Image via Liberty Daily
Proclamation on Columbus Day, 2020
More than 500 years ago, Christopher Columbus’s intrepid voyage to the New World ushered in a new era of exploration and discovery. His travels led to European contact with the Americas and, a century later, the first settlements on the shores of the modern day United States. Today, we celebrate Columbus Day to commemorate the great Italian who opened a new chapter in world history and to appreciate his enduring significance to the Western Hemisphere.
When Christopher Columbus and his crew sailed across the Atlantic Ocean on the Niña, Pinta, and Santa María it marked the beginning of a new era in human history. For Italian Americans, Christopher Columbus represents one of the first of many immeasurable contributions of Italy to American history. As a native of Genoa, Columbus inspired early immigrants to carry forth their rich Italian heritage to the New World. Today, the United States benefits from the warmth and generosity of nearly 17 million Italian Americans, whose love of family and country strengthen the fabric of our Nation. For our beautiful Italian American communities — and Americans of every background –Columbus remains a legendary figure.
Sadly,
in recent years, radical activists have sought to undermine Christopher
Columbus’s legacy. These extremists seek to replace discussion of his
vast contributions with talk of failings, his discoveries with atrocities, and
his achievements with transgressions. Rather than learn from our history,
this radical ideology and its adherents seek to revise it, deprive it of any
splendor, and mark it as inherently sinister. They seek to squash any
dissent from their orthodoxy. We must not give in to these tactics or
consent to such a bleak view of our history. We must teach future
generations about our storied heritage, starting with the protection of
monuments to our intrepid heroes like Columbus. This June, I signed an
Executive Order to ensure that any person or group destroying or vandalizing a
Federal monument, memorial, or statue is prosecuted to the fullest extent of
the law.
I
have also taken steps to ensure that we preserve our Nation’s history and
promote patriotic education. In July, I signed another Executive
Order to build and rebuild monuments to iconic American figures in a National
Garden of American Heroes. In September, I announced the creation of the
1776 Commission, which will encourage our educators to teach our children about
the miracle of American history and honor our founding. In addition, last
month I signed an Executive Order to root out the teaching of racially divisive
concepts from the Federal workplace, many of which are grounded in the same
type of revisionist history that is trying to erase Christopher Columbus from
our national heritage. Together, we must safeguard our history and stop
this new wave of iconoclasm by standing against those who spread hate and
division.
On
this Columbus Day, we embrace the same optimism that led Christopher Columbus
to discover the New World. We inherit that optimism, along with the
legacy of American heroes who blazed the trails, settled a continent, tamed the
wilderness, and built the single-greatest nation the world has ever seen.
In
commemoration of Christopher Columbus’s historic voyage, the Congress, by joint
resolution of April 30, 1934, modified in 1968 (36 U.S.C. 107), has
requested the President proclaim the second Monday of October of each year as
“Columbus Day.”
NOW,
THEREFORE, I, DONALD J. TRUMP, President of the United States of America,
by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws
of the United States, do hereby proclaim October 12, 2020, as
Columbus Day. I call upon the people of the United States to observe
this day with appropriate ceremonies and activities. I also direct that
the flag of the United States be displayed on all public buildings on the
appointed day in honor of our diverse history and all who have contributed
to shaping this Nation.
IN
WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this ninth day of October, in the
year of our Lord two thousand twenty, and of the Independence of the United
States of America the two hundred and forty-fifth.
DONALD J. TRUMP
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