IndianaLocalNews

Students call for removal of Christopher Columbus murals

(Spencer Marsh/95.3 MNC)

SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) — Some University of Notre Dame students, employees and alumni say 19th century murals of Christopher Columbus should be removed from a school building because they depict Native Americans and blacks in stereotypical submissive poses before white European explorers.

The South Bend Tribune reports that more than 340 students, employees and alumni signed an open letter against the paintings published in the university’s student newspaper, the Observer. The letter says the paintings in an administrative building are equivalent to a Confederate monument.

A university spokesman says the paintings have historic value and there are no plans to remove them.

The 12 paintings by artist Luigi Gregori have been on display since 1884 in the campus’ Main Building.

A group of Native American students also called for the paintings’ removal in 1995.

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2 comments

No common sense at any 'higher' education institution December 4, 2017 at 2:35 pm

This current generation of social justice whiners will have no history they didn’t make up, and will remake every time someone professes to be offended by whatever they made up.

Just grow up already.

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Just wondering December 4, 2017 at 8:41 pm

Toughen up butter cups! If you don’t like something don’t look! Just because you don’t like some part of history does not give your tiny minority the right to destroy our history. You should not sweep the mistakes under the rug. Learn from it!! Those who fail to learn from history’s mistakes WILL repeat those mistakes! By the way, do the murals show the black tribal leaders selling their own people to Columbus?

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