Miami Herald (Sunday)

Hands off University of Florida’s curriculum on race — and anything else, lawmakers

- BY FABIOLA SANTIAGO fsantiago@miamiheral­d.com

Some days, I hardly recognize the University of Florida, my beloved alma mater. If any institutio­n in this state was going to stand up to the unrelentin­g threats inflicted on our democracy by political ambition, I thought UF would be the one.

Through the decades, the university has been a beacon of openness, a pillar of academic freedom, leaders and promoters for Florida’s public records and Sunshine Laws, to name an area of national distinctio­n.

Yet, here we are, another week and another political battle is brewing at the university, this time over how the teaching of critical race theory might impact vital state funding from the GOP-led and dominated Florida Legislatur­e.

ANTI-CRITICAL RACE THEORY BILLS

At a time when Republican lawmakers are introducin­g bills to quash CRT discussion­s in state institutio­ns, instead of standing on the side of academic freedom, university officials have asked faculty members to not use the words “critical” and “race” in curricula to avoid political backlash.

So claims UF College of Education Associate Professor

Chris Busey in a grievance filed through the faculty union.

I can understand the concerns over legislator­s taking away funding as punishment, but submitting to blackmail is hardly admirable.

Silencing and censuring professors is shameful enough in itself, but doing so to enable elected leaders to enact laws that weaken our democracy is unforgivab­le.

MORE DAMAGING POLITICAL STUNTS

And it seems like operating at Tallahasse­e’s behest — to the detriment of faculty and, ultimately, the students not served — is becoming a trend at UF.

Only a few weeks ago, university officials tried to pull another damaging political stunt.

They prohibited three political science professors from testifying in a voting-rights lawsuit against Gov. Ron DeSantis and his administra­tion. After a national uproar and a federal lawsuit on grounds of First Amendment violations, the university rescinded its ban.

But the damage to UF’s reputation was done.

And there’s more.

Before these last two incidents, DeSantis and his administra­tion, I’m told by a source in the medical field, also used UF to ram through an appointmen­t for the governor’s questionab­le new surgeon general, Dr. Joseph Ladapo, at the UF College of Medicine.

“The new surgeon general is an ideologue and zealot, making him perfect for DeSantis,” this insider told me. “Faculty there are aghast and remorseful — and fearful of retaliatio­n if they speak out.”

Clearly, DeSantis and his lawmakers are all too comfortabl­e using a nationally, top-five ranked public university as a tool for their partisan errands. And they’re putting that ranking at risk by exerting undue influence and meddling with academic freedom.

WHAT UF STANDS FOR

Forgive me for taking it all personally, but I feel as if my hard-earned degree has been tarnished. And a question comes to mind: Should I return my Distinguis­hed Alumni medal?

After all, our politics don’t coincide.

I’m on the side of the basic American founding principles I was taught at UF to defend. And no, one of them wasn’t to hide the inhumanity of slavery, the ugly side to the birthing of this country, America’s original sin, along with the genocide of Native Americans. And I certainly wasn’t taught at the College of Journalism to hide racism’s lingering, generation­al effects on modern-day USA.

In fact, even when it wasn’t diverse at all back in the late 1970s and 80s, the university had African American and women’s issues studies. Now we’re harking back to...what exactly?

The people that university officials are working so hard to please, on the other hand, stand for total political domination of the state. There’s nothing sacred on the road to turning Florida not just red, but very red. Not voting rights, not fair representa­tion in redistrict­ing, not the right to protest.

Critical race theory is only the latest target, one of the dog-whistle political talking points along the midterm campaign trail Republican­s want to pound. Most people don’t even know what it really is, and the GOP counts on ignorance to exaggerate its controvers­ial aspects.

Republican leaders like DeSantis and GOP party chair Sen. Joe Gruters of Sarasota are in a perennial state of anxiety over the national reckoning with race and racial issues. They don’t even hide it.

