99% Invisible - 331- Oñate's Foot
Episode Date: December 5, 2018Juan de Oñate is one of the world’s lesser-known conquistadors, but his name can be found all over New Mexico. There are Oñate streets, Oñate schools, and, of course, Oñate statues. When an acti...vist group removed one foot off an Oñate statue in 1998, they said it was a symbolic act meant to highlight the atrocities Oñate committed against the indigenous population. Just as people in New Mexico were learning more of this history, the city of Albuquerque was considering building yet another statue of him. This resulted in a years long conflict about how New Mexico should commemorate a “founding father” who committed such cruel acts. Oñate’s Foot This was a collaboration with Reveal, from the Center for Investigative Reporting and PRX Please support the 2018 Radiotopia fund drive!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is 99% Invisible. I'm Roman Mars.
On January 7th, 1998, an envelope landed on the desk of Larry Calloway.
He was a columnist with the Albuquerque Journal.
It was sort of a combination of a press release and a ransom note and a photo.
and a photo.
The photo was a Polaroid of a cut-off riding boot with a huge Spanish spur, all in bronze.
And I read the note.
The note hinted that the bronze foot came from a statue
of a man named Juan de Oñate, seated on a horse.
It was part of a monument on the side of a rural highway
near where Oñate founded the
first Spanish colony in New Mexico back in 1598. Larry figured this was probably a hoax.
This is Stan Alcorn, a reporter with the investigative podcast Reveal.
There are collaborators on the story today. So he handed the tip off to the newsroom,
and a reporter called up the visitor center at the Oñate Monument.
And asked, is your statue missing a right foot?
And the guy said, what?
And he went out and checked, came back, and he was, you know, in shock.
He said, it's gone.
Oñate is one of the world's
lesser-known conquistadors,
but his name is all over New Mexico.
There are Oñate streets,
Oñate schools. For decades,
there was an annual fiesta where one
lucky guy would get to be Oñate,
complete with a cape and helmet.
There's even a song.
Viva Oñate!
Viva!
Viva Oñate! Viva! Viva la historia de este gran señor! There's even a song.
In parts of New Mexico, he's treated as a kind of founding father.
But history is not all song and dance and wearing capes.
He was a conquistador after all.
The envelope Larry got also included an excerpt from a history book on Oñate's treatment of New Mexico's native people.
It described an incident that ended with Oñate sentencing a group of men from Acoma Pueblo to each have one foot chopped off.
If the symbolism of removing the statue's foot was unclear, the note made it explicit.
Clear, the note made it explicit.
It said, we took the liberty of removing Oñate's right foot on behalf of our brothers and sisters at Acoma Pueblo.
We will be melting this foot down and casting small medallions
to be sold to those who are historically ignorant.
The statue's sculptor cast a new right foot and reattached it.
The medallions never turned up, but the story stuck. It got picked up by NPR and the New York
Times. I was a seventh grader in Albuquerque at the time, and what I remember is how the subject
I found most boring, history, was suddenly this exciting mystery that remains unsolved to this
day. Who stole Oñate's foot? And then there was the timing. 1998 was the 400th anniversary of
Oñate's arrival. There were corto centenario celebrations planned all over the state.
There would be theater, parades, a commemorative stamp. In a second note to the paper, these so-called friends of Acoma wrote,
We see no glory in celebrating Oñate's fourth centennial, and we do not want our faces rubbed in it.
In other words, the point of cutting off the statue's foot was to spoil the party.
And the centerpiece of that party, that got a mention in all the foot-cutting stories,
was a cuarto centenario memorial being planned for Albuquerque's historic center.
The proposal?
Another bronze statue of Juan de Oñate.
This one right in the middle of New Mexico's biggest city.
But with all this new attention on Oñate,
the second statue wasn't going to get built without a fight.
I still didn't see the storm that was coming.
It was still in its infancy.
Conchita Lucero was one of the organizers of the 400th anniversary celebrations in Albuquerque
and one of the most passionate advocates for a new Oñate statue.
A passion that goes back to her childhood,
growing up in 1950s New Mexico,
knowing almost nothing about Oñate, or the state's two centuries as a Spanish colony.
When I was a child, at 10 years of age, I asked my grandmother, who was a school teacher,
I was reading the American history books, I said, didn't our people do anything?
