CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JANUARY 5, 2021, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“HISTORICAL REVISIONISM HITS
SCHOOLS, PARKS”
Historical revisionism – that’s the
only term to describe what’s happening today in the naming of public schools
and parks. Who led what, who created what, whose ideas and ideals resulted in
today’s world, these things mean less with each passing week and each renaming.
Admittedly, it makes no sense to
lionize persons like Braxton Bragg, the commander of the Confederate Army of
the Mississippi during the Civil War and the recipient of three brevet
promotions during a single battle in the Mexican-American War about 18 years
earlier.
The Northern California outpost and
later city of Ft. Bragg took his name after he returned from Mexico with a
hero’s reputation, and city officials say they’ll keep the name even though
Bragg had little connection to the area.
There’s good reason for African
Americans to resent naming any city after Bragg and little reason for anyone
else to support honoring his name.
But that’s very different from the
likes of George Washington and Abraham Lincoln, for whom schools, parks and
cities have long been named all over America. No one ever claimed these seminal
figures in United States history were saints, but things they did shaped
America for the better in definite ways.
No doubt Washington was a major slave
owner, his sumptuous home and lifestyle at Mt. Vernon near what is now
Washington, D.C. enabled by exploitation of the labor of human beings he owned.
But Washington led the Continental Army with daring, inspiration and courage in
the Revolutionary War. He also refused offers to become king of this country around
the time he left office after two terms as the first president. For a contrast,
imagine how Donald Trump might react to such an offer.
For his remarkable actions and his
refusal of monarchic status, Washington deserves massive recognition despite enslaving
others. Yes, he had flaws, but he shaped American ideals perhaps more than any
other individual. Removing his name from schools – as the San Francisco school
board now contemplates – or from cities would amount to renouncing some of the
best of our history.
The same for Lincoln, whose
Emancipation Proclamation freed almost all slaves in America. Yes, he conducted
Indian wars against Native American tribes and even drank some alcohol.
Lincoln, thus, was also not saintly, but he remains a seminal figure in
American progress and national survival. Erasing his name amounts to an attempt
to erase history.
The list goes on, especially in San
Francisco, where officials are considering renaming schools called after
Revolutionary War hero Paul Revere, Spanish explorer Vasco Nunez de Balboa, the
Alamo, U.S. Sen. and former San Francisco Mayor Dianne Feinstein, naturalist
John Muir and early San Francisco Mayor Adolph Sutro.
In no case, are or were any of these figures
perfect human beings, which apparently is required to satisfy revisionist
standards of political correctness. In each case, the individual or institution
was a product of contemporary times and morality.
It might be appropriate to consider
renaming the many Mission schools in San Francisco and other parts of
California because of the enslavement of Native Americans by Spanish monks who
led the European exploration and colonization of Mexico and then this state.
But there can be no argument that the
mission system, with its churches and attendant farms neatly placed a day’s
journey apart had a major part in California’s development, even to the
placement of major cities. Denying that history invites nothing but ignorance.
It’s not merely schools that are under
pressure now to change names and thus attempt to downgrade the history and
contributions of past leaders and institutions.
There’s also a move afoot to change
names of state parks, most of which already carry names of locations and not
people. Example: Two former state park commissioners suggested in an op-ed the
other day renaming parks in Los Angeles after African-descended soldiers who
accompanied the Spaniards who founded Los Angeles. But that expedition was not
their idea, nor did they decide how it was conducted. Their leaders did.
Naming parks and schools for folks who
were along for the ride but not shaping events would mislead and misrepresent
history, with potential consequences no one today can foresee.
-30-
Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most
Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now
available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
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