A crowd of about 200 protesters gathered on top of Art Hill in Forest Park, St. Louis, on Saturday, to demand the removal of the statue of the city’s namesake, King Louis IX of France, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported (Should he stay or go? Protesters clash over statue of St. Louis’ namesake). They were facing a rather smaller crowd that was praying for the statue’s preservation.

If any statue in these United States deserves to be toppled, it’s this one. King Louis the 9th hated Jews with a venom. Four years after his coronation, in 1230, he issued the famous Ordinance of Melun, forbidding the Jews to engage in any money lending activities. In 1234, he seized one-third of the debts owed to the Jews and decreed that in the future they would be permitted to take pledges only in the presence of trustworthy witnesses.

Louis took no measures to protect the Jews from persecution by crusader recruits in 1236 in the provinces of Anjou, Poitou, Mançois, Touraine, and Berry. In 1242, Louis burned 24 cartloads of Jewish books, including the Talmud. When Innocent IV, petitioned by Jews that they could not teach the Bible without the Talmud, ordered it to be reexamined, but Louis had none of that and in December 1254 threatened to expel any Jew who kept copies of the Talmud or other banned books.

In 1268 Louis called for the arrest of all the Jews and the confiscation of their property in preparation for their eventual expulsion. A year later, under the influence of the apostate Pablo Christiani, Louis downgraded the decree to ordering the Jews to wear a distinctive badge and instructed his officers to force Jews to attend missionary sermons.

Umar Lee, one of the protest organizers, said on Saturday: “This guy right here represents hate and we’re trying to create a city of love. We’re trying to create a city where Black lives matter. We’re trying to create a city where there is no anti-Semitism or Islamophobia … this is not a symbol of our city in 2020.”  Read more at JP