福・教・介・看〜ふくきょうかいかん〜 › フォーラム › 障がい者支援 › National Trust urged to scrap Churchill's home from controversial list
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Bosses at the are being urged to remove Sir Winston Churchill from a controversial list which ‘names and shames’ individuals linked with the British Empire and the slave trade.<br>Campaigners want the Trust to follow the lead of St Paul’s Cathedral, which last week decided to remove a description from its official website of the wartime Prime Minister as ‘an unashamed imperialist and white supremacist’.<br>Last week there was an international outcry after The Mail on Sunday revealed that the Cathedral – the scene of Sir Winston’s state funeral in 1965 – had been using the derogatory description for more than a year.<br>A spokesman for said the Prime Minister ‘strongly disagreed’ with the Cathedral’s assessment of a man regularly described as the greatest Briton ever.<br>Nick Gent, who persuaded St Paul’s to drop its offensive descriptions, now wants the National Trust, which has more than five million members, to remove Sir Winston’s Chartwell home from a list of properties with links to the British Empire and the slave trade.<br> Bosses at the National Trust are being urged to remove Sir Winston Churchill (pictured) from a controversial list which ‘names and shames’ individuals linked with the British Empire and the slave trade<br>Since 2020, when the list was first published, he has been asking leading figures within the organisation, including director general Hilary McGrady, to reconsider their stance towards Churchill.<br>To justify the wartime leader’s inclusion on the list, the Trust pointed out that his war-time premiership coincided with the Bengal Famine of 1943 and that he personally opposed the granting of limited autonomy to India in 1935.<br>But now Mr Gent, a member of the campaign group Restore Trust, argues that it’s wrong to conflate the British Empire with slavery, and has accused the Trust of using Churchill as a ‘scapegoat’.<br>He argues that far from turning his back on the victims of the famine, Churchill did everything in his power, at the height of the war, to help. <br>He said: ‘The Bengal Famine was caused by a cyclone, not by Churchill.
Some have it in for him because of his aristocratic background and use him as a scapegoat.'<br>He added: ‘The reason why he prevaricated was not because he was deliberately callous about lots of Bengalis dying, it’s because it was during the Second World War, and it was in the run-up period to D-Day.’ <br>Mr Gent’s correspondence with the Trust included a lengthy report about the Tory leader’s attitude to India and his efforts in relation to the Bengal Famine. <br>He urged the Trust to remember that Churchill was born at the height of the British Empire in 1874.
He wrote: ‘Churchill had colonialism thrust upon him, it was not his ‘fault’ that he was born into an imperial age.'<br> Nick Gent wants the National Trust, which has more than five million members, to remove Sir Winston’s Chartwell home (pictured) from a list of properties with links to the British Empire and the slave trade<br>He also urged the organisation to consider that Churchill may have voted against limited autonomy for India in 1935 because his view was coloured by ‘a Victorian sense that Empire was a force for good’.<br>In his submission Mr Gent argued that Sir Winston did what he could to help the victims of the famine, but he was hampered by the ongoing fight against Hitler. <br>He said relief efforts were hampered by food shortages in the UK, a shortage of ships and complexities in India – the cyclone destroyed much of the railway network needed to transport the food and there was a refusal by some provincial governments with food surpluses to part with their stock.<br>Mr Gent said: ‘In my correspondence I have concentrated on Sir Winston’s humanitarian side.
You have to look at the big picture.<br>’If you get to know Winston as a person he was a great humanitarian who was respected by his political adversaries.'<br>The National Trust said: ‘The report is a factual audit of our places that have direct links to colonial history and historic slavery. <br>’We are proud custodians of Chartwell and in 2020 completed a £7.1 million project to transform the way we present this precious place, one of the many that helps to preserve the memory of Sir Winston Churchill.'<br>
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