New Jersey officials approved BLM mural and then painted over BLM-inspired fist with white box
A Black Lives Matter mural that was approved by officials in a New Jersey city was covered up after a few residents complained about the âpolitical undertonesâ of the BLM-inspired raised fists.
A group of recent Clifton High School grads â" led by May Yuasa, 19 â" painted murals on both sides of a Garden State Parkway underpass in Passaic County last week after getting permission and design approval from city officials.
The original design included five fists of different color skin tones to represent all races coming together, Yuasa said in a Wednesday Facebook post.
Four days after painting began, the first fist was completed, which fired up some residents who took offense to the âpolitically-motivatedâ symbol and demanded it come down.
That forced Yuasa to change the design.
Instead of the five fists, she included two hands of different colors making a heart and two hands of different colors clasped together with the words âUSE YOUR VOICE.â
âI altered the part of the design that I did not already paint on the wall so that it would be more palatable for the city and the people who complained,â Yuasa said.
But she kept the one fist that was already finished. DPW workers painted over the fist with a white rectangle. That second alteration remains in place.
On the other side of the underpass, four children of different races are holding hands with the words âINFINITE POSSIBILITIESâ painted over them.
This was the original concept by May Yuasa, 19, who said each fist was meant to represent people of all races coming together
This was the changed design, where Yuasa kept the one BLM-inspired fist
The fist was painted over by DPW workers with a white box that some in the city and on social media are calling censorship
This mural is painted on the other side of the underpass, and has not received any complaints
Yuasa and her friends paint a mural on Garden State Parkway underpass in Passaic County
City Manager Dominick Villano told NJ.com (NJ Advance Media), âWhen we start making political statements, weâre opening up a can of worms.â
âThis is public property. We have to tread lightly,â he added.
Yuasa said on Facebook that she met with Villano for two days to alter the design but âwas ordered to completely paint over the fist because of the continued outrage.â
The teenage artist and civil engineering student at Cornell University said Villano âissued a warningâ that the mural would be painted over if the fists were included.
Villano told NJ.com that he thought the white box âwas better (to see) something that promotes peace, happiness or love.â
Yuasa said sheâs proud of the design but âregrets changing it just to please those that were offended.â
âI kept the fist that was part of the original approved design. After I finished, I wrote an email so they could reconsider painting over the fist but they did not.â
Clifton residents and supporters flocked to social media to back Yuasa and her friendsâ work, especially on the Facebook page âClifton News and Community,â where theyâre organizing to pressure the city council to keeping Yuasaâs original design.
Yuasa posted a video standing next to the mural on Instagram Wednesday morning and said in accompanying post that the Cliftonâs officials âwould rather cater to a privileged few than represent the community equally and respectfully.â
The video was made before the fist was painted over but the post was written after.
People on social media, like this Twitter user, objected to the censorship of the BLM-fist
âI told city officials that if the council and involved departments decide to cover the mural, it shows what kind of community our city government has decided to represent.
âNot the dozens of volunteers who worked tirelessly to help create this mural, nor the hundreds of supporters who cheered us on as we painted, nor the diverse and welcoming community that I continue to have pride in.â
Clifton has a diverse population of 85,000, according to the latest available Census data, of which 68 percent are white, 38 percent are Hispanic, 9.5percent are Asian and 5.3percent are black.
DailyMail.com called Villano and left a message for Yuasa for comment.
May Yuasaâs Wednesday Facebook post in the group âClifton News and Community,â where theyâre organizing to pressure the city council to keeping Yuasaâs original design
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