It no longer is some kind of scare tactic to say that after the  statues
of Confederates are all trashed then other statues will be smashed.
There now are calls in Chicago  -by a black leader-  to get rid  of
a statue of George Washington. There was a news item recently
about getting rid of a statue of Lincoln (not a typo). There have  been
calls to blast off the sculptures on Stone Mountain in Georgia.
And now this...
 
 
Religion Dispatches
August 22, 2017
 
Saint’s statue defaced amid Confederate  monuments debate
By _Kimberly  Winston_ (http://religionnews.com/author/kimberlywinston/)  

 
 
 
(RNS)  — As the battle over Confederate monuments suggest, one person’s 
saint is  another person’s sinner. 
And  over the weekend that controversy reached beyond the South to 
California, where  a statue of a Catholic saint, Rev. Junipero Serra, was 
vandalized 
in Los  Angeles. 
Images  appeared on social media showing the word “murder” smeared in 
white paint on a  statue of the 18th-century Franciscan priest who led the 
Catholic Church’s  missionary efforts among Native Americans on the West Coast.
 
 
Traces  of red paint and a swastika were also found on the statue, which 
sits in a park  across from Mission San Fernando in the Mission Hills section 
of Los  Angeles. 
Serra,  who is credited with spreading the Catholic faith across what is 
now  California, was canonized by Pope Francis on his 2015 trip to the U.S. 
But  critics say the priest was part of an imperial conquest that beat and 
enslaved  Native Americans, raped their women, and destroyed their culture 
by forcing them  to abandon their traditional language, diet, dress and other 
customs and  rites.
 
 
“I  think the statue should come down from this park, and then put some 
appreciation  to the Native people that live here,” Cristian Ramirez, a local 
man who came to  see the vandalized statue, _told_ 
(http://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2017/08/17/junipero-serra-statue-vandalized/) 
CBS  Los Angeles. “We don
’t want this violent history to be praised in our  community.” 
Father  Serra was born in Spain in 1713. He came to the Americas in 1749, 
and in 1769 he  founded the first of what would become 21 missions along the 
California  coast. 
Native  Americans brought into the mission to be evangelized were not 
allowed to leave  the grounds. Many labored for no pay. There is evidence of 
beatings,  imprisonment and other abuse at the hands of the missionaries. By 
the 
time Serra  died in 1784, he is reputed to have confirmed 5,300 people as 
Catholics, most of  them Native Americans.
 
 
Serra’s  defenders argue that it’s not fair to judge this 18th-century 
missionary by  21st-century standards. They believe he was a moderating 
influence on his fellow  Spaniards, and frequently pleaded for more merciful 
treatment for the Native  Americans under their control. 
Monuments  associated with Serra have been vandalized before. Within days 
of his elevation  to sainthood in 2015, the historic mission in Carmel, 
Calif. was vandalized and  gravestones were toppled. Serra’s remains are buried 
at the Carmel Mission,  which was founded in 1770. 
Also  in 2015, vandals spread red paint on the door of Mission Santa Cruz. 
The  vandalized Los Angeles statue was restored over the  weekend.

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