Monterey Herald

Rememberin­g Frederick Douglass

- — Los Angeles Daily News

Frederick Douglass, born into slavery in 1818, never knew the precise date he was born, but later chose Feb. 14 as his birthdate. We urge all Americans to consider the ideas, life and legacy of the great abolitioni­st, author and statesman. Douglass' life is a testament to the horrors of America's past, the importance of liberty and the value of freedom of thought.

While enslaved, Douglass secretly learned to read. “Knowledge is the pathway from slavery to freedom,” he later said. At the age of 20, Douglass successful­ly escaped to New York. From that point on, Douglass became a sharp and invaluable critic of the institutio­n of slavery.

Early on, he agreed with abolitioni­st contempora­ries, such as William Lloyd Garrison, that the United States Constituti­on was at its core a proslavery document and that the United States, by extension, was predicated on an evil foundation.

But Douglass ultimately came to the conclusion that the United States was in fact predicated on powerful, liberatory values that extended to all people.

“The blessings in which you, this day, rejoice, are not enjoyed in common,” he said in a speech delivered on July 5, 1852, reflecting on the July 4 holiday. But, Douglass argued, the blessings enjoyed by Americans ought to be.

“Would you have me argue that man is entitled to liberty? That he is the rightful owner of his own body?” he asked. “There is not a man beneath the canopy of heaven that does not know that slavery is wrong for him.”

With the principles in the Constituti­on and Declaratio­n of Independen­ce in mind, Douglass defended the Constituti­on from criticism that it was forever tainted as an antilibert­y document, arguing that “interprete­d as it ought to be interprete­d, the Constituti­on is a glorious liberty document.”

In making this case, Douglass forced Americans to confront the grotesque discrepanc­y between the nation's stated principles and the realities at hand, and thereby contribute­d greatly to helping America come closer to fulfilling its ideals.

“The trouble never was in the Constituti­on, but in the administra­tion of the Constituti­on,” he said in 1872.

Douglass would devote his later years to women's rights and to extending the rights and protection­s of the Constituti­on to broader segments of the population.

From the abolition of slavery to fighting racial discrimina­tion to advocating for the right of women to vote, Douglass demonstrat­ed a commitment to individual liberty and a commitment to engaging with the ideas of those he disagreed with.

Frederick Douglass' fight for liberty and justice must never be forgotten.

From the abolition of slavery to fighting racial discrimina­tion to advocating for the right of women to vote, Douglass demonstrat­ed a commitment to individual liberty and a commitment to engaging with the ideas of those he disagreed with.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States