Museum and art centre where colonialist Rhodes was born to change its name

The vandalised Cecil Rhodes bust at Rhodes Memorial in Cape Town.
The vandalised Cecil Rhodes bust at Rhodes Memorial in Cape Town.
Image: ESA ALEXANDER​

A museum and art centre in the house where 19th-century British colonialist Cecil Rhodes was born is changing its name after protests from antiracism campaigners.

The Rhodes Art Complex will become South Mill Arts on August 24, after calls to stop glorifying an imperialist who annexed swathes of Southern Africa as part of the British Empire and paved the way for racial segregation in SA.

“The trust originally indicated that it would consult the local community about a new name,” said a statement by the Rhodes Birthplace Trust, which runs the centre in Bishop's Stortford, 48km northeast of London.

The lively debate in the press, on social media and in unsolicited e-mails to the complex has more than adequately expressed the community's views and the trustees now feel that such a consultation is not necessary

“The lively debate in the press, on social media and in unsolicited e-mails to the complex has more than adequately expressed the community's views and the trustees now feel that such a consultation is not necessary.”

The trust said it is also changing its name to Bishop's Stortford Museum and Arts Charitable Incorporated Organisation.

A wave of antiracism protests sweeping across the US, Europe  and SA has reignited a debate about statues and buildings glorifying Britain's imperialist past, which many people see as offensive in today's multi-ethnic society.

Oxford University's Oriel College said in June that it wanted to remove its Rhodes statue after renewed protests by Rhodes Must Fall campaigners, inspired by South Africans who pushed Cape Town University to remove its Rhodes statue in 2015.

The Rhodes Art Complex is one of more than 100 statues and venues targeted by “Topple The Racists”, a crowdsourced map of monuments and buildings in Britain that the website says “celebrate slavery and racism”.

The trust's chair, Deirdre Glasgow, said in a statement that it would not “participate in any attempt to eradicate Cecil Rhodes from our history” but would provide visitors with evidence and facts to discover the truth for themselves.

The arts complex includes a theatre, cinema, studio for dance and fitness classes, and the museum in Netteswell House, where Rhodes was born in 1834.

“We are joyful the arts centre, something we should feel proud of in the community, will no longer be tarnished by the name of Cecil Rhodes,” said Stortford Against Rhodes, a group of local residents who pushed for the arts centre's name change.

“We, as antiracists, must educate the future generations to be antiracism too and that includes the crimes of Cecil Rhodes and other colonialists and we hope the centre will be able to be a part of this.” — Reuters


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