You know, that's how I felt.
She didn't know New Mexico history. All Conchita knew was that her Spanish ancestors had come to the state
centuries before the Anglo classmates who called people like her dirty Mexicans, or the Anglo
teachers who kept her out of a leadership club. And she knew that racism and ignorance of history were somehow connected.
If we make you feel like the underdog,
and then we take away your history and take away your knowledge,
you're starting from scratch.
Conversations, you don't know how to even participate.
You just let the other guy put you down.
Conchita thought if she could just search out her own European roots,
it would help her fight back.
None of this is uncommon in New Mexico,
where people have been reaching back to their colonial roots
and identifying as Spanish since the 1800s.
After Conchita retired, she found a lot of like minds
in local genealogical
and historical societies. She learned how to use birth and death and baptism records to
trace her family tree. There was the occasional Native American ancestor, but she was most excited
to find branches like the one that extended back to a Spanish captain who brought his wife and kids through the Chihuahuan Desert
on Oñate's 1598 expedition.
She saw them as having transformed the region
by bringing livestock and Catholicism and the Spanish language.
You'd start finding your family members and you're going,
wow, I never knew they did all of this.
Did it change how you saw yourself?
Yes. I never argued that one person wasn't as good as the other,
but sometimes you were made to feel inferior.
And at that point, that inferiority left.
And so it was that Conchita was on the Cuarto Centenario committee
when they met with the Albuquerque Arts Board
to discuss their request for a prominent new statue of Juan de Oñate,
the man they called the father of the Hispanic culture and our state.
And who the Friends of Acoma accused of destroying Native people's way of life.
Was what happened at Acoma brought up?
No.
And was it on your mind?
No.
Was it something that you knew about?
I wasn't as versed in it as I have become.
For people who don't know Acoma, what is that?
What is Acoma?
This is Alida, or Tweedy Suazo,
an Acoma woman who would become an outspoken opponent of an Oñate statue in Albuquerque.
Acoma is the oldest continuously inhabited community in the United States.
And it sits on a mesa 375 feet above the valley below.
She actually carries a postcard of Acoma to show people when she travels.
It's a village built on top of a mesa, which, if you're not from the desert,
is like a huge rock pedestal.
And that mesa just towers over the flat,
empty plain below.
All of it a hundred shades of brown,
from light tan to deep rust.
It's incredible.
The tough thing with radio is you don't have pictures,
like how to help people visualize it,
because it's like no other place on earth.
No, it's not. It's beautiful.
It's desert and rocks and sandstone, and that's where I come from, you know.
And unlike the dozens of pueblos that disappeared after the arrival of the Spanish,
Acoma is still here.
Each year, tens of thousands of tourists drive an hour west of Albuquerque and then take
a tour bus up a steep road to the top of the mesa. So just watch yourself. Don't get too close to the
edge. If you happen to fall over the edge, this is the end of your tour and no repons will be given.
So just keep that in mind. On top, you can see buildings made of mud and sandstone that tour guides say date back to the 1100s.
If you think about it, these houses have been passed down through the same family for almost a thousand years now.
So now we're going to be walking past some of the older houses right up here, folks.
All along the tour, there are tables where Acoma artists sell their wares, mostly pottery.
These pots are made from the clay from the area here, about two miles.
But it's not just a tourist attraction.
There are 15 families that live up top year-round,
and hundreds more like Tweedie's, who go there for special occasions.
Funerals, deaths, religious, fiestas, we were always there.
deaths, religious, fiestas.
We were always there.
What did you know about the history of your people in that place?
That we came from the underworld on the back of Grandmother Spider.
We wandered the earth.
And when we got to where Akuma was, we were told this is where we're supposed to be.
That's what I knew, you know, that we've been there forever.
Tweedy also knew that when the Spanish arrived, they did terrible things to her ancestors.
But she didn't know the details.
Historians know many of those details today because they were written down by the Spanish
in letters and legal documents.
These documents, to quote Oñate's best-known biographer,
skim the surface of events
and sometimes present Oñate, quote,
as he wished to be seen, not as things actually were.
Which makes their description of what happened at Acoma all the more shocking.
After 13 of Oñate's men came looking for food and were killed,
Oñate declared a war of blood and fire.
