Just
days after President Barack Obama left office, this mural, which includes an
image of comedian Bill Cosby, on the side of Ben's Chili Bowl in Washington,
DC, has been removed ©Jim Watson (AFP)
|
Barack Obama left the
presidency just days ago, but already his smiling face is gone from a mural on
the wall of an iconic eatery in the US capital.
AFP
report continues:
An
outer wall of Ben's Chili Bowl -- famous for its chili half-smoke sausages --
on very hip U Street is now just a vast white space.
Also
painted over is the face of Bill Cosby, the groundbreaking comedy legend now
reviled as a suspected serial sexual predator.
Passersby
who were used to seeing those two faces on the colorful mural are doing a
double-take. In its place are written the words "new year, new mural"
and the address of the restaurant's website.
"I'm
shocked that they actually took it down," said Shadarryl Brown, a
43-year-old African American.
To
boot, also gone are the faces of funk guitarist and band leader Chuck Brown and
a local radio DJ named Donnie Simpson.
There
is nothing political about the removal, the restaurant insists. It is letting
people vote on which faces go up now.
Nor
is the eatery trying to dissociate itself from Cosby, who will go on trial in
June, said owner Virginia Ali.
- Vote for next mural -
As
for Obama, his departure from the White House last Friday is just a
coincidence, she insisted.
"We
removed the mural because it's been there five years. It needs to be done
again. And we decided that for the new year, we should do a new mural. For the
next five years," said Ali.
"I
had no idea my little wall was so important," Ali said with a smile.
The
decision to give the wall a makeover was made last spring.
The
new one will go up around April, and the idea is to let people vote on who they
want to see -- even Obama again, maybe, this time with wife Michelle.
Brown
said it was good that people can express their preference.
His
first choice is Michael Jackson -- "when he was black" -- and civil
rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., whose assassination in 1968 triggered
riots along U Street and elsewhere in America.
People
can choose from some 60 candidates, most of them black. Washington is a mainly
black city, and the U Street area also used to be mainly African-American until
it underwent gentrification.
Starting
Thursday, people can now weigh in on the future mural and suggest up to six
candidates.
The
restaurant is even suggesting some combinations of famous faces. One brings
together King, Mahatma Gandhi, Obama, Nelson Mandela, Mother Teresa and Desmond
Tutu.
Voting
will be open until late February but already thousands of people have cast
their ballot, said Kamal Ali, son of the owner.
"So far Michelle and Barack Obama are leading," he said. "They are leading overwhelmingly."
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