Why Punish the Past

If we are to be honest about what some are attempting to do regarding the Civil War monument, then we must face the reality that there are those who obviously want to punish the past for not measuring up to the standards of today.

If we are to be honest about what some are attempting to do regarding the Civil War monument, then we must face the reality that there are those who obviously want to punish the past for not measuring up to the standards of today. This is far worse than silly, as it is bordering on mania.

When Islamic extremists become the majority power anywhere in the Middle East, they raze, destroy and obliterate all prior religious symbols, and any other artifacts, or objects which do not directly correspond to their belief systems. The Taliban once destroyed ancient Buddhist carvings on a cliff side with artillery shells as an illustration of this point.

Unfortunately, for a number of years, we have had otherwise good-intentioned people who are dangerously close to imitating this very troubling brand of extremism. Good intentions aside, it is often said that the road to

hell can be paved with good intentions. There have also been books which are no longer on student reading lists because they fail to meet complete and absolute approval. Are these books to be banned and burned next? This was done in Europe in the last century, and was only the prelude to further horrors which were previously unimaginable.

As a young man, my late father knew both Charles Strahan and Harry Castello, who were on opposite sides in the Civil War. Mr. Strahan was a Confederate soldier, and Mr. Castello was a Union soldier of Company D of the 10th Rhode Island Volunteers, who marched in the victory parade in Washington, D.C. in May, 1865. My father knew both of them as honorable and upstanding citizens active in island affairs, and of the highest character. Mr. Strahan and Mr. Castello were both good Americans, and had long since put aside their differences many years before their deaths in 1931 and 1937, respectively.

Hopefully, more reasonable thoughts will prevail concerning the fate of the monument and its plaques.

Michael F. Fontes

West Tisbury

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 05/16/2019 - 12:18

Permalink

Jackie MV

Removing a plaque that whitewashes an evil part of history, and putting it in our musuem, while the monument statue remains intact in Ocean Park, is hardly worthy of hystrionic comparisons with words like, "raze, destroy, obliterate, mania, artillery shells, extremism, and banned and burned". The plaque was a decades-later afterthought, not part of the original monument. It's nice when old white men who fought against each other in the Civil War can come together decades later in life, but why must the rest of us publicly honor that one of those men, a traitor to the Union, fought and was willing to die for the evil that was slavery? The plaque belongs in the museum. Keeping the plaque in its current public place of honor punishes those of us in the present. We can forgive but we don't forget and we never honor those who perpetuated the barbaric evil that slavery was. There is no need to have had ancestors who were slaves to be able to feel what every person who descended from slaves must feel when reading this plaque in Ocean Park.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 05/16/2019 - 17:30

Permalink

Randolph West Tisbury7

Jackie, what is all this racist white guys stuff. You obviously dont realize there were blacks not only fighting on the side of the Union but some blacks also owned black slaves. You obviously didn't read the incredible respectable, factual and historical reasoning behind the Staute. I have no clue how long you have been visiting the island but probaby like Gretchen Underwood who has been coming here for 70+ years and now
after all this time a black film maker comes down here for a quick summer vist starts raising all kinds of racist hell.
It would be nice if you would just calm down a little and reread Mr Fontz's much thought out letter I think you will see this is not as bad as your first reaction. With all do respect I know the MV Gazette is siding with the NAACP but you will see this is not a issue that deserves protests, demonstrations in August as C.L. King threatens if their demands are not met.

Add new comment

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.