In the most brutal account of the battle that followed,
Oñate's soldiers killed hundreds of men, women, and children,
stabbed prisoners and threw them off the mesa,
and set fires that suffocated women and children
who'd taken shelter in sacred rooms known as kivas.
They then rounded up 500 prisoners and put them on trial.
Oñate sentenced those over 12 years old to 20 years of slavery.
Those under 12, he separated from their families,
giving the girls to the church and the boys to the captain who'd just destroyed their village. And then there's the most infamous detail.
In a document signed by Oñate himself, it says,
His cruelty to the innocent of Acoma was one of the 12 crimes
for which Oñate himself would later be tried and convicted by the Spanish crown.
As punishment, he would be banished permanently from the territories of New Mexico.
This is the history that Tweedy and I and many other New Mexicans
were learning for the first time as news of the stolen foot ricocheted around the state.
That was the beginning of it.
That was everybody's first awareness.
And at the same time, we were also learning that the city of Albuquerque
was planning to build this new, much more prominent statue of Oñate.
He had been cast out of New Mexico forever.
And now you want to bring him back and put him on a statue?
It's still mind-boggling.
How Oñate went from a banished conquistador to a father of New Mexico that people wanted to put on a statue is a story for another podcast. But the simple answer is he was first. The first to build a
European colony in the region, even if that colony was soon abandoned. He was among the first to
bring wheat and sheep and Catholicism. And because every people needs a founding figure, Spanish New
Mexico made Juan de Oñate its George Washington, even if he had been cast out forever. But it did not take long for the Albuquerque Arts Board to realize that Juan de Oñate
was not everyone's idea of a founding father. They could see that another triumphant statue
of him on a horse would be a bad look for the city. So by the time the foot was cut off of
the old statue on the side of the highway, they made a few changes to the plan. The memorial would
need to depict not just Oñate, but also the peaceful settlers who came with him and the
Native Americans who preceded and survived him. And the exact form the memorial would take would
be up to a team of artists. They had a team of two, but right before the newspapers got wind of
the missing foot, they decided to add a
third. When Nora Naranjo-Morse got the call, she was in the place where she's most comfortable,
her studio. I mean, who would want to be here, right? In the studio with a fireplace in the rain.
On the phone was the director of public art for the city of Albuquerque,
asking if she wanted to be part of a tricultural collaboration.
It would be the Hispanic artist who had built the statue that had its foot stolen,
an Anglo artist, and her, a Tewa Indian artist from the Santa Clara Pueblo.
The call was so out of the blue.
This was a public art project. I'd never done public art, really. This was with other
people. I had been working solo, so I didn't really know. I was listening.
And did you say yes right then, or do you remember how the phone called?
I said yes. I said yes right away because I opened my mouth and I said yes. And then afterwards I thought, oh, I wonder what this is going to be like.
She'd find out when she showed up for that first meeting.
In an institutional room with fluorescent lighting and a chalkboard,
the other artists wheeled in a model of a statue they'd already put together.
It was another triumphant statue of Juan de Oñate on a horse.
And that's when they begin to talk about the granite pedestal
and how I could use it.
The pedestal beneath Oñate's horse's feet.
Right.
I felt insulted. I felt insulted.
I felt hurt.
I felt marginalized.
I didn't think I could do that.
Although in myself,
I was thinking that there was a solution,
that art could tell a story that was truthful.
Nora quite literally refused to put Oñate on a pedestal, and the artist went back to the drawing board.
But now Nora was in the public eye, and soon she started getting calls from other Pueblo people
who wanted her to leave the project entirely in protest.
I didn't do that.
And when I refused, I got some, I think people were disappointed. But I realized that by me staying in the game,
I would at least be able to fight for that voice that I think was so important.
Not just my artistic voice, but the voice of these people that had gone through this incredible experience that changed their culture completely.
And I kept going back to those things.
And I kept going back to those things.
The year of the 400th anniversary, 1998, came and went,
and there was still no plan for the memorial.
But the city would not give up.
All the attention had made the memorial a very public test of whether the state was the land of tricultural harmony that it claimed to be.
And so every time the process hit an impasse, the city just threw more time and money at it,
hiring mediators and forming committees. At one point, one of those committees came up with a
plan that would have restarted the whole artistic process, a plan Conchita's side couldn't tolerate.
