The Guardian Weekly (2022-01-14)

(EriveltonMoraes) #1

Opinion


The Guardian Weekly 14 January 2022


48


Colston four’s critics are


deluded to think Britain


owes no historic apolog y


Nesrine Malik


I

t was inevitable, but the speed of it was
surprising. After the four protesters who
toppled the statue of Edward Colston
then helped to heave it into the harbour
were acquitted , Conservative MPs, the
rightwing press and the prime minister
himself unleashed their volley of rage at the
verdict. “ Vandals can’t change our history ,”
postured Boris Johnson on the front page of the Daily
Mail. A “ green light to ransack the past ”, said the Sun. “ A
monumental mistake ,” punned the Telegraph, weakly.
If one were a cynic, one would think the newspaper
stories, statements and tweets had been sitting in draft
form, waiting to be posted, emailed and published. The

responses were so rehearsed, so obtuse and so optimised
for a polarising landing, that it seemed less about Edward
Colston’s statue and more about their rigid vision of
Britain, a country that – in their eyes – has done no wrong ,
owes no apology and should show no humility.
Certainly that seemed to be the motivation of Suella
Braverman, the UK attorney general. For as soon as
the media screams died down, she made clear her
distaste at the trial’s outcome – predicated, lest it be
forgotten, on the decision of a properly convened jury
of her fellow citizens – by threatening to refer the matter
to the appeal court. There was “confusion”, she said. It
was necessary “to clarify the law ”. Clarity, one might
suggest, to better protect that never-to-be-questioned
version of Britain.
But that version of Britain, in which fi gures such
as Colston are remote characters from the past who
have no bearing on lives today, is a fi ction. The Colston
statue topplers, and the Black Lives Matter protest ers in
general, are the ones trying to drag Britain’s view of itself
closer to reality, one in which community relations are
still strained by deep inequalities that run, like cracks,
from the past to the present.
Maintaining fi ctions is hard work, so an army of
propagandists must mobilise to spin the lies that make
up this permitted view of British history. The narrative

UNITED
KINGDOM


▲The Colston
statue topplers
were found
not guilty


FINNBARR WEBSTER/
GETTY


p

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