A historic bronze statue of Christopher Columbus has been restored and relocated to Blauvelt, New York, after being rescued from a Virginia river where it was thrown by rioters in 2020. The statue, weighing about a ton, was originally erected in Richmond during the 1920s by the Italian-American community. The Italian-American Cultural Association of Virginia (IACAVA) fought to take custody of the statue from Richmond officials after far-left agitators toppled it during the Black Lives Matter (BLM) riots of 2020, and it now stands outside a lodge of the Blauvelt Sons of Italy.
The statue of the Italian explorer spent two years submerged in a river before the IACAVA could rescue it. After this, it was stored in a farmhouse until Sons of Italy Rockland Lodge President Michael Pizzi connected with IACAVA and began the process of restoring it in New York.
At the rededication ceremony attended by over 100 people, Pizzi described Columbus’s statue as a “symbol of discovery, adventure, perseverance, and the spirit of Italian culture.” Catholic priest Father Joe Pavone then blessed the statue, praising Columbus as a “brave, courageous figure” who “in many ways is responsible for bringing our faith to the New World.”
Historic statues and monuments were targeted by rioters and left-wing lawmakers across the United States and the wider West throughout the BLM disorder of 2020 and beyond. These included not just Confederate memorials but also monuments to the Founding Fathers and even Abraham Lincoln.
Statues of Columbus had been a target even before the BLM riots, with many leftist ideologues demonizing him for laying much of the groundwork for the European conquest and settlement of the Americas.