It called for a memorial without Oñate.
And would focus on coexistence of Hispanics and the indigenous.
Well, then we said it wasn't our celebration. You know, it's your celebration now. It's not ours.
You know, you don't get invited to a wedding. You don't start telling the bride and the groom,
you should have had it this way or that way. And that's what it was. It was our celebration. But it was your celebration
with public money in a public space that's in a city that has people of all different backgrounds.
The grant was for our celebration, not for the Acoma celebration or for anybody else's.
As far as Conchita's group was concerned, the presence of Oñate was non-negotiable. our celebration, not for the Akama celebration or for anybody else's.
As far as Conchita's group was concerned, the presence of Oñate was non-negotiable,
which made it hard to negotiate. In the end, there simply was no single design that everyone could agree on. In fact, eventually the artists stopped talking to each other.
Instead, they proposed a memorial made up of two separate artworks, a series of bronze statues of Spanish settlers, including Oñate in full armor,
and Nora's response, an abstract land art installation made out of the desert itself.
It had gone from a small bronze statue to a memorial that would take up most of a city block
and cost over half a million dollars, requiring the city to issue special bonds.
Now the question was, would the city approve it? Conchita and the pro-Oñate forces lobbied the
city council, while Oñate opponents, like Tweedy, took their case to the people.
You know, finding out, well, who's for us and who isn't? And how do we target the people in that area
for them to call their councilmen?
That's the first time I'd ever done that, you know?
You were like becoming an activist for the first time?
Yeah, I was. I'd never done that.
The statue, and also a highway the city was trying to build
through a national monument of ancient petroglyphs,
was making first-time activists out of a lot of Pueblo people.
It's the first time that we really rallied around something.
Activists, artists, citizens, and city councilors were headed for a final showdown.
down. This is GOV 14, and now from Government Center in downtown Albuquerque, the Albuquerque City Council. In a series of meetings, the City Council auditorium was divided, like a pep rally,
or Congress. On one side was the pro-Oñate crowd,
mostly Hispanic people around Conchita's age. On the other side was the anti-Oñate group.
They tended to be younger and more diverse, Native Americans, but also
Anglos and African Americans, and a lot of people who identified as Chicano or Mestizo,
explicitly embracing their indigenous as well as European ancestry.
The city council tried to give the two sides equal time to speak. And in hour after hour of
public comment, they went back and forth, but not over the design of the memorial really.
They were fighting over something much bigger and much more personal, their place in American
history.
Our colony was the first in what is today the United States of America.
You can't pretend that we didn't come here 400 years ago.
This is really a matter of denigrating the Hispanic people of New Mexico. Do I have to stop?
Oh, no, no, no. Have some courage and listen.
First of all, soy Chicano.
And unlike some Hispanics that are here in the audience,
I didn't just get off the plane from Spain.
Oñata does not represent the best of my culture.
You are not representing me.
And I just want to say that I'm sorry
that you and a small group
of Hispanics in this room feel like they have to
slam another people's culture in order to
feel pride.
There were dozens of speakers, but the leaders
were women from Acoma, like Tweedy.
I didn't know that the awful things that happened to my people happened to my people
until this statue became an issue. I'm really tired of being used as tourists
and our wares are the only things that matter in this community.
in this community. I'm begging you, don't do this to my people. I'm begging you, don't do this to my people. Don't hurt them this way. It's not right.
Thank you very much.
Last speaker, Ayal Sanchez-Davis.
It seemed like most people were on Tweedy's side.
But if the city voted against the memorial,
it wouldn't just be saying no to this statue of Oñate and the settlers,
and to Nora's landscape art.
It would be admitting that this whole very public process that had dragged on for more than
two years had been a failure. The committees, the design iterations, the debate, all for nothing.
So when it finally came time to vote, all those in favor please signify by saying aye.
Aye. Those opposed? No. They voted seven to two to build the memorial. That motion passes.
They voted 7-2 to build the memorial.
That motion passes.
After the vote, Conchita Lucero told a reporter,
I think our kids will finally learn about their ancestors.
Tweedy Suazo and other anti-Oñate activists formed a prayer circle in the city council chambers and wept.
We worked so hard.
