Mayor Joseph A.
Curtatone
Today Somerville got caught up in the national game of who
can take the most offense. The Boston Herald got a hold of an email sent by the
principal of the Kennedy School to school staff raising the question of how to
teach the history of the European discovery of the Americas, and decided to
make it as sensational as possible.
I spoke with the columnist for 15 minutes, as did School
Superintendent Tony Pierantozzi, but she clearly was more interested in stirring
the pot than having an adult discussion. So she wrote a column accusing us of
not wanting to celebrate any holidays in Somerville and, of course, that turned
into regional and national radio and Internet fodder. Apparently some people
must take great offense at something new each day and today we have become the
designated punching bag.
What I told the Herald columnist is that history is messy. Columbus
Day celebrates the nation we have become, one that embodies the adventurous
spirit that led Columbus to sail across the Atlantic Ocean in the first place.
For many historians Columbus’ voyage marks the end of medieval Europe and the
dawn of the modern world. As an Italian-American I take great pride in that,
but I also recognize the wrongs committed by the conquistadors who followed
him.
No one is saying people cannot celebrate our traditional
holidays, just that there’s more to them than fits on the back of a matchbook.
Principal Anne Foley raised a fair point with her staff. The story of Columbus
is complicated, just like history is complicated. Our educators should be
having that discussion. We encourage healthy debate in our schools.
We also celebrate the 4th of July, but we teach
our children about the history of slavery in America and that women did not
have the right to vote until 1920. We celebrate V-E Day and V-J Day, but we
have debate over the firebombing of Dresden and using the A-bomb on Hiroshima
and Nagasaki. More importantly, people should be able to disagree on these
historical events in a civil fashion. I know civil discourse does not make for
radio ratings or an Internet sensation, but most people I know prefer it to
ranting and raving.
So we have nothing against Columbus Day in Somerville. We
also have nothing against Thanksgiving and Halloween. On the Halloween front,
on Saturday, October 23rd we will throw the biggest Halloween-themed
party in the metro Boston region. We are closing down Somerville Avenue from
Union Square to Porter Square for our
last SomerStreets festival of the year. There will be a costume parade,
costume contests, a haunted house, chainsaw pumpkin carving, zombie makeup and
a DJ mashup competition featuring the Halloween classic “Monster Mash” written
by Somerville’s own Bobby “Boris” Pickett. Thousands of people are going to be
there.
In fact, the biggest thing the Herald missed in its column
was the headline – “Fun takes a holiday in Somerville.” We have more fun with
more events and holidays in this city than any other city I’ve ever seen.
And we also have schools filled with educators who practice
the American tradition of spirited debate. There should be room to celebrate
our traditional holidays and to learn history without anyone rushing to take
offense.