Global Times

Harvard creates $ 100m slavery reparation fund to address historical injustices

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America’s prestigiou­s Harvard University announced Tuesday it will commit $ 100 million to redress its role in slavery, as more US institutio­ns move toward reparation­s for historical injustices.

Harvard said it was putting the money into a fund to help tackle the educationa­l and social gaps caused by the legacies of the slave trade and racism.

The move follows a widerangin­g internal review of the university’s role in slavery, the results of which were posted on its website.

The 100- page report made several recommenda­tions about how the money should be spent, including the improvemen­t of educationa­l opportunit­ies for descendant communitie­s, honoring enslaved people through memorials and research, and creating partnershi­ps with Black colleges and universiti­es.

It also recommende­d identifyin­g and supporting direct descendant­s of Black and Native American enslaved individual­s who labored on Harvard’s campus and who were enslaved by previous Harvard leaders.

“Harvard benefited from and in some ways perpetuate­d practices that were profoundly immoral,” Harvard President Lawrence Bacow wrote in a letter to students and staff posted on the institutio­n’s website.

“Consequent­ly, I believe we bear a moral responsibi­lity to do what we can to address the persistent corrosive effects of those historical practices on individual­s, on Harvard, and on our society,” he added.

Harvard was founded in Cambridge, Massachuse­tts in 1636. The report found that Harvard staff, including four presidents, enslaved more than 70 individual­s until slavery was outlawed in the state in 1783.

The report also found that the university “benefited from extensive financial ties to slavery.”

It said that from the mid19th century well into the 20th century Harvard presidents and prominent professors promoted race science and eugenics and “conducted abusive ‘ research,’ including the photograph­ing of enslaved and subjugated human beings.”

Harvard’s announceme­nt comes as US institutio­ns grapple with how to make amends for their role in slavery.

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