And it just, it didn't matter. It didn't matter what wept. We worked so hard and it just it just is it didn't matter it didn't matter what we said
it didn't matter what we do it didn't matter that we educated it just didn't matter.
If it all happened again today do you think it would happen the same way or
what would be different?
I think Pueblos are just a little bit more politically astute now.
Tweedy thinks what they learned was that the right arguments aren't enough. You need the
right decision makers. She's one of several anti-Oñate activists who
went on to get involved in electoral politics. She's now the chair of the Native American
Democratic Caucus of New Mexico. And this last cycle, she helped raise money and get out the
vote for Deb Haaland, one of the two Native American women who just became the first ever to be elected to Congress.
Today, if you go visit the Finnish memorial,
what you'll see isn't Oñate on a horse.
It's a compromise.
It's really two memorials crammed into one.
The first you can grasp without even getting out of your car.
It's more than two dozen life-sized bronze figures,
men and women, oxen and sheep, trudging up a hill.
Juan de Oñate is in front.
On foot, no plaque with his name, and under the watchful eye of a security camera
that may or may not be pointed at his feet.
The second memorial, right next to it,
looks from above like a huge dirt spiral. But from ground
level, you really just have to experience it. It's a striking contrast to the kind of art that
that's really in your face and didactic and says, this is what I mean. I think that reflects Pueblo
thinking. It's much more subtle. It doesn't articulate in the way we've become used to as, you know, civilized people, colonized people.
When I met Nora Naranjo-Morse to get a tour, she'd just been picking up trash left inside her part of the memorial.
She was holding a donut wrapper as we walked down a dirt path that spirals slowly downhill into the ground.
The street disappears behind the berms of chemisas and junipers
on our right and left,
then the buildings, then Oñate himself,
until finally, at the center of the spiral,
all you can see is the land
and water trickling across a rock.
And I like that very much
because I think that's what it was like a long time ago.
That's how I interpret the past.
If you sit low to the ground, you can almost get a glimpse of a world before Oñate arrived.
It's an escape.
But it's also intended as a confrontation between two totally different worldviews.
Because as you walk back out of the spiral...
This is what you see.
The telephone lines, the sculpture of Oñate coming here, looking north, the stoplight, it's all there.
And so you see that in some ways when they came, they brought us great opportunity, but at such a high cost.
The brutal colonization was forever affecting to us.
And I think we should never forget that.
She hopes her piece of the memorial will remind people of that.
But honestly, not that many people come here.
The memorial doesn't attract nearly as much attention as the conflict over the memorial did.
I think that's why it's important stewardship, not only to pick up the trash, but also to keep that story alive.
Because there are going to be a lot
more generations of people coming, wondering, what is this?
And that's where our story was going to end, until last year, when an old mystery re-emerged.
Remember that first statue we told you about, the one that got its foot stolen? Well, for
almost two decades, the foot thieves had remained in the shadows,
their identities unknown.
And then one day, Chris Eyre, the director of Smoke Signals and Skins,
possibly the best-known Native American filmmaker,
was at La Choza, this great little New Mexican restaurant in Santa Fe.
I was sitting there eating a taco with my business partner, and someone came up to me and said,
I have a story to tell you as I'm eating my taco. And I said, oh shit, not another story.
And, you know, I heard a few key words, but I wasn't listening that intently.
And all of a sudden it dawned on me.
I said, wait a minute.
And I turned and I said, are you talking about what I think you're talking about?
It was the guy who cut the foot off the first Oñate statue.
Or at least he claimed to be a spokesman for the group who did the deed.
And the truth of the matter is that I could never verify it other than I believed it in the end.
Chris believed the guy, in part because he was presented with a very solid piece of evidence.
When Chris met him for a second time in a forest of piñon trees, he unwrapped a piece of black velvet to reveal something no one had seen for 20 years.
one had seen for 20 years. Lo and behold, there appeared probably a 28-inch long bronze patinaed boot of a Spanish
conquistador.
And I said to myself, wow.
Then I looked around and I said to myself, where the hell am I and what the hell am I doing here
a few chunks of the foot had been shaved off where they'd made a half-hearted attempt to
follow through on those medallions for the historically ignorant but otherwise it was
still intact and still had the power to grab people's attention if Chris knows the identity
of the foot thieves he is not revealing. But he did talk about their motivations.
