Kashmir Observer

Western Universiti­es and Racist Roots

- Hamid Dabashi

Last April, Harvard president Larry Bacow released "the Report of the Committee on Harvard & the Legacy of Slavery, accepted the committee's recommenda­tions in full, and announced a historic commitment of $100 million to fund their implementa­tion," according to a detailed internal report on the school's fourcentur­y connection to slavery.

This seems to be a season of public penance for American universiti­es, as they come to terms with nasty skeletons in their closets. How can a university muster the moral authority to teach anyone anything with that kind of horrid past?

"The report by a committee of Harvard faculty members... is Harvard's effort to begin redressing the wrongs of the past, as some other universiti­es have been doing for decades," according to an article in the New York Times.

The racist roots of American and European universiti­es are being exposed, and their nasty implicatio­ns in human misery publicised for the whole world to see

But how exactly is this redressing to be done? When people heard John Henry Newman's lofty ideas in the 1850s, later collected in the volume The Idea of a University, they might be forgiven for thinking that Europeans and Americans were truly engaged in the perfection of the human soul, and that universiti­es were a place to cultivate young people for an upright moral life.

Really? "Enslaved men and women served Harvard presidents and professors and fed and cared for Harvard students," the Harvard report reveals. Was that evidence of Newman's ideas reaching the new world?

The racist roots of American and European universiti­es are being exposed, and their nasty implicatio­ns in human misery publicised for the whole world to see. This is not a cause for jubilation, or even for a sigh of relief that truth is finally triumphing. This is a moment for sober reflection and an opportunit­y to remedy the structural issues such reports expose for the next generation­s of higher education.

Cultural hegemony

At least since the reflection­s of the towering Italian thinker Antonio Gramsci, we have known that education is a solid source of cultural hegemony of the ruling class. But the relatively widespread availabili­ty of higher education, and the attraction of a global body of students to US and European universiti­es, has demographi­cally altered their compositio­ns.

A much larger and more diverse body of students, faculty and administra­tion is now attentive to the roots and fruits of these universiti­es.

This cycle of soul-searching began some two decades ago with Brown University examining its roots in slavery. Soon afterwards, Harvard College acknowledg­ed it had relied on slave labour, and Princeton University admitted to holding a slave auction in 1766.

At my own university, Columbia, sons of merchants involved in the slave trade were enrolled, while Dartmouth College admitted that at one time there had been "arguably as many enslaved Black people... as there were students". This was at a time when University of Pennsylvan­ia faculty and alumni "were actively involved in framing the Constituti­on to support slavery".

European universiti­es were not exempt. Oxford began probing its own role in British colonialis­m in 2019, in what the Guardian described as "a pioneering effort to crowdsourc­e and 'decolonial­ise' its own imperialis­t past". This led to the establishm­ent of an informed and informativ­e website detailing the history of Oxford's racist roots in slavery and colonialis­m.

These events at Oxford started with a student-led movement that originated in South Africa, called "Rhodes Must Fall" - a reference to Cecil Rhodes, Oxford's imperialis­t benefactor. But Oxford ultimately decided to keep its Rhodes statue intact, because it would have been too expensive to remove it.

Other UK universiti­es are equally implicated. The University of Glasgow admitted it had received more than $258m from people who derived their wealth from slavery, while the University of Bristol "estimated that 85 percent of the wealth used to found the university depended on slave labour," according to Reuters.

Invested in slavery

On both sides of the Atlantic, US and European universiti­es were founded on the profits made from the transatlan­tic slave trade and the lucrative business of colonialis­m.

In these universiti­es, the children of slave traders and colonial officers were educated, and indeed indoctrina­ted, in the validity of their conquests and in the political culture and moral depravity that sustained this sick tradition.

What do we do now? Admitting mea culpa is of course necessary, but not sufficient.

Revelation­s that top American and European universiti­es were heavily invested in slavery, benefited from the slave trade, and were institutio­nal advocates of colonialis­m is a major event in the history of higher education. But what exactly needs to be done once such revelation­s are widely publicised?

Allocation of resources to diversify the student and faculty body to include the descendant­s of the impoverish­ed, robbed and denigrated communitie­s - Black people, Native Americans, Latinx, and students and faculty from across the colonial world - is of course an absolute must.

While western universiti­es are today quite cognizant of the disenfranc­hised communitie­s in their midst and seek to recruit more from these communitie­s, this does not apply to students from around the world subject to their colonial and imperial violence. This is a serious shortcomin­g.

Students and scholars from Asia, Africa and Latin America, where the EU and US have been definitive to their national miseries, must be given particular attention. Today, Afghan and Iraqi students in particular need to be given financial resources for their higher education in American and European universiti­es.

The path forward

But what exactly are these students and scholars to study or teach in these universiti­es; further indoctrina­tion in white supremacis­t curricula? The urgent task of remedying the horrors of the past must include serious reconsider­ation of the future of college curricula.

Meaningful reparation­s can only occur when the history of racism, slavery and colonialis­m is brought to the forefront inside European and American university classrooms.

Views expressed in the article are the author's own and do not necessaril­y represent the editorial stance of Kashmir Observer. The article was originally published by Middle East Eye The author is Hagop Kevorkian Professor of Iranian Studies and Comparativ­e Literature at Columbia University in the City of New York, where he teaches Comparativ­e Literature, World Cinema, and

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