CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, 2020, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“ETHNIC
STUDIES BATTLE CONTINUES DESPITE IMPROVEMENTS”
With just two months before the legal
deadline for the state Board of Education to decide on a new ethnic studies
curriculum for all California public schools, new concepts have been introduced
into the latest proposal and new people added to those who might be studied.
Still, old prejudices figure to be reinforced.
Among the new individuals to be studied for sure, if this program
is adopted, are some that few would object to: Former state Supreme Court
Justice Cruz Reynoso, onetime Hawaii Congresswoman Patsy Mink, American Indian
Movement founder Madonna Thunder Hawk, ex-President Barack Obama and the late
former Brooklyn Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm, the first-ever serious Black
presidential candidate. Among the new peoples: Irish- and Jewish-Americans, via
new units on anti-Semitism and Sephardic (Middle Eastern) Jewry.
Things get more controversial with other
persons on the suggested list teachers would have the option of adding: Onetime
Black Panther leader Bobby Seale, self-proclaimed “lifetime Communist” Angela
Davis, convicted murderer Mumia Abu-Jamal, the vocally anti-Semitic
Arab-American leader Linda Sarsour and Emilio Zapata, founder of an early 20th
Century agrarian revolutionary movement that still influences governance in Mexico.
One thing these individuals have in common: All are or were
figures on the left. There’s no room for American conservatives here, no one
like the Black Republican Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina or newly-elected
Republican Congresswomen Michelle Steel and Young Kim of Orange County, both
Korean-Americans.
There are also no Irish or Jews, or Indians or Armenians on the
list of individuals to be studied for sure, no Chinese-Americans, no immigrant
business leaders like the founders of Zoom, Google and other seminal California
companies. That makes the list highly partisan, allowing the right to plausibly
label it a propaganda instrument.
There is also an objectionable, though optional, lesson on Aztec
gods including Texcatlipoca, supposedly the originator of human sacrifice and
other problematic practices.
Most of this will satisfy educators from the Critical Ethnic
Studies Association, dedicated to teaching about the prevalence of white
supremacy, racial privilege and oppression in American history. But there’s nothing
here about more establishment minority group members, like the scientist Booker
T. Washington.
This is deliberate, as made plain by state Schools Supt. Tony
Thurmond. The curriculum, he said last August, “needs…fidelity to the four
ethnic groups that launched the (critical ethnic studies) movement” during a 1968
student strike at San Francisco State University: African-Americans, Hispanic
Americans, Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders and Native Americans. He did
not explain why the new curriculum must stay faithful to ideas conceived more
than 50 years ago by emotionally heated students lacking solid academic
credentials.
The planned curriculum would also introduce some new concepts,
bound to bring loud protests. Most prominent of those is the idea of “racial
privilege,” introduced by Thurmond’s staff rather than by the generally leftist
members of the state Education Department’s Instructional Quality Commission,
designer of the first two versions of the curriculum.
This segment of the program would feature a unit on Irish- and
Jewish-Americans “redefining themselves as white and American” and thus gaining
alleged racial privilege they may not previously have had. Never mind that both
Irish and Jewish immigrants faced massive discrimination upon arriving in
America, overcoming college admission quotas, ethnic and religious exclusions
in rental leases and land convenants by dint of hard work and academic effort.
The implication is that other Caucasian immigrant groups like
German-Americans, Italian-Americans and Hungarian refugees arrived with white
privilege, no matter how difficult their lives may really have been. Meanwhile,
Jews – who maintained their identify for millenia in the face of hundreds of massacres
even before the Holocaust – would be portrayed as striving to shuck their
longtime identity to present themselves as white, just to get ahead.
This concept is only very marginally accurate, at best, and should
have been laughed off, but now appears on its way into public school curricula.
What’s more, the California program figures to be copied in other states.
In short, the newest version of the proposed ethnic studies
program may be improved, but still contains gaping holes, questionable subject
matter, plus some bigotry.
Which means it needs still more improvement before anyone dreams
of adopting it.
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