As with many of the best quotes, a great deal
of uncertainty surrounds the original authorship of the saying that “history is
written by the winners”. One of its more recent outings was from the mouth of
the US Attorney General, Bill Barr, in defending Trump, and in the process justifying whatever means are used. Whilst it isn’t always entirely true, it’s a maxim
which holds in the general run of things, and it underlines the fact that the
history that we understand isn’t just a series of facts and events, but an
interpretation of those facts and events, and any interpretation is inevitably
written from a particular standpoint which chooses what weight to give to which
event. And history isn’t unchangeable – different generations in different
times look at the same events and draw entirely different conclusions from
them.
There is no doubt that Edward Colston was
a generous philanthropist, but neither is there any doubt that much of the fortune
which financed his philanthropy had its origins in the callous trading of
fellow humans as slaves, who were forcibly torn from one continent and shipped
across the ocean to another. At the time his statue was erected in Bristol, the
slave trade had already been abolished for almost 90 years, but the historical interpretation
of those who erected it had more to do with his philanthropy than with the
source of the money. And, for context, the British Empire was still thriving –
slavery might not have been legal any more but exploitation of people and
resources was still the general rule, and the native inhabitants were hardly
better regarded than when they had been slaves. Although there are still those
who hark back to the ‘glory days’ of the British Empire (it was only a few
years ago that a certain Boris Johnson said of Africa: “The problem is not
that we were once in charge, but that we are not in charge any more”), it
is hard to conceive of circumstances when a statue would be erected today
celebrating the life of someone like Colston, and I can well understand why the
statue looks to be, at the least, a glossing over of the past.
Some – including the new Labour leader –
have attempted to argue that the statue should have been removed, but only by
following ‘proper processes’. That would be the ‘proper processes’ which have
seen debate continue for decades without any action being taken. Would they
apply the same simplistic labels of ‘criminal damage’ and ‘unlawfulness’ to similar
acts elsewhere? How about the toppling of statues to Lenin and Stalin after the
fall of the Soviet Union? Or those of Saddam Hussein after the war in Iraq? Or
how about the mob who attacked the Berlin Wall and tore it down? That was also
a ‘criminal act’ of vandalism, was it not? In truth, our response towards the removal
of symbols, by fair means or foul, is usually based more on our attitude to the
symbols and what they represent than on the criminality or otherwise of the act
of removal.
And that brings us to the real problem with
statues to so-called ‘great men’. People are rarely perfect, and many of those
to whom statues have been erected attract strong feelings, both for and
against. It’s easy enough – in the twenty-first century at least – for most of
us to agree that celebrating the life of a slave trader is wholly inappropriate,
but there are other controversial figures in history as well. Statues are erected
in one historical context, but continue to stand when the context, and the interpretation
of past events, have changed beyond recognition. (One of the more obvious
examples is Churchill. Whilst he was/is a war hero to most of my parents’
generation, there is little doubt that he was also a racist who believed in and
pursued the idea that some races are superior to others. His callousness and
willingness to use indiscriminate violence to pursue the maintenance of the
British Empire are well-documented. At the moment, the popular interpretation
of history is still on his side overall (indeed, in an echo of the idea that
history is written by the winners, he once wrote that he expected history to be
kind to him “…especially as I propose to write that history”). A century
from now, I doubt that the same will be true – distance in time invariably
changes perspectives.)
History is always changing; those who want
to cling on to statues and symbols of the past are often using those symbols as
mere proxies. What they are really trying to cling on to is their own version
of history. The British Empire has been dead for decades in the real world, but
it lives on in the memories and attitudes of too many people. Removing the artifacts
which symbolise and commemorate that view of the past challenges their world
view. But it’s long overdue.
6 comments:
But surely we cannot leave it up to our relatively recent minority immigrant population to decide which statues should be discarded and which should remain.
The rule of law needs to come down on the perpetrators of such wanton destruction like a ton of bricks!
Until he took a bath in the Bristol dock, I had not heard of Little Eddy Colston but your (rather good) post and other readings has enlightened me.
My attitude to statues of people are framed by my upbringing in the Welsh Wesleyan Church and its Taliban wing, in that statues lend themselves to idolatry and that is a ticket to Hell. However, other people see value in them.
Eddy`s statue does past one of my tests in that if they should be erected then only from voluntary funds at a minimum of thirty years after the death of the subject, maintenance should also be paid from the same source and if the money is not there ,neither is the statue as the market has spoken.
Those sick people who benefited from Ed`s generosity or children who got an education, I doubt gave a thought to the source of the investment, but we should not be too hard on them as HMG in Wales rants about Bankers, the City, Oil Companies etc, but when the blood bag of money arrives from HM Treasury, they fall short of conducting a ethical audit of the source of this dirty money and request a reduction in their income , in fact they would be very happy to get even more.
What has any of this post got to do with immigration, whether recent or not? Answer: nothing.
The problem with the imperial past doesn't arise purely because some of the descendants of the victims of empire now live in the UK and can see the way that past is glorified and celebrated, it arises because of the acts committed during that period. That problem would still exist even if no-one from the far reaches of the empire had ever set foot in the UK - blaming immigrants is the typical response of an English nationalist.
To Anonymous
Most of the removal crew rolling Colston down and into the harbour appeared to be white.
Maybe they were Poles.
CapM ... from Anonymous
Quite so, the black population voiced their dislike, the 'woke' white population took decisive supporting action.
Yesterday Sarah Vine in the Daily Mail wrote a very good piece about the dangers of it all.
Anon,
Are you really saying that all white people are so blind and ignorant of the past that they can only start to challenge received truth when black people point it out to them? Do you realise quite how silly that sounds? Probably not, if you think that an article by Sarah Vine in the Daily Mail counts as some sort of authoritative source. She is no more an impartial observer of events than am I; she writes from a specific viewpoint which I don't share. The fact that you, apparently, do is entirely your right, of course. But please don't confuse opinion with fact.
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