You know, the party involved is not speaking from an activist position and doesn't feel like an activist.
This person feels like a historian.
He wasn't trying to start a movement or affect policy,
just to write what Oñate did to Acoma men in 1599
into the history of the colonization of New Mexico.
That story still doesn't have a statue,
and maybe it never will.
But in the meantime, the friends of Acoma
are holding on to Oñate's foot.
Most statues in the news these days
are Confederate ones.
We're going to talk to a journalist who's researched exactly how those monuments are funded.
That's coming up after this.
Our story about Oñate this week was a collaboration with Reveal,
which, if you're not already a fan, is a podcast from the Center for Investigative Reporting and PRX.
And Reveal is actually airing another fascinating statue story this coming weekend.
It comes out on Saturday, and we want you to subscribe and listen to the whole thing.
So we're going to talk with one of the reporters involved to give you a little preview.
The story focuses on Confederate monuments, and it was reported by Seth Friedwessler
and Brian Palmer of the Investigative Fund. And for Brian, his interest in Confederate monuments
all started in a historic cemetery. He was visiting the place where his great-grandparents
were buried. They were both enslaved and then self-emancipated to the north. Brian's great-grandfather
served in the United States Army during the Civil War,
and the cemetery where they're buried is located in Virginia on a military base.
There's a white section and a black section. And what I saw was, on the one hand, tragic,
and on the other hand, enlightening. The tragic part was that this African-American cemetery was not as well tended as the white cemetery across the base.
So that to me was a little bit striking.
At the white cemetery, there was one grave in particular that caught my eye.
It had a couple of Confederate flags around it.
And the inscription on this wooden cross, a little plaque said to the unknown
Confederate soldier. So I thought, wow, that's really interesting. This white cemetery is being
maintained. The black cemetery, they at least raked, but it was tumbled down and it just did
not look like it had had any stewardship. So I started wondering, well,
why are such cemeteries, black cemeteries, historic black cemeteries, why are cemeteries
such as this in such terrible shape? And why are Confederate cemeteries and monuments and sites
in such wonderful shape. So the obvious journalist
thing to do then is to follow the money. So you notice that there's a disparity in the care,
and it makes you realize that that disparity in care is reflected in disparity of dollars,
and that money is being spent on Confederate monuments and not being spent on the monuments
devoted to the African-American experience
and the African-American history.
And then you start chasing down the dollars.
And not only are those dollars being used for the preservation and the maintenance of
Confederate monuments, they are being used for Confederate monuments devoted to this
lost cause narrative.
So could you describe what the lost cause narrative is
to people who don't know it?
Yes, so you make that important distinction.
We looked at a range of sites that tell Civil War history.
You have battlefields, you have homes
in all sorts of different places,
and what they put on the walls
and what their guides say
is factual. This happened here, this unit fought. That to us is history. That's acceptable. That is
educational. That's perfect. What we did was we focused on sites where the historical interpretation and what the people there say and what is omitted represents an
ideology, not an evidence-based comprehensive approach to the Civil War, but what represents
ideology, what perpetuates ideology. So, for example, ones that either minimize or deny the centrality, the importance of slavery in the Civil War, the ones that pump out these to democracy and to our society, and I think it's led us to where we are now politically, in fact.
So these monuments that you were investigating, they didn't appear right after the Civil War.
So could you talk about when they showed up and what political purpose they were serving when they were erected?
When they showed up and what political purpose they were serving when they were erected?
They didn't just spring up after the Civil War, largely because the South didn't have the money to erect them.
Our first major monument here in Virginia was donated by Brits.
Thomas Stonewall Jackson was put on the lawn of our capital, and that was funded by British folks. But monument building really had three main phases at the tail end of the 19th century, the beginning of the 20th century, and then right around the time of civil rights. So interesting, huh? It's not coincidental.
these things, they came about over time in these moments of white people in power,
really, literally exhibiting their dominance through these statues and monuments. And what I think is really interesting, you make this really good point in the piece, is that the
current discussion or controversy over historic monuments, this isn't current PC culture kind of thing.
