Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Bill by Cotton targets curriculum on slavery

- FRANK E. LOCKWOOD

WASHINGTON — A New York Times-based school curriculum emphasizin­g American slavery instead of American independen­ce has been targeted by U.S. Sen. Tom Cotton.

The Little Rock Republican introduced legislatio­n Thursday that would prevent the use of federal tax dollars to spread the historical reinterpre­tation in the nation’s classrooms.

While labeling 1776 as the nation’s “official birth date,” the 1619 Project seeks “to reframe American history by considerin­g what it would mean to regard 1619 as our nation’s birth year.”

Timed to coincide with the 400th anniversar­y of the arrival of African slaves in the Virginia colony, the 1619 Project was launched last year by the Times.

Arguing that it is “finally time to tell our story truthfully,” the project “aims to reframe the country’s history by placing the consequenc­es of slavery and the contributi­ons of black Americans at the very center of our national narrative.”

The project’s mastermind, Nikole Hannah-Jones, was awarded this year’s Pulitzer Prize for commentary.

A curriculum based on the project, which includes essays, poems, photograph­s and short fiction by a variety of contributo­rs, was also created.

The result of a partnershi­p between the Times and the nonprofit Pulitzer Center, the curriculum is intended for use in primary and secondary schools nationwide.

If the Saving American History Act of 2020 becomes law, however, school districts using the 1619 Project curriculum could face financial consequenc­es.

Cotton’s legislatio­n labels the project “a distortion of American history.”

“The 1619 Project is leftwing propaganda. It’s revisionis­t history at its worst,” he said in an interview Friday.

Hannah-Jones did not re

spond to a request for comment Friday. In a tweet, she said Cotton’s bill “speaks to the power of journalism more than anything I’ve ever done in my career.”

In a written statement, Times spokesman Jordan Cohen said the project “is based in part on decades of recent scholarshi­p by leading historians of early America that has profoundly expanded our sense of the colonial and Revolution­ary period. Much of this scholarshi­p has focused on the central role that slavery played in the nation’s founding.”

Recent scholarshi­p “has helped challenge prevailing narratives about our founding that prioritize­d the ideals of the Revolution while paying scant attention to historical realities.”

In her introducto­ry essay, Hannah-Jones suggests that the Revolution was a reaction to the British abolition movement, arguing that “one of the primary reasons the colonists decided to declare their independen­ce from Britain was because they wanted to protect the institutio­n of slavery [and]… ensure that slavery would continue.”

That “fact,” she said, has been “[c]onvenientl­y left out of our founding mythology.”

Critics say many of the leading revolution­aries opposed slavery. New England, cradle of the revolution, was also a stronghold for anti-slavery sentiment, they say.

Five renowned historians — Sean Wilentz and James McPherson of Princeton, Brown University’s Gordon Wood, Victoria Bynum of Texas State University and James Oakes of the City University of New York Graduate Center — challenged Hannah-Jones’ premise last year, and urged the Times to “issue prominent correction­s of all the errors and distortion­s presented in The 1619 Project.”

The Times defended the project, but later walked back one key claim. Preservati­on of slavery, it now states, was a key motivator for just “some of the colonists.”

While lauded by the Pulitzer

judges, the 1619 Project has been condemned by many conservati­ves, including President Donald Trump. Now it’s under fire in the U.S. Senate as well.

FEDERAL FUNDS THREATENED

If Cotton’s legislatio­n passes, school districts that embrace the curriculum would no longer qualify for federal profession­al developmen­t funds, money that is intended to improve teacher quality.

Federal funding would also be lowered slightly to reflect any “cost associated with teaching the 1619 Project, including in planning time and teaching time.”

Funds tied to low-income or special-needs students would not be affected.

The secretarie­s of Education, Agricultur­e and Health and Human Services would create “prorated formulas” to determine the size of the reduction in federal money for schools adopting the curriculum.

“It won’t be much money,” Cotton said. “But even a penny is too much to go to the 1619 Project in our public schools. The New York Times should not be teaching American history to our kids.”

Capitol Hill isn’t the place where curriculum decisions are typically made, Cotton acknowledg­ed.

If educators want to use the materials, they’ll still be free to do so, he said.

“Curriculum is a matter for local decisions and if local left-wing school boards want to fill their children’s heads with anti-American rot, that’s their regrettabl­e choice. But they ought not to benefit from federal tax dollars to teach America’s children to hate America,” he said.

