Till monument comes amid GOP race fights
WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden established a national monument Tuesday honoring Emmett Till, the Black teenager whose 1955 murder helped galvanize the civil rights movement, making a case for reckoning with the legacy of racism in America even as some Republicans try to limit how Black history is taught.
The monument honors Till and his mother, Mamie Till-Mobley, who insisted on an open coffin at her son’s funeral, saying that “the whole nation had to bear witness to this.”
The Emmett Till and Mamie Till-Mobley National Monument includes three protected sites in Illinois, where Emmett was born 82 years ago, and in Mississippi, where he was killed at the age of 14 after being accused of whistling at a white woman.
In a ceremony at the White House, which was attended by Vice President Kamala Harris
as well as members of the Till family, Biden invoked Republican efforts to ban books and “bury history.”
“Darkness and denial can hide much,” Biden said. But “they erase nothing. We can’t just choose to learn what we want to know.”
The president’s decision to dedicate the Till monument
comes amid a divisive political battle over how to teach Black history in schools.
Last week, Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida, who is campaigning for the Republican presidential nomination, came under fire after education officials in his state introduced new standards for teaching Black history.
The standards say that middle schoolers should be instructed that “slaves developed skills which, in some instances, could be applied for their personal benefit.” The depiction drew widespread rebuke, including from Harris.
“Let us not be seduced into believing that we will somehow be better if we forget,” she said at Tuesday’s ceremony.
DeSantis, who has made fighting a “woke” agenda in education a signature part of his election platform, defended the standards, which were created to comply with a law he signed known as the “Stop WOKE Act.” He accused Democrats of “indoctrinating students.”
Since Biden took office, more than 40 states have introduced or passed laws or taken other measures to restrict how issues of race and racism are taught, according to Education Week. The outlet has been tracking the legislation against so-called “critical race theory,” a term that has been adopted by conservative activists as a catchall for teachings about race.