queen mary university removes king leopold ii plaques
Last Updated : GMT 09:07:40
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Last Updated : GMT 09:07:40
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After student protest

Queen Mary University removes King Leopold II plaques

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Egypt Today, egypt today Queen Mary University removes King Leopold II plaques

Queen Mary University removed a foundation stone laid by King Leopold II
Belgium - Arab Today

The “Cecil Rhodes effect” is creating a chilling atmosphere around the country, experts fear, after it emerged that Queen Mary University of London quietly removed a foundation stone laid by King Leopold II amid student complaints that he was a “genocidal colonialist”.

Within weeks of the launch of a petition by the university's Pan-African Society calling for the foundation stone and commemorative plaque to be taken down, the institution's authorities yielded to the activists' demands.

King Leopold II, who was a first cousin of Queen Victoria, ruled Belgium from 1835 to 1909. He founded the Congo Free State, now the Democratic of Congo, where he forced natives to work as labourers on rubber plantations. 

The petition, launched in June, said the plaques should be removed from their “uncritical” place in the Octagon Building and “relocated to a museum...dedicated to the memorialisation of the crimes of genocide, colonialism and imperialism.”

Just a month later, the university told students that it had removed them “as part of ongoing refurbishment work” to the Octagon Library.

queen mary university removes king leopold ii plaques

Emma Bull, director of student services at the university, told the leaders of the student protest at the time: “Queen Mary University has no historical ties with King Leopold, other than he visited Mile End in April 1887, and then returned to lay the Foundation Stone in June 1887.

“The size and prominence of these inscriptions suggested a strength of association that was never the case, and as such the decision was taken to remove both from view.”

Dr Williams,  senior lecturer  in higher education at the University of Kent, said that universities were now so quick to respond to student demands that they were losing their ability to “hold the line”. 

The actions of Queen Mary University of London set a dangerous precedent of universities giving in to students and “whitewashing” history, she said. 

queen mary university removes king leopold ii plaques

“It suggests a fear within the university authorities - as if they are scared of the students and pander to their demands to avoid attracting negative attention.”

The “Leopold Must Fall” campaign at Queen Mary is one of a string of student movements calling for universities to sever ties with individuals and objects associated with colonialism. 

Earlier this year, Oxford University refused to give into calls from the “Rhodes Must Fall” campaign to tear down a statue of Cecil Rhodes from Oriel College over his links with Britain’s colonial past.

However, other universities have been quicker to give into student demands. Jesus College at Cambridge University took down a bronze cockerel statue which had been looted during a British colonial expedition to Nigeria in the 19th century, after students asked for it to be repatriated.

Harvard Law School replaced  its official crest, because of its links to an 18th-century slave owner, following five months of demonstrations and sit-ins by students.

queen mary university removes king leopold ii plaques

Dr Joanna Williams, whose book  Academic Freedom in an Age of Conformity was published earlier this year, said: “When universities start removing plaques and statues on the basis of student petitions, without any broader debate or discussion, where and when do they draw the line?

“There are very few who have a completely untarnished record when you start looking back through history.

“Roads are named after people, streets are named after people - if you start saying you have to have a completely unblemished past to have something named after you, you could argue that every single building and road would be renamed across the country.”

Source: Telegraph

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