You know, I don’t see my mother and stepfather more than a couple of times a year, They live in Worthing and with the best will in the world their days of long drives or train rides and staying in hotels are a thing of the past. So to use a phrase, Mohammed must go to the mountain. When I do, I have this mischievous streak that makes me introduce the topic of removing Edward Hodges Baily’s statue of Admiral Nelson from the top of Nelson’s Column in Trafalgar Square in London.
This is partly because I rather enjoy their reaction to it.
The argument in favour goes – Horatio Nelson may not have owned saves, in fact
he didn’t, but he was certainly in favour of continuing the slave trade and
wrote in letters that he was considering speaking out against William
Wilberforce in the House of Lords. Well, Trafalgar put paid to that and we’ll
never know for sure if he would or not. But Nelson’s connections with the slave
trade were brought into discussion in the furore following the pulling down of
the statue of slave trader Edward Colson in Bristol in 2020 and there were
articles in several of the dailies with people arguing for and against pulling
Nelson off his pedestal.
My mum’s and step-dad’s reactions? To paraphrase – this is
nonsense, it all happened over 200 years ago – you can’t change the past. Well,
I certainly don’t agree that’s it’s ridiculous, but okay, it was over 200 years
ago and you cannot change the past (although when I invent my time machine,
watch this space). But it isn’t about that. It’s about changing your
relationship with the past, if anything. It’s about asking the questions
whether, with all we know now, we feel that this is an individual we should
still regard as a national hero? And engaging in debate. Surely, if Nelson was
as worthy of the honour as they thought he was in the 1840s when the column was
erected, then a bit of honest discussion isn’t going to change that. But if he
wasn’t, well, then burying our collective heads in the sand and ignoring it
because it was more than 200 years ago surely is not morally justifiable.
Despite the way that I present my opinions to Mum and Tony,
I do try to keep an open mind. If you can prove to me that Nelson is a good
symbol of qualities that I value and respect, then I promise I’d be one of the
protestors standing in front of the column to guard it from the bulldozers. But
then, that would involve being prepared to have a discussion about it in the
first place. And that probably ain’t happening any time soon.