South Bend, Ind. • The University of Notre Dame will cover murals in a campus building that depict Christopher Columbus in America, the school’s president said, following criticism that the images depict American Indians in stereotypical submissive poses before white European explorers.
The 12 murals created in the 1880s by Luis Gregori were intended to encourage immigrants who had come to the U.S. during a period of anti-Catholic sentiment. But they conceal another side of Columbus: the exploitation and repression of American Indians, said the Rev. John Jenkins, president of Notre Dame.
It is a “darker side of this story, a side we must acknowledge,” Jenkins said in a letter Sunday.