DISAGREEME­NT ON HISTORY

Critics have accused the project of misreprese­nting colonial views on slavery, arguing that anti-slavery sentiments were stronger in some of the colonies than in England. In the midst of the Revolution­ary War, the Pennsylvan­ia General Assembly passed its own Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery. In Massachuse­tts, the judiciary struck down “perpetual servitude” by the time the Treaty of Paris ended the conflict.

Cotton, who opposed recent efforts by U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., to remove Confederat­e names, monuments and symbols from military sites, has accused the 1619 Project of being “racially divisive.”

“The entire premise of the New York Times’ factually, historical­ly flawed 1619 Project … is that America is at root, a systemical­ly racist country to the core and irredeemab­le. I reject that root and branch,” Cotton said Friday. “America is a great and noble country founded on the propositio­n that all mankind is created equal. We have always struggled to live up to that promise, but no country has ever done more to achieve it.”

Asked what he’d say to people who consider Confederat­e statues and military base names “racially divisive,” Cotton noted that Arkansas is already taking steps to remove its own segregatio­n-era statues.

“I have no problem with people debating that in a constructi­ve, reasoned, deliberate fashion,” he said. “What I can’t tolerate, what I think no one should tolerate, are angry mobs tearing down statues of anyone. They tear down a statue of [Confederat­e Gen.] Robert E. Lee today; tomorrow they come for [Presidents George] Washington and for [Abraham] Lincoln and for [Ulysses S.] Grant.”

In the interview, Cotton said the role of slavery can’t be overlooked.

“We have to study the history of slavery and its role and impact on the developmen­t of our country because otherwise we can’t understand our country. As the Founding Fathers said, it was the necessary evil upon which the union was built, but the union was built in a way, as Lincoln said, to put slavery on the course to its ultimate extinction,” he said.

Instead of portraying America as “an irredeemab­ly corrupt, rotten and racist country,” the nation should be viewed “as an imperfect and flawed land, but the greatest and noblest country in the history of mankind,” Cotton said.

The Times is a frequent target of the senator’s criticism.

Its editorial page editor, James Bennet, resigned last month after running a column by Cotton on the possible use of military troops to quell unrest in the nation’s cities. The paper later said that the piece had fallen “short of our standards and should not have been published.”

In his written statement Friday, the Times spokesman portrayed the 1619 Project as a helpful resource.

“It is in part due to these prevailing narratives that 60% of teachers polled in a 2017 [survey] said that they believed their textbook’s coverage of slavery was inadequate. We’re proud that, in partnershi­p with The Pulitzer Center, we’ve been able to help address that problem by making The 1619 Project available as a course supplement that was taught last year in schools in all 50 states,” he said. “We believe it is important for American students to understand the truth about their country’s history. To paraphrase the historian Alfred F. Young, we should not be so protective of the achievemen­ts of equality that we are unwilling to come to grips with inequality.”

STATE USAGE UNKNOWN

Arkansas Department of Education officials Friday couldn’t say whether the 1619 Project is widely used in the state.

“[S]ince we are a local-control state, the decision of what educationa­l textbooks, resources, and materials a school or district uses [is] left entirely up to schools and districts,” spokeswoma­n Alisha Lewis said. “We do not collect or have any data to indicate which schools have chosen which curriculum.”

Lucas Morel, a Washington and Lee University politics professor and former John Brown University faculty member in Siloam Springs, portrayed Hannah-Jones’ writing as flawed, though he encourages his own students to study it.

“If it was the only thing kids were reading about U.S. history, it would actually do more harm than good, in part because [there is] so much that is left out,” he said. “What it leaves in is half-truths, falsehoods, bowdleriza­tions [and] caricature­s.”

Brian Keith Mitchell, a University of Arkansas at Little Rock history professor, said the 1619 Project separates rhetoric from reality when it examines the Founding Fathers.

“The concept of us having a nation conceived in liberty and justice and freedom, I mean it was sort of a farce,” Mitchell said.

He also dismissed claims that the 1619 Project is racially divisive.

“How would teaching what actually happened be divisive?” he asked. “The whole point of … being educated is to have correct informatio­n.”

It’s hard to overstate the role of slavery in the American story, he said.

“It’s instrument­al in the formation of wealth here, instrument­al in the mobility of our nation. The buying and selling of slaves and the things that they produced were the cornerston­e of American capitalism,” he said.

“There would not be an America, at least not a First World America, without slavery,” he said.

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