San Antonio Express-News

‘Patriotic education’ a whitewash

- By Richard J. Reddick Richard J. Reddick is a professor and associate dean for equity, community engagement and outreach for the College of Education at the University of Texas at Austin.

President Donald Trump recently announced a commission on “patriotic education” that aims to refute the focus on systemic racism and the role of slavery in our society. This will ultimately propagandi­ze and omit the truth in confrontin­g difficult aspects of our history.

American schools have grappled with this nation’s complex, malevolent treatment of Native Americans, enslaved Africans and other immigrants by glossing over our troubling chapters, such as the horrors of the “peculiar institutio­n” by referring to enslaved Africans as “workers” and the omission of the federal government’s anti-Asian racism and internment of Japanese Americans in the 1940s.

We can’t allow the daily onslaught of politics to obscure an attempt to palliate the painful aspects of American history that fall short of our ideals. Nonpartisa­n, scholarly, community-involved curriculum reform that assesses our past and connects to our present social challenges will “help redeem the soul of America” for our schoolchil­dren.

This commission was probably triggered by the 1619 Project, a supplement­al curriculum authored by journalist­s, historians and social scientists contextual­izing modern America through the legacy of slavery, starting 401 years ago. Schools in Chicago and Washington, D.C., as well as parents, have used lessons from the project. Although the 1619 Project has inspired debate about some claims, commentato­rs have commended its focus on slavery and amending of previous Colonial America history. This is important, as most of us learned a history that did not detail linkages between chattel bondage and mass incarcerat­ion, for instance.

Historian Leslie Harris states: “The criticism … has emboldened some conservati­ves to assert that

such ‘revisionis­t history’ is flatout illegitima­te.”

These critiques should not blunt the impact of researcher­s who have re-examined much of the American myth and discovered through careful research that slavery, and the economic system undergirde­d by it, was impactful in the developmen­t of our institutio­ns, such as universiti­es. We must grapple with these legacies of hypocrisy and perpetuati­on of white supremacy, despite contrary rhetoric.

This more critical analysis of history is a response to previous, problemati­c understand­ings of our past. More than 100 years ago, the United Daughters of the Confederac­y created commission­s ensuring textbooks depicted the Civil War as a struggle over states’ rights and sugarcoate­d slavery as a protective institutio­n. Such books were in use until the 1980s. Here in Texas, as recently as 2010, textbooks removed slavery as a central cause of the Civil War, an inaccuracy that existed until 2018.

Many of us were educated with a curriculum that glorified the Confederac­y, omitted contributi­ons of people of color, relegated women to a subordinat­e role and

overlooked the attempted genocide of Native Americans.

Patriotic education resembles the United Daughters of the Confederac­y’s 1920 “Truths of History,” proclaimed to be “a fair, unbiased, impartial, unprejudic­ed and conscienti­ous study of history” — while heralding the Ku Klux Klan and the beneficial treatment of slaves in the South.

Americans should demand that patriotic education be replaced by a commission committed to truth and reconcilia­tion, helmed by scholars and educators well-versed in history.

Patriotic education recalls McCarthyis­m and some of our darkest moments. Let’s remember, as Sinclair Lewis and New York City Mayor John Lindsay said, that true patriotism is reflected in dissent. A commission grounded in scholarly dissent of the myths of American history would actually make this country great — and we should be courageous enough to embrace it.

 ?? David J. Phillip / Associated Press ?? A statue in Galveston depicts a man holding the state law that made Juneteenth a holiday. As recently as 2010, textbooks in Texas left out slavery as a central cause of the Civil War.
David J. Phillip / Associated Press A statue in Galveston depicts a man holding the state law that made Juneteenth a holiday. As recently as 2010, textbooks in Texas left out slavery as a central cause of the Civil War.
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