Ellipsis - // Let's personalise this a little. Derek lives in Bristol. He used to walk past the Colston statue twice a day, five days a week. Derek's grandparents came from Jamaica in 1948, part of the Windrush generation encouraged by British government in 1948 to come over and fill shortages in the labour market. Derek's parents were both born and raised in England. So was Derek.
Derek's grandparents were in Jamaica in the first place because Colston and others like him forced them out of Africa and put them to work as slaves in a completely different part of the world. Many of those slaves were raped, tortured and murdered alongside being kidnapped, expatriated and subjected to forced labour.
So here's Derek, his ancestors suffering crimes against humanity at Colston's hands, his grandparents coming to England by invitation and being granted citizenship by the UK government, his parents and himself born and raised here, walking twice daily past a monument to the slave trader. What does he make of it? What would you make of it. //
You are assuming that Derek must have an awareness of history that would only be possible in adults a lot older than he is.
By then he will have learned some perspective - yes his ancestors were badly treated, but a fortunate set of circumstances has seen him born into a land of opportunity.
Maybe he won't be interested in visiting retribution on people who were not alive when his ancestors we being made slaves, because expecting people to pay the price for the sins of their ancestors is simply not viable, so it's best if we agree to learn from you history and avoid the same mistakes again.