CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2020, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2020, OR THEREAFTER
BY
THOMAS D. ELIAS
“ETHNIC STUDIES: DON’T LET IT PROMOTE
GRUDGES”
There could be no better way to
promote a lifelong sense of victimhood and an enduring series of grudges and
resentments than to adopt a public school ethnic studies curriculum like the
one now proposed for California’s public schoolchildren.
Here’s why: Despite being sent back to
the drawing board last year because of its obvious biases, untruths and
incompleteness, the second draft plan still is under the strong influence of
the Critical Ethnic Studies Assn. (CESA), a college-level academic group that
stresses (according to its websites) “colonialism and conquest, racial chattel
slavery and white supremacist (doctrines).”
Although it has added anti-Semitism
and the Armenian genocide of the early 20th Century to its list of
longstanding persecutions, the new version still lacks emphasis on anyone’s
positive contributions to America and California, let alone those of
European-derived whites who organized this country.
Its stress on conquest would likely
result in teaching schoolkids about how their infecting the Aztecs, Incas and
Mayans of Mexico and Central and South America with smallpox enabled a very
small force of Spanish conquistadors to conquer large and successful empires.
But chances are it would ignore the
fact that the Spanish conquests ended human sacrifice and some limited forms of
cannibalism in this hemisphere. Odds are it would also ignore how English
settlers brought ideas like freedom of religion here after being persecuted in
Britain.
Yes, the proposed curriculum would
justifiably and properly emphasize how much enslaved Africans contributed to
the building of America, but it would downplay the contributions of figures
like Thomas Jefferson, George Washington and James Madison because they owned
slaves. Not that those seminal historic figures should be excused for owning,
exploiting and trading in the lives of other humans. But the fact that they
promoted and wrote into the Constitution ideas contrary to their personal
practices must also be recognized, if there is to be any accuracy to this
program. Their vital contributions to establishing the world’s first democracy
since King Philip of Macedon defeated ancient Athens cannot be ignored, even as
some of their statues come down.
But accuracy is not the hallmark of
the CESA. Grudges are.
As one reader noted, it’s not enough
to cover the history of American slavery and blame it all on Europeans,
although they were certainly culpable. Ignoring the fact that slavery was an
ancient practice recognized and not condemned even in the Bible makes America
seem uniquely evil, promoting lasting resentment of this country. Ignoring the
fact that Africans held and traded in slaves long before they began selling
some to Europeans who carried them to America promotes an inaccurate version of
history.
Said the reader, “Our children have to
be taught the history of America using hard facts and documents, not opinions.”
Of course, opinions about what’s
important vary, also changing over time. Is it more important to cover Jim Crow
laws in an ethnic studies course or to examine the racial and religious
restrictions that prevailed in America until about 80 years ago, some still
memorialized in current deed restrictions that are no longer recognized
legally? Why not look at both?
But the proposed curriculum prevents
such a realistic look at a seamy side of American life by dividing this nation
into four basic groups: whites, African-Americans, Hispanic Americans and
Asians and Pacific Islanders. Where does that leave, for example, Jews – they
have lived for centuries in every area from which those four groups stem. Yet
their exclusion until the last half-century or so from many neighborhoods and
the limitations admission quotas long placed on their presence at many
universities would be ignored by the curriculum.
In short, the CESA-led group that
designed the new planned curriculum has decided which people are and were
legitimate victims and which were not, regardless of what may really have
befallen them.
That’s not a factual approach and
cannot help but lead to inaccurate classroom instruction.
Which means that the state Board of
Education, due to okay or reject the latest curriculum plan by the end of next
March, must sent it back for another rewrite, or perpetuate what may be the
most destructive set of academic guidelines ever introduced into California’s
education system.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough:
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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