The Hate They Censor: Burying Lessons of History – History News Network (HNN)

Posted: November 19, 2021 at 5:36 pm

More than 700 miles from where I sit in Mississippis capital city, oncethe power center of U.S. white-supremacist strategy, white people in Kansas dont want young adults to learn about the origins of the Ku Klux Klan. In Goddard, Kan., a 90%-plus white western suburb of Wichita, leaders just decided that the award-winning nonfiction book They Called Themselves the K.K.K.: The Birth of an American Terrorist Group must be pulled from library shelves in the Goddard School District.

Young adults reading a book that explains the origins of the Klan in Pulaski, Tenn., and how it becamea white-terrorist Invisible Empire under Nathan Bedford Forrest,is unacceptable in white suburbs in Kansas, we learn. They dont think teenagers can handle the truth about past white terrorist and vigilante groups burning schools and killing and beating teachers here in Mississippi and beyond to stop Black advancement,as I wrote about recently.

And Im quite sure they dont want students today to understand the purposeful roots of current inequities, division and (re)segregated schools in a nation where so many educational institutions are overwhelmingly one race or another, with the majority-white ones typically drawing the most resources.

Goddard is also censoring books by Margaret Atwood, Toni Morrison and Mississippis very own Angie Thomas (who is onour advisory board), andeven plays by August Wilson. Like thewell-funded and -planned censorship wavesweeping the nation,the Goddard white purgeis yet another supposed anti-CRT salvo to stop Americans from learning about and from our own race history, warts and all.

Its yet another campaign to rewrite our history and censor the difficult parts out of classrooms, just asfirst Mississippi State University President Stephen D. Lee helped leadmore than a century ago. Lees censorship efforts targeted books and educators to solidify widespread mythology about the Confederacy and the lost cause into place, as well as supported Jim Crow discrimination laws to limit Black education, voting and advancement for decades.

These 21st-century book-banners seem to think minors, even those in their teens, arent old enough to handle historic truth about the systemic racism, homophobia, xenophobia and misogyny that have kept power centered largely in a small percentage of wealthy, white male hands of various political persuasions.

They ignore that young people have experienced the effects of these bigotries and adult power plays from very early ages. Think of men and women spitting on6-year-old Ruby Bridgesand calling her and her mother the n-word after she enrolled in a public elementary school61 years ago yesterday in New Orleans.

When exactly is too young to start thinking about ways to change these deplorable old habits and beliefs in our society?

Read more:
The Hate They Censor: Burying Lessons of History - History News Network (HNN)

Related Posts