Holy woke Batman.
Cool how institutions preach racial hierarchies in Canada now and everyone acts like it’s normal. Great job all around.
Making a priestly caste out of 5% of the population is not going to have any disastrous effects on long term equality I'm sure.
All that to say, I am very much opposed to moving the statue and degrading its importance.
Let me say that there was no 'woke' motivation to move the statue.
There was a discussion about what else you might place at the center of the park were the statue not there.
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Let me betray my bias here, I'm not a fan of statuary particularly. Of anyone. It strikes me as idolatry which I just don't think serves anyone well.
That said, I wouldn't be a champion for removing long-standing/heritage commissioned works. That doesn't mean, however, that they need to be a centerpiece is any given park.
That statue has been there a long time..............so....questions:
1) How many people know it's a statue of Edward VII th? Of those, how many care enough to know who he was, or what his significance was? I will suggest to you that the number is substantially less than 10% of park users and 1% of the broader population. So if there were an educational reason for its presence, it's surely failing.
2) How many park users report the statue as important or very important to their enjoyment of the park, or came to the park because of the statue?
If that number is also below 10% .........does that suggest the statue merits that particular location?
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Further notes. The statue was not an original for Toronto. It was originally made for and installed in Delhi, India. After Indian Independence from Britain it was put in storage......and purchased by a private, if influential Toronto citizen named Harry Jackman in 1969, who had it moved to Toronto, and Queen's Park.
Once asked about why he had a fascination for the King, he replied that he did not, he thought it was a great sculpture of a horse.
Did the King in question bear any great connection to the place? Sure, he opened Queen's Park as a young man (18) and Prince of Wales in 1860. But the statue has no connection to that occasion.
www.history.utoronto.ca
Worth saying, there is no further record of his having visited Toronto, and his brief reign as King (1901-1910) included no visits to Canada.