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Nearly 16 percent of Wisconsin’s BLM supporters would change cities, counties named for Catholic missionaries and saints

People

Staff reports Oct 1, 2020

Heg
The statue of Hans Christian Hegwas toppled. Heg was an abolitionist to end slavery.

Nearly 16 percent of Black Lives Matters supporters in Wisconsin believe name changes are in order for geographies named after missionaries and saints.  

Of 215 BLM supporters polled by American Catholic Media Company, 15.8 percent, or 34 respondents, said they "Would you favor a proposal to change the names of Wisconsin’s cities and counties named for Catholic white European missionaries and saints?” 

The poll was targeted at BLM supporters living in Wisconsin on Facebook Sept. 22-29. 

Catholic missionaries were instrumental in exploring and settling the United States. As such, there are innumerable geographies across the country named for Catholic saints and missionaries. One researcher recently found 300 site names in Kansas alone

Now, those geographic names are in jeopardy as Black Lives Matter supporters turn their attention toward saints and missionaries

In Wisconsin, a ban would force changing the names of the communities of St. Croix Falls, St. Francis and Marquette County. 

Christopher Columbus High School fought off a name change effort last year. 

Statues are also at risk. Catholic shrines dot the landscape. 

In Madison, rioters toppled the statue of Hans Christian Heg. Heg was a noted abolitionist who fought against the Confederacy. 

Catholic Churches and iconography have been targeted in the rolling riots that have taken place this year.  

St. Louis. Mo. is one of 11 major cities that derive their names from saints and missionaries along with over 40 other smaller cities. A name change drive has been underway for the City of St. Louis this year with protests and counter-protests being held at the foot of St. Louis’s statue in front of Saint Louis Art Museum in Forest Park.

Earlier this year Catholics praying under St. Louis's stature were attacked by BLM supporters. 

In June, a priest met and stopped protestors seeking to tear down a statue of the city’s namesake. 

Some BLM supporters have even called for statues of Jesus to be torn down. 

“No Catholic can support the national (BLM) organization, whatsoever,” author and radio show host Deacon Harold Burke-Sivers, a black Catholic deacon of the Diocese of Portland, Or., said. 

BLM has broader goals that are just as focused upon transforming family life in the United States and promoting "transgenderism" as an alternative to biology as they are on the message of race.

BLM has been successful in achieving name changes of streets in Washington, D.C. and New York City as well as several other municipalities. 

Catholics currently comprise around 23 percent of the country’s population.  

Previous American Catholic Tribune polls revealed swing state Catholic populations to be starkly in disagreement with Black Lives Matters principles and do not “take personal responsibility for slavery.” 

See a chart below with recorded responses to poll questions.

Founded in 2019, Chicago-based American Catholic Media Company is a publisher of Catholic parish news around the United States. 

American Catholic Tribune publishes the titles below:

• American Catholic Tribune  

• Arizona Catholic Tribune

• Florida Catholic Tribune

• Michigan Catholic Tribune

• Minnesota Catholic Tribune

• Pennsylvania Catholic Tribune

• Wisconsin Catholic Tribune

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