I, too, hope the statue is still there, and perhaps some of your vecci amici from the nearby University can tell you if the statue of Christopher Columbus is still standing.
Let us know what you find out.
Leni
Followup to my post # 14 (excerpt from Chgo Sun Times:
“A separate Columbus statue in Chicago, just west of the Shedd Aquarium, was also defaced over the weekend with the letters BLM and splashes of red paint. Kaitlyn OKeefe, 26, of Humboldt Park, was charged with one count of criminal defacement to property in that case, police said. Despite being defaced nearly every year, the damage done to the statue in Little Italy has struck a particular nerve as heated debates have swirled in the community over whether the monument should stay or go.
An African American man that lives in Little Italy said he went to the park after it was vandalized to see how the community was responding. Ive never seen so much hate in my community and I lived here for several years, the man said, asking to remain anonymous for fears of retribution. When he arrived at the park Saturday, a heated argument was going on between a white resident and an African American man. At one point the white man, later identified as a retired Cook County judge, attempted to throw a punch at the man who had been screaming at him, causing police to pull the judge back. No arrests were made in connection with the incident or the earlier vandalism. A Chicago Police Department spokesperson declined to comment on the video.
The neighborhood has been on edge as it is forced to deal with its own internal fights with racism. On Sunday, a womans window was shot at with a BB gun, she believes, because there was a Black Lives Matter sign in the window next to it. We dont know who did it but we are the only apartment with a Black Lives Matter sign on the block and we are the only apartment that had our window shot at, she said, asking to remain anonymous. My hope is that it was some kind of fluke or accident, but I dont know.
Resident Antonio Musillami, 41, who has relatives whove lived in the neighborhood dating back to the 1920s, thinks the statue should be removed and replaced with a more positive figure. Some have suggested the statue be replaced with one honoring Mother Cabrini, who founded a shuttered hospital nearby, or Florence Scala, who fought to save the neighborhood before the UIC opened its Chicago campus. The Chicago Park District didnt respond to a request for comment. Musillami said some Italian Americans believe Columbus is sort of the last piece remaining of their heritage. Its a moment in American history right now when people in America are reevaluating historical figures and I dont think people in the neighborhood can ignore that, Musillami said.
A source of pride to Italians Joseph Esposito, who heads up the Little Italy Chicago Neighborhood Association, said the statue is a source of pride and the spot where generations of family photos have been taken. We as Italian Americans, we dont bother anybody, we dont tell other groups who to celebrate and who not to. ... Unless you would like to celebrate Columbus with us, and I mean this with all due respect, mind your business. If you dont like him, dont celebrate him, Esposito said. Nobodys perfect, Esposito said of the critics of Columbus. If it wasnt for Columbus I honestly believe we wouldnt be having this conversation right now.