There was objections all the way along. It's just people didn't listen because they were mainly
objections by African-Americans. There is a history of African-American resistance to
this sort of self-glorification of white elites. Frederick Douglass wrote about monuments,
W.E.B. Du Bois wrote about the monuments, and they were saying, you know, this is just
ridiculous. And yet, because blacks didn't have the political power to do anything,
and because the so-called mainstream media controlled by white men did not
write about these objections, it could find no traction in larger culture.
So people now in the 21st century can, with ignorance, tell us, well, you never objected
before. No, it's that you never paid attention before, and we never had the tools to make you
pay attention in the same way that you forced us to pay attention to your
myths and your stories by embedding them in public space.
So you began investigating these lost cause memorials.
How did you go about investigating how public funds were used to maintain and promote these
sort of ahistoric sites?
So how do we go about this? First,
we had to differentiate between the sites that were doing real, honest, genuine historic work
and those that were promoting ideology. So we did a lot of our searching on the web first,
and we talked to people in the places where these monuments and sites were.
And then we went so we could go to the museum, so we could go to the gift shop,
so we could talk to the docents. So we visited 50, 60 different places and we lost count.
And then once we figured out which sites we wanted to focus on, we filed dozens of open records and Freedom of Information Act requests to local and state governments and to the federal government to find out where this money was coming from.
We looked at IRS documents. We looked at state budgets line by line by line. So that was our methodology.
And so could you tell me just like you're going around to these sites with your collaborator, Seth Fried-Wesler, and Seth is white, correct?
Seth is white.
I am not.
I am African-American.
Yes.
Were you ever separated in such a way that you were given a different experience of these sites?
So that's a very interesting question because we tended to report separately.
I knew based on my reporting with other white colleagues and with my wife who's white that we would be treated differently.
So the stuff that Seth heard and the stuff that I heard,
very different. And I think that's part of the story, but it's also the frame of the story.
We went to some of the same places like the Confederate section of Oakwood Cemetery here.
I spent a lot of time there. Seth visited. What people told him was alarming. What people
told me was supposed to be reassuring. They needed to get the PR engine going for the visiting black
person. But for a white person, they could be themselves, as it were. They could let their prejudiced hair hang down. And that, to me,
was telling. There are people who just don't know the other part of this history, the African
American strands that have been purposely erased. But then there are people who do know,
and still they trot out these myths, either to preserve their power, to make themselves feel better, whatever it is.
That's a kind of intellectual dishonesty that I think is really, really dangerous.
And I think that's—we're trying to eliminate the gray area that people can wallow around in when they say, well,
you know, this is, you know, heritage, and they've been standing for 100 years. And if
the black people want their own monuments, then they should go build them. Well,
a lot of these monuments were built with public funds. Yes, there were private donations, certainly,
but land was donated, infrastructure was built, and money allocations came
from general assemblies, city councils, county supervisors. So don't tell me that we should accept sites and statues that were erected in a violent and anti-democratic
atmosphere when African Americans were being lynched. African Americans could not participate
in the political process that put these things up. Now that we can, we're supposed to shut up?
that we can? We're supposed to shut up? We have no time for fake history. And this is fake history. We funding for Confederate monuments, subscribe to Reveal.
There is amazing and jaw-dropping tape in the story from some of their visits to memorials
like Beauvoir, which is Jefferson Davis' home and presidential library in Biloxi, Mississippi.
And Brian and Seth also do the important work of chasing down how much public money,
taxpayer money, our money, is being spent to maintain these sites. Check it out
at revealnews.org or wherever you listen to podcasts.
99% Invisible was produced this week by Stan Alcorn and edited by Delaney Hall.
Mix and tech production by Sharif Youssef. Music by Sean Rial. Our senior producer is Katie Mingle. Kurt Kolstad is the digital director.
The rest of the team is Avery Truffleman, Emmett Fitzgerald, Vivian Lee, Joe Rosenberg, Taryn Mazza, and me, Roman Mars.
Special thanks to Reveal from the Center for Investigative Reporting and PRX, our collaborators on the story this week.
Thanks also to Roman Garcia at KUNM
and the filmmaker Chris Ayer.
He interviewed the alleged foot thieves for his film
that is currently seeking funding.
So you should seek him out and give him some.
We are a project of 91.7 KALW in San Francisco
and produced on Radio Row in beautiful downtown Oakland, California.