Germany: Monuments to Controversial Historical Figures Should Remain (Updated 2021)

INTRODUCTION

In the UK in June 2020 as part of Black Lives Matter protests, a statue of Edward Colston [Ref: Wikipedia] was toppled by protestors and thrown into the harbour [Ref: BBC] and a few weeks later Oriel College, Oxford, voted to remove the hotly debated statue of Cecil Rhodes [Ref: Guardian]. In the United States, protestors and city officials have removed hundreds of statues of controversial figures, including those of confederate General Robert E. Lee [Ref: List of monuments and memorials removed during the George Floyd protests, Wikipedia]. In Germany, the debate focuses primarily on street names and military barracks named after colonialists. These actions are the latest chapter in a long-running debate about historical monuments, with campaigns such as ‘Rhodes Must Fall’ having argued for some time that such statues are more than just a symbol of past oppression – they represent the institutional racism which continues to exist today [Ref: BBC News]. “Protesters,” says one columnist, are “compelling entire nations to confront their present through a new understanding of their past” [Ref: Guardian]. Others believe that these monuments make reconciliation difficult or even impossible. Some, however, worry that there is a tendency to ‘cleanse’ history of unsavoury – even appalling – elements. In the words of historian Mary Beard, “statues offer different challenges to our view of history … and remind us of our own fragility in the judgement of the future” [Ref: TLS]. At its heart, the debate is about our relationship with history, and whether removing statues and monuments has a role to play in reappraising historic wrongs, or whether they encourage us to airbrush out difficult and contentious parts of our history, rather than engage with and understand them. Should monuments to controversial historical figures remain?

DEBATE IN CONTEXT

This section provides a summary of the key issues in the debate, set in the context of recent discussions and the competing positions that have been adopted.

Do historical monuments matter?
“Public statues are intensely political” [Ref: Spectator] notes writer Martin Gayford. He outlines the nature of public memorials and statues, and observes that over time, our appraisal of individuals changes, for instance as with the thousands of statues of Lenin and Marx brought down after the fall of the former Soviet Union [Ref: Spectator]. From this perspective, historical monuments do matter as they can be seen as symbols of norms and values we agree to commemorate, as historian Professor Christopher Phelps argues. He says that: “History is one thing, memorials another. As tributes, memorials are selective, affirmative representations… [they] bestow honour and legitimacy.” [Ref: Chronicle Review]. But what changes when a monument is removed? As someone who participated in the removal of Soviet statues reflected: “Waging war on bronze men doesn’t make your life any more moral or just” [Ref: New York Times]. Thus, the moral value of historical monuments is fiercely contested. For critics, in removing these statues we are in danger of symbolically removing distasteful aspects of history which allow us to understand the present. As one South African student notes in reference to Rhodes: “Removing him omits an essential part of the institutions history that has contributed to everything good, bad and ugly about it” [Ref: Guardian]. In the case of the Rhodes statue at Oxford, some argue that statues serve as a repository of history, good and bad: “A salient fact about the Oriel statue of Rhodes is its date: 1911. It is an echo in stone of a different time.” [Ref: New York Times].

Why do people want to remove them? 
Advocates of removing statues of controversial figures suggest that these monuments represent individuals whose actions and legacies should not be celebrated or memorialised. Thus, in 2014 the German tabloid newspaper “Bild” called for a deconstruction of the Soviet War Memorial in Berlin, following the war in the Ukraine. For some, the statue of Rhodes represents the glorifying of a “racist mass murderer of Africans” [Ref: Guardian], and serves to further alienate black students who study at Oxford and elsewhere. As one Rhodes Must Fall campaigner argued: “While these histories continue to be forgotten, a sentimentalised, whitewashed statue stands in the way of academic rigour.” [Ref: Guardian]. Of course, many dispute that removing statues really represents a historical reckoning with the ills of the past. One cultural critic insists it is “A moral crusade to cleanse history… Preserving material (be it inspiring or appalling) allows us better to understand our history and society today; it helps us make judicious decisions about what is right for our future” [Ref: Spiked]. Yet, as some counter, is removing statues not as much a part of the historical process as keeping them? Commentator Matthew Parris insists: “Far from [toppling a statue] being a ‘writing out of history’ it was a writing in of history. History is what happened.” [Ref: Spectator]. Indeed, our understanding and interpretation of historical norms and values changes over time: “To reconsider, to recast, is the essence of historical practice. Altering how we present the past is not ahistorical… it represents a more thorough coming to terms with the past and legacies, a refusal to forget.” [Ref: Chronicle Review].

