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Opinion

The urge to take down statues is about heat, not light

Britain is full of memorials to Jew haters - but there is no simple answer to deciding how to react to them, writes Robert Philpot

June 16, 2020 19:01
Churchill statue, boarded up
6 min read

The toppling of the statue of the slaver Edward Colston into Bristol harbour earlier this month has thrown a harsh and much-needed light on some of the darker aspects of British history.

But as the debate about statues, street names and blue plaques has widened to enmesh the likes of Sir Robert Peel, William Gladstone and Winston Churchill, it has threatened to become a new front in the nation’s culture wars; one fought chiefly by armchair social media warriors.

The deep vein of antisemitism which has coursed through our national story illustrates the complexity of how figures from 1,000 years of history should best be remembered and memorialised. 

Take, for instance, Edward I, who is memorialised in High Holborn and at the site of his death in Burgh-by-Sands in Cumbria. Although no longer viewed, as he was in the 19th century, as “the English Justinian”, Edward is remembered for his legal reforms and his role in establishing Parliament as a permanent institution (in Wales and Scotland the brutality of “the Hammer of the Scots” has earned him a rather dimmer reputation).