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New Santa Fe poet laureate hopes to make position s words to reach further

Native Santa Fean Tommy Archuleta, appointed to the position Wednesday, believes in writing as a way to help people through trauma and addiction and hopes to bring that ethos into

Wellington performing Black Poets in NM at Old Church

Ocala letters to the editor for Feb 10, 2021

Ocala Star-Banner Undeserving of prize In response to Darryl Wellington s column Black Lives Matter deserves recognition of a Nobel Prize, I assume the writer doesn’t know the definition of peace: freedom from disturbance; quiet and tranquility. While I m sure at the beginning stages of this movement it was to protest unfair treatment of African Americans, this movement has morphed into one of the most violent, unlawful and immoral groups we ve seen. How can looting, bodily harm, destruction of property and demanding all police be defunded possibly represent the outcry of the violence of a race? That s a contradiction to their cause.

Podcast addresses the elephant on the Plaza

.... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... ‘Unsettled’ podcast producers Diego Medina, left, and Christian Gering, right, with interviewee Artemisio Romero y Carver at the Cross of the Martyrs in Fort Marcy Park. (Courtesy of Alicia Inez Guzmán) Copyright © 2021 Albuquerque Journal To paraphrase Walt Whitman, the controversial Soldiers’ Monument obelisk that stood in the center of Santa Fe Plaza for 152 years loomed large and contained multitudes. A time capsule buried beneath it included local newspapers and Masonic artifacts. A plaque on its base once celebrated the heroes who had fallen in battles with “savage Indians” in the New Mexico Territory. Calls for the monument’s removal based on its offensive language and what the obelisk represented date back at least to the 1950s.

Rest in pieces

Photography by Don J. Usner When Indigenous Peoples’ Day arrived, the sun cast a low, warm light on the obelisk. The Soldiers’ Monument, as it’s officially known, was already looking somewhat besieged as a crowd began to gather around it for a third day of demonstrations. The tip of the 33-foot structure a presence in the Santa Fe Plaza for 152 years had been removed months earlier by contractors in the middle of the night. There was still the vague silhouette of red spray paint marks left by protesters that couldn’t be scrubbed from one of its four sides. And one of the marble tablets at the obelisk’s base was entirely busted. It had once read: “To the heroes who have fallen in the various battles with savage Indians in the territory of New Mexico.” In the 1970s, an Indigenous man chiseled out the word “savage” in broad daylight. In its place, others had written new adjectives like “resilient.” Now, the entire inscription was illegible. 

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