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In recent years, however, there has been a push against promoting Columbus in a positive light. Mostly, it centers on the devastation the arrival of Europeans had on the Native American population, and that is certainly undeniable, just as it is undeniable that many of the United States’ founding fathers rose to wealth and prominence thanks largely to slave labor.

These are things that happened, but I don’t think that they automatically diminish or disqualify the accomplisments of these people.

The first time I was introduced to the idea that Columbus was a villain was in college. In my Intro to U.S.

History class, we were given a document titled “With the Royal Banner Unfurled.” It was a letter Columbus had written to Queen Isabella of Spain detailing the first days after his arrival in America.

We were asked to read the letter and decide whether Columbus was or was not using the letter as a self-glorifying piece of propaganda.

It was pretty clear from the way the assignment was being presented to us that we were, of course, supposed to say that it was. As much as I scoff at the idea that colleges are liberal havens looking to “indoctrinate” our youth, that assignment always makes me thing, at least a little, “well…”

And in case you’re wondering, I did not agree.

Sure, the letter itself was a nice little laundry list of all the great things Columbus had done, but it’s worth noting that he and his small crew sailed across the Atlantic Ocean in uncharted waters and found two continents previously unknown to contemporary Europeans. It was an amazing accomplishment and like the expression says, “If you can do it, it ain’t bragging.”

A few years ago, I learned that Columbus Day is a much bigger deal in the Catholic community and in the Italian American population, like St. Patrick’s Day for the Irish or Cinco de Mayo for Mexicans or Juneteenth for the Black community. In places like Boston, there are parades and feasts and such. Around here, all we really get is closed banks and no mail service.

There’s been a push at various levels to even do away with Columbus Day or change it to Indigenous Peoples Day (which is already a thing. It was this past Monday and no one really noticed). That seems a little like pandering, but whatever.

Either way, you can’t deny it… if Columbus had not set sailed in 1492 with the Nina, the Pinta and the Santa Maria, America as we know it would not exist. Holiday worthy? I guess that’s your choice…

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