MONDAY AFTERNOON UPDATE:
A federal judge issued a temporary restraining order barring removal of the memorial as originally reported below. A group called Defend Arlington filed a lawsuit on Sunday, according to the Associated Press, which led to the restraining order. A hearing on the matter is now scheduled for Wednesday. Our original report, unedited, appears below. Defend Arlington is fundraising for legal costs to fight the removal of the memorial.
ORIGINAL MONDAY MORNING REPORT:
The iconic Confederate memorial in Arlington National Cemetery is set to be removed this week, a cemetery official announced Saturday. Moves to desecrate the site – first intended as a “peace” monument which also serves as the grave site for its designer, America’s first globally renowned Jewish artist Moses Ezekiel – began Monday.
The decision to trash the stunning monument was made over a year ago part of efforts to erase Confederate iconography from America. Objections raised by over 40 Republican congressmen eventually went unheeded, with a total sum of over $62 million allocated for the removal of a number of Confederate and otherwise “problematic” statues.
The monument was first unveiled in 1914, with Ezekiel explaining at the time: “The intention is that it is a peace monument… Without forgetting the sacrifices and the heroism of the South, and emphasizing the fact that they were fighting for a constitutional right, and not to uphold slavery, I have attempted to have the dominant idea the future and not the past, to show that the intention of the South is to rest the future on her industry and her agriculture, and let the past go, but not be forgotten.”
Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin says he plans to relocate the statue to the New Market battlefield state historical park in the Shenandoah Valley.
The deletion of history begins pic.twitter.com/Bhsot16vJP
— Corey Inganamort (@TheBirdWords) December 18, 2023