“Garbage,” Gruters calls CRT.

In their view, teaching the horrible truths about slavery and discussing the inequities still ingrained in society today somehow offends the sensibilit­ies of their white children.

UF’s role isn’t to be the nanny to their insecuriti­es.

The GOP bid to exert political control over education calls for courage, not cowardice, University of Florida.

If anything, the university should be sounding the warning bells through scholarshi­p and placing its efforts where they belong — in the study of the rise of right-wing extremism in F-L-O-R-I-D-A.

Then, maybe again we can shout with pride, go Gators!

Fabiola Santiago: 305-376-3469, @fabiolasan­tiago

AFGHANISTA­N HAD ABOUT 300 FEMALE JUDGES, MUSKA SAID, AND MANY ARE NOW IN HIDING, THEIR BANK ACCOUNTS FROZEN.

salary, lost their jobs, had their bank accounts blocked. They are still in danger,” the judge said.

“It is not good in Kabul.”

The Taliban won widespread support in Afghanista­n in part because the toppled U.S.-backed government was widely seen as corrupt.

“But women judges were the bravest, strongest and most honest officials in the previous administra­tion,” said Muska, who said the decision by U.S. President Joe Biden to end American presence in the country meant she quickly had to leave.

“Everything happened suddenly,” she said.

Judge Renata Gil, the head of the Brazilian Associatio­n of Magistrate­s that is sponsoring the refugees, said the Afghans arrived “in a lot of fear, still feeling threatened.”

“They are being chased because they convicted Taliban fighters,” she said noting that she herself had received death threats “because I sentenced drug dealers. For women this is much harder.”

Speaking at the associatio­n’s headquarte­rs in the capital, Brasilia, she said, “I hope they are able to live their lives independen­tly. But as long as they need, we will be here to help.”

The judges and their 19 family members – apparently the only Afghan refugees who have come to Brazil since the Taliban returned to power – now have Brazilian bank accounts and health care. Those who can are taking lessons in Portuguese.

It’s not clear yet what the future holds for them in Brazil, where at least they are protected. But Muska said they’d like to return home one day.

“I hope I can join my family members in Kabul.

I have this dream I am in my house. I miss everything,” the judge said.

Muska hasn’t seen much of Brazil due to security reasons, difficulti­es with the language and her own fears. But she has found people with empathy for her situation.

“They cry with us, we know they can sense our feelings,” the judge said with tears in her eyes.

Muska’s three children, including a toddler, are also having a tough time adapting. The judge used to have her parents and nannies to help, but in Brazil she’s largely on her own, while worrying about her future, and theirs.

The children look happy and energetic as they run and jump at a public playground, speaking Dari among themselves. But the judge said her eldest daughter has questions she cannot answer.

“She is always asking about my parents, her friends, her cousins,” Muska said. “She always asks us questions about the Taliban, if they will kill us.”

Despite the difficulti­es, Muska said she believes the future will be brighter for her children than for those still in Afghanista­n.

“I have hope for them. That they have their studies in a good situation, in a good educationa­l system,” she said. “They will have their choice on what they can do.”

 ?? CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com ?? On the issue of critical race theory, Gov. Ron DeSantis has said, “We are going to get the Florida political apparatus involved so we can make sure there’s not a single school board member who supports critical race theory.” In this photo from Monday, May 25, 2021, DeSantis responds to local TV reporter’s question after he signed legislatio­n to make it harder for social media companies to punish users who violate terms of service agreements inside FIU MARC building in Miami, Florida.
CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com On the issue of critical race theory, Gov. Ron DeSantis has said, “We are going to get the Florida political apparatus involved so we can make sure there’s not a single school board member who supports critical race theory.” In this photo from Monday, May 25, 2021, DeSantis responds to local TV reporter’s question after he signed legislatio­n to make it harder for social media companies to punish users who violate terms of service agreements inside FIU MARC building in Miami, Florida.

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