But how is this process of reconsideration to take place? In the case of the Bristol statue of Coulston, Prime Minister Boris Johnson lamented that democratic decisions were replaced by criminal acts [Ref: BBC]. But does this imply that removing statues is right whenever a democratic majority says so? [Ref: The Atlantic]. Indeed, the aftermath of the Bristol protests featured attempts by some residents to recover the statue [Ref: Bristol Post] and subsequently the artist Marc Quinn placed a statue of a Black Lives Matter protestor where Colston had stood [Ref: BBC]. The mayor of Bristol, defending his decision to remove the Quinn’s statue, insisted in a nuanced statement that “The people of Bristol will decide its future” [Ref: Bristol City Council]. But who has the right to decide what to do with such monuments? How do we judge such monuments?

A battle over history?
Of course, such debates are never just about the statues themselves but are a tussle over history too. Sometimes, as in the case of Berlin’s Mohrenstraße historians and activists can’t even agree on the historical facts.  As the Oxford-based philosopher Amia Srinivasan argues, the ultimate goal of Rhodes Must Fall is “to ‘decolonise’ the university, a broad campaign – of which changing public symbols is only one part” [Ref: London Review of Books]. But the historian David Olusoga, despite being broadly in favour of removing such statues, argues the discussion about statues can be a distraction: “If forced to choose between a proper national debate on racism or the statue wars, which is it to be? … statues are a symptom of the problem, not the problem itself.” [Ref: Guardian]. The fight over statues carries the danger of moral rigorism, writes historian Jonas Anderson. Similarly, writer Kenan Malik suggests that such debates are part and parcel of distracting ‘culture war’ issues: “Rather than ask ‘What are the policy reasons for the lack of housing and stagnating wages?’ or ‘What are the social roots of racism and what structural changes are required to combat it?’, we look to blame the Other, demand recognition for our particular identity and tussle over symbols” [Ref: Observer].

Aside from arguments about subjecting historical figures to modern standards of moral judgement [Ref: Guardian], and questioning what good removing a statue of Rhodes will do in a practical sense [Ref: The Conversation], opponents of toppling statues worry that our relation to the past is becoming fraught or superficial. For these critics, the act of understanding history relies on recognising how the past informs the present, and not editing out parts we don’t like. Allowing monuments to stand isn’t to legitimate the views of 19th century slave holders or imperialists or Confederate Generals, but rather, it is part of the “challenge of history” to debate the moral questions the monuments may present, and confront them head-on [Ref: New York Times]. For some, the destruction of monuments is emblematic of a wider contemporary fixation with pathologising the past, “treating history as a source of psychological trauma.” [Ref: spiked]. But if “anti-racism is a battle for memory,” then history very naturally becomes a battleground [Ref: Jacobin].

In light of the arguments on both sides, should monuments of controversial historical figures be removed, or does this do a disservice to history, and make us victims of history rather than subjects who can understand and engage with it?

ESSENTIAL READING

It is crucial for debaters to have read the articles in this section, which provide essential information and arguments for and against the debate motion. Students will be expected to have additional evidence and examples derived from independent research, but they can expect to be criticised if they lack a basic familiarity with the issues raised in the essential reading.

FOR

Towards Britain’s Year Zero
Alexander Adams Spiked 11 June 2020

Statue Wars
Mary Beard TLS 11 June 2020

The trouble with people who lived in the past
David Mitchell Guardian 16 March 2016

Must Rhodes fall?
Matthew D’Ancona New York Times 28 January 2016

AGAINST

Tearing Down Statues Doesn’t Erase History, It Makes Us See It More Clearly
Ernesto Traverso Jacobin 24 June 2020

In praise of statue-toppling
Matthew Paris Spectator 13 June 2020

Oxford’s Cecil Rhodes statue must fall – it stands in the way of inclusivity
Yussef Robinson Guardian 19 January 2016

Removing racist symbols isn’t a denial of history
Christopher Phelps Chronicle of Higher Education 8 January 2016

IN DEPTH

Culture wars risk blinding us to just how liberal we’ve become in the past decades
Kenan Malik Observer 21 June 2020

