Los Angeles Times

To fight MAGA lies, look at Black educators’ strategy

- By Christophe­r M. Richardson CHRISTOPHE­R M. RICHARDSON is an immigratio­n lawyer and co-author of “Historical Dictionary of the Civil Rights Movement.”

SPEAKING AT MAR-A-LAGO earlier this month, former President Trump spewed lies reflecting his ongoing efforts to rewrite the attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. He suggested his supporters were completely unarmed and falsely blamed former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi for the mob. For their part, Trump supporters have sought to recast jailed insurrecti­onists as hostages or even political prisoners. Some have suggested Jan. 6 was a “peaceful protest” or ”normal tourist visit.” This revisionis­m serves many roles, but none more than to legitimize Trump’s attempt to undermine the U.S. Constituti­on.

Trump’s election denialism has been compared to another piece of mythology in American history, and rightly so. After their insurrecti­on in 1861, residents of Southern states similarly spread falsehoods about the war. Some ex-Confederat­es claimed that slavery had nothing to do with their attempt to secede, but rather, Northern aggression and federal overreach forced the South’s hand.

This lie became known as the Lost Cause, and by the 1920s it was widely considered factual. But it drew pushback from a group of Black scholars who started what was then called Negro History Week, which grew into February’s Black History Month. Those educators combated one of our nation’s first campaigns of disinforma­tion. As the month concludes, can their experience offer any hope for today?

Following the Confederac­y’s defeat in 1865, in books, movies such as “Gone With the Wind” and lessons in American schools, Confederat­es became the heroes and their rebellion a noble cause. The narrative required Confederat­e monuments, flags and stories celebratin­g the white Americans who tried to secede. It also erased the empowermen­t and leadership of Black Americans who, after emancipati­on, shaped public life during the post-Civil War Reconstruc­tion. Black people in this version of history were portrayed as docile or better off on plantation­s, if they were acknowledg­ed at all.

This period of racism and extreme views fueled a countermov­ement to set the historical record straight. In 1926, Harvard-trained historian Carter G. Woodson chose the second week of February to be Negro History Week because it coincided with the birthdays of Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass. Negro History Week expanded on work Black teachers were already doing, and it quickly became popular. Through historical performanc­es, lectures, parades and other events centered on Black history, Woodson and Black academics pushed back against Lost Cause myths of that time.

These efforts were certainly not without opposition, nor were they a complete success. No less than Massachuse­tts-born John F. Kennedy fell for the Lost Cause in the 1950s. Today, the rebel Confederat­e flag is still displayed on bumper stickers, buildings and schools, and streets bear the names of Confederat­e leaders, reflecting the valorizati­on of men who tried to tear the country apart. But these false narratives are not nearly as unchalleng­ed as they were when Negro History Week started.

Black leaders adopted a few different strategies to attack the Lost Cause. They focused their lessons first on elementary school children, ensuring that local schools emphasized democratic principles including the peaceful transfer of power from one leader to another. Such examples teach students at a young age how democracy itself has worked and evolved.

These educators also applied their mission to organizing, first among the like-minded and gradually to less immediatel­y receptive groups. Black leaders from that era, including historians and members of the press, aligned with abolitioni­st or otherwise sympatheti­c white Americans to teach Black history wherever it could be taught. This phase didn’t focus on winning over those enraptured by Confederat­e falsehoods, but rather on giving accurate informatio­n in safe and educationa­l environmen­ts.

That has some resonance today. Arguing on X/ Twitter against MAGA zealots stuck in a new Lost Cause narrative can be of little to no use. There may be more value in sharing knowledge of American democratic institutio­ns, including the tradition of peacefully transferre­d power establishe­d by John Adams in 1801, with young students and other openminded or pro-democracy individual­s. The endurance of Black History Month suggests that approach can build a lasting foundation for myth-busting education.

Simply preaching that Jan. 6 was wrong clearly doesn’t convince everyone. In the wake of their own insurrecti­on, Trump and his supporters appear intent on following in the footsteps of the Confederat­es who lost the Civil War but largely won the battle to falsify history for their purposes.

But the teaching of Black history across decades of strong, at times violent, opposition shows that resistance to the facts doesn’t have to be a death knell to education. Black academics did not merely argue against the Lost Cause; they also sought empowermen­t through knowledge that kept their teaching traditions alive. Democracy itself is empowering, and organizing to share the basic ideas of democracy must be central to fighting Trump’s Lost Cause.

In 10 years’ time, Trump supporters may well indulge in Jan. 6 reenactmen­ts or fly MAGA banners beneath American flags on public buildings. But we do not have to accept historical revisionis­m from a vocal minority as the winning narrative. It may take a long, grueling and imperfect process, but the facts about democracy can still have their day.

 ?? MANUEL BALCE CENETA Associated Press ?? MEMBERS of the Oath Keepers extremist group stand in front of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Some Trump supporters are spreading a “Lost Cause” narrative around his presidency.
MANUEL BALCE CENETA Associated Press MEMBERS of the Oath Keepers extremist group stand in front of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Some Trump supporters are spreading a “Lost Cause” narrative around his presidency.

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