Nearly 500 protesters stage Anti-Columbus Day history tour at New York museums

Arts

Decolonize This Place gathered a coalition of over 15 grassroots organisations to attend this years Anti-Columbus Day movement, including calls for the abolition of prisons, the liberation of Palestine, and the end of capitalism Photo: Zachary Small

Rename Columbus Day. Remove the statue of Teddy Roosevelt. Respect the ancestors. Decolonize This Place has spent the last four years demanding the same three things from the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH)—with little progress. This year, blocked from gathering inside the institution, the activist group decided to take their fourth Anti-Columbus Day tour on the road.

Nearly 500 demonstrators—many of them artists, students, and teachers—gathered on the museum steps on Monday afternoon, but found the entrances blocked and the museum unexpectedly closed, hours ahead of schedule. When asked if the early closure was because of Decolonize This Place, visitor services staff said they were “not at liberty to say”, and press representatives for the museum did not respond to The Art Newspapers request for comment at the time of publication.

So the participants of the planned tour instead marched through uptown Manhattans typically quiet streets to the sound of drums and calls for the abolition of prisons, the liberation of Palestine, and the end of capitalism. Many wore bandanas to conceal their identities; others sported Indigenous dress to express pride in their ancestry. An estimated 50 police officers followed the activists, diverting traffic away from the them.

The general population needs to think more about what the beauty of museums is built on

The high police presence did not bother Anne Tirozzi, who attends the protest tour every year. “The general population needs to think more about what the beauty of museums is built on,” the New Yorker said. Even though she is protesting the museum, she is also a member who regularly brings her children and grandchildren to visit. “As a member, Im paying money for this museum to remain open, and I will not pay anymore unless they start honouring our demands.”

Last year, around 1,000 people attended the Anti-Columbus Day tour, which took place inside the museums galleries. Activists staged interventions arguing that the institution perpetuates outdated ethnographic curatorial practices by collecting and displaying African and Indigenous artefacts and remains in a way that denigrates non-white and non-Western peoples. In March, AMNH attempted to address its critics by updating a historic diorama of Dutch settlers and Lenape people to include ten large labels summarising various issues with the display. The change did not impress activists.

“After three years of protest, it seemed like a token gesture,” says Amin Hussein, an organiser with Decolonize This Place. “The museum annotated a diorama while its still sitting on the skulls of indigenous people.”

On the heels of their successful push for the removal of Warren Kanders from the Whitney Museums board of trustees, Decolonize This Place gathered a coalition of over 15 grassroots organisations to attend this years Anti-Columbus Day movement. They included protesters calling for the abolition of prisons, and on Friday, Decolonize This Place will join the New Sanctuary Coalition and Freedom to Thrive in a protest outside the Museum of Modern Arts opening party to demand that the institution divest its pension fund from private prisons.

After leaving the natural history museum, demonstrators weaved through Central Park Photo: Zachary Small

After leaving the natural history museum, demonstrators weaved through Central Park, which was once the site of Seneca Village, the citys first settlement of free African America landowners before it was razed in 1857 for the parks reconstruction. And for centuries before that, the land belonged to the indigenous Lenape people who occupied much of Manhattan. The parks history was used as an example of the legacy of gentrification and rezoning imposed on the citys Black residents. Other stops on the tour included the Egyptian obRead More – Source