iluvoursolskjær
New Member
I think one conversation that gets overlooked and lost in the emotional responses from both sides, is that history shapes national and cultural identity. The history of Churchill doesn’t just belong to the Anglo-Saxon but to everyone concerned with the Empire, a multitude of peoples who originate from all over it; coming together to form the fabric of modern British society.
I don’t just ‘identify’ as British, I am British. But that can sometimes be a conflicting and painful thing when history is so easily whitewashed, dismissed even, left to feel almost like as if to be looking in from the outside. I mentioned also in another post that racism isn’t bred from a lack of education, rather a particular kind of education, one founded on ethno-nationalism and cultural-imperialism.
For these reasons when I look at that statue, I know what it actually represents because it’s backed up by how we are all educated in school. To suggest everyone should see it as simply a monument celebrating the fight against Nazism, forces upon everyone a level of wilful ignorance.
Anyways I’m not necessarily for or against its’ removal. Though being intellectually honest is important here.
I don’t just ‘identify’ as British, I am British. But that can sometimes be a conflicting and painful thing when history is so easily whitewashed, dismissed even, left to feel almost like as if to be looking in from the outside. I mentioned also in another post that racism isn’t bred from a lack of education, rather a particular kind of education, one founded on ethno-nationalism and cultural-imperialism.
For these reasons when I look at that statue, I know what it actually represents because it’s backed up by how we are all educated in school. To suggest everyone should see it as simply a monument celebrating the fight against Nazism, forces upon everyone a level of wilful ignorance.
Anyways I’m not necessarily for or against its’ removal. Though being intellectually honest is important here.