The history wars
Richard J Evans New Statesman 17 June 2020

The ‘statue wars’ must not distract us from a reckoning with racism
David Olusoga Guardian Jun 14

How can nations atone for their sins?
Ivan Krastev and Leonard Benardo Prospect July 14, 2020

A healthy society does not destroy its monuments
James Heartfield Spiked 17 June 2020

Under Rhodes
Amia Srinivasan London Review of Books 31 March 2016

The real meaning of Rhodes must fall
Amit Chaudhuri Guardian 16 March 2016

KEY TERMS

Definitions of key concepts that are crucial for understanding the topic. Students should be familiar with these terms and the different ways in which they are used and interpreted and should be prepared to explain their significance.

List of statues removed during George Floyd Protests
American Civil War
Cecil Rhodes
Colonialism
Confederate States of America
Imperialism
Rhodes must fall

BACKGROUNDERS

Useful websites and materials that provide a good starting point for research.

Statement from the Mayor of Bristol
Martin Rees Bristol City Council 15 July 2020

In Russia, They Tore Down Lots of Statues, but Little Changed
Andrew Higgins New York Times July 7 2020

The Case for a Statue of Limitations
Yasmin Sherhan The Atlantic June 25 2020

The statue-topplers are obsessed with white men and white history
Tanjil Rashid Spectator 20 June 2020

Toppling statues of bygone tyrants forces British people to face present-day racism
Owen Jones Guardian 11 June 2020

Why Hitler’s house should be destroyed
Jamie Aspden Redbrick 16 November 2016

Why the Austrian government’s plan to demolish Hitler’s birth house is contentious
Luke Fiederer Archdaily 1 November 2016

The terrible problem of Hitler’s earliest home
Jessie Guy-Ryan Atlas Obscura 10 April 2016

Cecil Rhodes colonial legacy must fall – not his statue
Siya Mnyanda Guardian 25 March 2016

Removing Confederate monuments in New Orleans is the right thing to do
Stephanie Grace The Advocate 21 March 2016

Not all racist monuments should be torn down
Zachary Fine New Republic 10 March 2016

Rhodes hasn’t fallen, but the protesters are making me re-think Britain’s past
Timothy Garton Ash Guardian 4 March 2016

New Orleans says goodbye to its Confederate status
Economist 4 February 2016

Students who say Rhodes must fall should be celebrated – not sneered at
Dan Hodges Telegraph 4 February 2016

History is not a morality play: both sides of the Rhodes must fall debate should remember that
Cheryl Hudson The Conversation 30 January 2016

Racism at Oxford goes deeper than a statue of Cecil Rhodes
Dena Latif Guardian 4 January 2016

Finally! Oriel College should have stood up to Rhodes Must Fall long ago
Harry Mount Telegraph 29 January 2016

Will Rhodes must fall fail?
BBC News 18 January 2016

Defending Robert E. Lee
Barry D. Wood Huffington Post 11 January 2016

A short history of statue toppling
Martin Gayford Spectator 9 January 2016

Topple the Cecil Rhodes statue? Better to re-brand him a war criminal
David Olusoga Guardian 7 January 2016

Never mind Rhodes – it’s the cult of the victim that must fall
Brendan O’Neill spiked 28 December 2015

The statue of Cecil Rhodes like that of Saddam, must fall
Chi Chi Shi The Times 26 December 2015

Message to students: Rhodes was no racist
Nigel Biggar The Times 22 December 2015

Cecil Rhodes and Oriel College, Oxford
Professor Mary Beard Times Education Supplement 20 December 2015

Cecil Rhodes was racist, but you can’t readily expunge him from history
Will Hutton Guardian 20 December 2015

Confederate monuments will come down in New Orleans
Kevin M. Levin Atlantic 17 December 2015

Don’t tear down Confederate monuments – do this instead
Jack Hitt Reuters 23 July 2015

Why we shouldn’t pull down all those Confederate memorials
Alfred L. Brophy Newsweek 10 July 2015

The University of Cape Town is right to remove its Cecil Rhodes statue
David Priestland Guardian 13 April 2015

Hitler’s old house gives Austria a headache
Bethany Bell BBC News 29 December 2014

ORGANISATIONS

Links to organisations, campaign groups and official bodies who are referenced within the Topic Guide or which will be of use in providing additional research information.

Oriel College Oxford
University of Cape Town