Following the museum's request to remove the statue, which features the nation's 26th President on a horse with a Native American man standing on one side and an African man standing on the other, the mayor's office announced the approval.The announcement comes as several state's grapple with how to handleremovals of confederate monuments and other controversial statues."The American Museum of Natural History has asked to remove the Theodore Roosevelt statue because it explicitly depicts Black and Indigenous people as subjugated and racially inferior," de Blasio's office said in a statement to CNN. "The city supports the museum's request. It is the right decision and the right time to remove this problematic statue." While it was meant to celebrate Roosevelt as a "devoted naturalist and author of works on natural history," the statue also "communicates a racial hierarchy that the museum and members of the public have long found disturbing," a press release on the museum's website said.No date has been set for the removal and the mayor's office is still working to determine next steps, a spokesperson for the mayor's office told CNN Sunday.The statue, titled "Equestrian Statue of Theodore Roosevelt" was commissioned in 1925 and made its debut in 1940 as part of the state's larger memorial to Roosevelt, according to the museum."To understand the statue, we must recognize our country's enduring legacy of racial discrimination — as well as Roosevelt's troubling viewson race," the press release said. "We must also acknowledge the museum's own imperfect history. Such an effort does not excuse the past but it can create a foundation for honest, respectful, open dialogue."Last week, in neighboring New Jersey, trustees at Monmouth University voted to remove President Woodrow Wilson's name from the campus's Great Hall. "Wilson was a controversial politician, who never actually set foot in the current building," university president Patrick Leahy said in a statement to students on Juneteenth. "Removing his name, and incorporating these earlier names, connects the centerpiece of our campus more accurately to our historical roots and eliminates a symbolic barrier to the Read More – Source

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