CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, MARCH 16, 2021, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“BEST MOVE ON ETHNIC STUDIES: A NEW
REWRITE”
The late March deadline for approving a new ethnic studies program
for California public schools is almost here, and one thing remains clear: This
project is still a work in progress, needing much more work before it becomes
something that will not insult large groups of Californians and stir even more
divisions than today’s.
Yes, there have been improvements. So much so that many who
contributed to the original draft of the program that was soundly rejected two
years ago are now asking to have their names erased from the final version, whatever
it eventually looks like.
They demand this because the original’s “guiding
principles…have been compromised by political and media pressure.” The byline
boycott, pushed on several Facebook posts, urges individual school districts to
reject the final state version and instead adopt “a liberated ethnic studies
model curriculum.”
Of course, what looks like a liberated curriculum to those
folks, mostly adherents of the Critical Ethnic Studies Association, looks to
others like encouragement of new prejudice and bias.
That’s why the original draft, based on the
CESA principle that much of American history is steeped in white supremacy and
oppression, was roundly rejected by legislative committees that looked it over.
The curriculum’s redone version, out in January, was somewhat
less negative about U.S. history and far kinder to whites in general,
Armenians, Jews and Israel, also adding information about Irish immigration and
the discrimination encountered by both Irish and Jewish newcomers.
But the left-leaning tilt of the proposed program remained
obvious to anyone glancing at the list of individuals suggested for study at
various grade levels.
The curriculum’s footnotes proposed examining figures like
former President Barack Obama, former California state Supreme Court Justice
Cruz Reynoso, onetime Hawaii Congresswoman Patsy Mink and her colleague from
Brooklyn, Shirly Chisholm, the first woman to make a serious run for president.
There are also proposed units on 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 others.
Nothing is offered or recommended on any
figure from the right, not
the late President and California Gov. Ronald Reagan, not the Black South
Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, no one.
So kids would not be educated on Reagan’s evolution from
liberal union leader to genial conservative icon.
This, said state Schools Supt. Tony Thurmond, a former
Democratic state legislator from Richmond, was because the curriculum
“needs…fidelity to the four ethnic groups that launched the (CESA) movement”
during a student strike at San Francisco State University in 1968. He gave no
reason for such fidelity. The four groups include African-Americans, Hispanic
Americans, Asian American/Pacific Islanders and Native Americans. Not a mention
of the European immigrants who rebelled against English colonial rule and risked
their lives to create human benchmarks like the Declaration of Independence and
the Constitution.
Not that Caucasian or mostly-white ethnic groups are ignored.
Rather, one segment of the program claims they redefined themselves after
arrival as “white and American,” thus assuming a mantle of “racial privilege”
and abandoning their previous identities. That’s simply untrue, no matter what
CESA thinks.
Where would that leave the white, largely Jewish Freedom
Riders so vital to the civil rights struggle in the South during the early
1960s? Essentially ignored. What about white abolitionists and other whites who
set up whole chains of quality schools for children of former slaves in the
period between 1870 and 1910? Also absent. Minority children thus would be led
to believe no Caucasians ever cared about or aided them when they were oppressed.
There’s a presumption here that all Caucasians arrived in
this country with instant “white privilege,” an approach that leaves out all
nuance and ignores the history of the textile industry, the union movement and
the outright oppression of huge numbers of poor white immigrants.
In short, what’s before the state Board of Education today improves
on the version from two years ago, but it’s still inadequate. That means much
more reworking is needed, the current deadline be damned, and if Thurmond and
the state board are at all responsible, they will see that the deadline is
extended by at least another year.
-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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