happened, minus the genocide.
And yet perhaps because I learned
the 1970s history catechism, where national unity trumps the complaints
of each individual group, I feel for the Italians, who just want to be
part of the story and celebrate themselves without having to wipe the blood
of the slaughtered off their hands every October.
What bothers me most about the ?Let?s
celebrate . . . ? card is the casual declaration of free-floating guilt
that we liberals seem to have mastered. What are you saying? You?re sorry
the nation was founded? At least Native Americans have a reason to say
that, though, like everybody else, their narrative is also self-serving
? heavy on ?Dances with Wolves,? light on the hearts-torn-out-atop-pyramids-to-honor-Quatzequatel.
The Aztecs were the most violent state
in recorded human history, so it isn?t as if, had Columbus never arrived,
the American Eden would remain to this day. To post that card is hypocrisy.
Europe?s still there. Go back if you feel so guilty about living here.
I sure don?t. My ancestors never killed an Indian or owned a slave. They
were selling rags in Poland when all this was going on, and America was
the golden door a handful fled through before the most cultured and sophisticated
society in Europe put the rest in ovens. That still doesn?t prompt me to
show up at German Unity Day and wave pictures of Auschwitz. The past is
a lousy place to live.
So I have sympathy for Italians on
Columbus Day; though really ? Columbus, Balbo, Berlusconi ? there is a
pattern of clinging to bad choices here.
?He was one of the great navigators
of history, and we?ve taken that away from him,? said DiFrisco, ?and reduced
him to some kind of bloodthirsty, syphilis-spreading marauder, and that
is not the case.?
Not the entire case. We live in a
time when heroes are ritualistically tarnished and, frankly, everybody
is better off with the more accurate, though less flattering, narrative
than with the pretty story. It?s easier for me to grasp the current inability
of the government to confront our problems when I consider that it was
formed on a lie ??All men are created equal? ? that skirted the issue of
slavery, kicking it down the pike to explode 75 years later. Ignoring our
biggest problems is an American tradition since 1776.
?Columbus Day is an Italian pride
holiday,? said Di Frisco. ?We decry that fewer and fewer schools have it
off. Here?s a man who planted the flag of Christianity on the shores of
the new world and teachers are systemically taking the image of Columbus
we all knew and they?ve turned him into a villain.?
Speaking of the flag of Christianity
. . . but space grows short. Happy Columbus Day.
nsteinberg@suntimes.com
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