Kejan Haynes
Lead Editor-Newsgathering
kejan.haynes@guardian.co.tt
The controversial statue of Christopher Columbus, a monument which has stood in the capital city since 1881, has now been removed.
The Port-of-Spain City Corporation removed the statue from Independence Square during an overnight operation that began around 10 pm on Wednesday.
According to the corporation, the timing aimed to minimise traffic disruptions. The removal was overseen by heritage architect Rudylynn DeFour-Roberts and Port-of-Spain Mayor Chinua Alleyne.
It is now in the care of the National Trust and will eventually be made available to the National Museum and Art Gallery, which is currently being renovated.
The decision to remove it followed consultations with stakeholder groups, including First Peoples and cultural organisations.
Yesterday morning, Eric Lewis, of the Santa Rosa First Peoples, held a smoke ceremony at the Columbus Square site to commemorate the removal of the statue. He said the statue represented more than history, calling it “a monstrosity” that carried the symbolic weight of colonial violence.
“We’re here to purify the space and honour our ancestors,” Lewis said.
“We’re not saying erase history, but teach it differently. It doesn’t need to be glorified in a public square.”
He also called for greater national recognition of indigenous history, including a First Peoples holiday.
Freedom Project Caribbean’s Shabaka Kambon described the statue’s removal as an “historic victory” after nearly a decade of advocacy.
“We’ve been working on this since 2016 with the idea that people wouldn’t just contemplate history but make it,” he said.
Kambon said the removal must now be followed by deeper cultural change, including rewriting colonial narratives in school curricula.
Citing Frantz Fanon, he said monuments to conquest are “germs of rot” that should be removed not just from the land but from the national consciousness.
“As we remove Columbus, the general who began the conquest, we must also interrogate the narratives embedded in our textbooks and identity,” he said.