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Is it time to end Black History Month?

Should Black History Month itself fade into history?

Many have long argued that African American history should be incorporated into year-round education. Now claims that Black History Month is outdated are gaining a new potency, as schools diversify their curricula and President Barack Obama’s election opens a new chapter in the nation’s racial journey.

“If Obama’s election means anything, it means that African American history is American history and should be remembered and recognized every day of the year,” said Stephen Donovan, a 41-year-old lawyer.

Ending “paternalistic” observances like Black History Month, Donovan believes, would lead to “not only a reduction in racism, but whites more ready and willing and able to celebrate our difference, enjoy our traditions, without feeling the stain of guilt that stifles frank dialogue and acceptance across cultures.”

Yemesi Oyeniyi, a 40-year-old stay-at-home mother, said that Black History Month feels like it’s only for blacks, “and therefore fails to educate the masses of non-blacks.”

“I mean, now there is a Hispanic History Month and quite honestly I haven’t paid more attention to the history of Spanish-speaking Americans any more now than I have in the past,” she said. “I think it all should be taught collectively — every month.”

The black historian Carter G. Woodson founded Negro History Week in 1926, seeking to build self-worth in an oppressed people, preserve a marginalized subject and prove to a nation steeped in racism that children of Africa played a crucial role in modern civilization.

Woodson chose February because it contained the birthdays of Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass (which belies long-standing jokes about Black History Month being relegated to the shortest month of the year). Woodson’s organization, now called the Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASALH), expanded the observance to a full month in 1976.

It has now become a fixture in American education and culture — complete with the requisite commercialism — even as the shift in labels from Negro to black to African American indicates the evolution of attitudes meant to be shaped by the event.

Obama released an official proclamation on Feb. 2 lauding “National African American History Month” and calling upon “public officials, educators, librarians and all the people of the United States to observe this month with appropriate ceremonies, activities and programs that raise awareness and appreciation of African American history.”

Daryl Scott, chairman of the history department at Howard University and vice president of programming for ASALH, says Black History Month is still needed to solidify and build upon America’s racial gains.

“To know about the people who make up society is to make a better society,” he said. “A multiracial, multiethnic society has to work at its relationships, just like you have to work at your marriage.”

“I don’t see it going away,” said Spencer Crew, a history professor at George Mason University, adding that a diverse year-round history curriculum can still be augmented with greater depth during Black History Month.

“There’s a Women’s History Month,” Crew said. “No one would argue that we don’t need to be reminded of women who have done things that are important.”

Racial attitudes can also vary greatly from person to person and place to place.

Lee Eric Smith, the first black editor of the University of Mississippi’s student newspaper, isn’t ready to get rid of Black History Month, “because, to start quoting clichés, those who don’t know their history are doomed to repeat it.”

“If Mississippi ranks last in more categories than I want to talk about, at the same time, so many issues we’re facing are rooted in not understanding how these problems came to be in the first place,” said Smith, a native Mississippian.

Mississippi memories point to a different America where, in response to institutionalized racism, concepts like “Black Power” and the Afrocentric holiday of Kwanzaa were created. As that racist reality faded, so did many of those creations.

Obama’s triumph, to some, means that we can all put other assumptions — like the need for Black History Month — behind us.

“I propose that, for the first time in American history, this country has reached a point where we can stop celebrating separately, stop learning separately, stop being American separately,” Detroit Free Press columnist Rochelle Riley, who is black, wrote in a Feb. 1 column calling for an end to Black History Month.

At Daniel Warren Elementary in Mamaroneck, N.Y., kindergarten teacher Jane Schumer has dedicated many hours this year to the story of Wangari Maathai, a Kenyan activist who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2004 for leading a movement that planted millions of trees in Africa.

Schumer connected Maathai’s story to Obama, who planted a tree in her program and whose father was from Kenya. She connected Maathai to Martin Luther King Jr., who like Maathai was jailed for fighting injustice.

Schumer doesn’t have any special black history plans for February.

“It can’t be contrived,” said Schumer. “It’s a way of thinking, a way of life … to me, the whole year has built up to this month … the emphasis we have is what people would want to accomplish with Black History Month.”

Steve O’Rourke, who has a kindergartener at Warren Elementary, said his son wants to ask Maathai, “You and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. both went to jail for doing the right thing. What did it feel like to be in jail?”

“Whenever we denote something as belonging in a certain month, it becomes tempting to say it belongs in that month alone,” said O’Rourke. “Ideally I would like us to have a common rather than compartmentalized history.”

New York is among several states that have passed laws mandating or encouraging teachers to broaden their history classes. New Jersey was the first to do so, in 2002, after Assemblyman Bill Payne conceived and wrote the Amistad Commission bill, named after the Africans who took over their slave ship, ended up in Connecticut and won freedom in court.

Several years later, many New Jersey teachers were unaware that the law existed, and many who wanted to comply did not have the resources or knowledge to diversify their lessons, Payne said.

Next fall, New Jersey’s Amistad Commission will deploy a new set of Internet-based lesson plans for teachers to use statewide.

“I’m concerned about black and white kids’ education,” said Payne, who is no longer in the legislature and travels the country lecturing about his Amistad Commission. “This is not a black history course. I’m taking about U.S. history. I’m an American.”

Yet even Payne thinks that Black History Month should remain, because “we should not give up our heritage.”

And it does seem unlikely that it will disappear anytime soon.

“Yes, we do need it for the time being, if only because we’re in uncharted territory,” said Smith, the Mississippi native.

“We’ve just experienced a seismic shift in the identity of America,” he said, referring to Obama’s election. “We’re in the process of transforming into something, we don’t know exactly what that is yet. Until we have a better grasp on that, it’s hard to understand how we should teach history.”

(Associated Press)



Jun 30 14:09pm by sery [146.243.4.157]

Ending Black History,.. who wants that? Until we see B.H. being more discussed in our University and schools that most of us can hear more of our younger people understand and know how African American plays an important role in this society... just maybe within decades of times we don't have to worry about the advertisement and other prints about our history. Having to know about such of a royal history.. it keeps me and I'm sure others on our toes. Since we have had Black History months-We have more people attending college and living the dream that every God's created child desire. Once a year, I enjoy attending functions and other recreational activities to hear about folks that have gone before that got it right for me and my generation to have that voice in this world. Just like seeing the dollar bills for non people of color and see how that intrigue those groups of folks certainly just to hear that 1% of Black History uplift me. Cool

 
Mar 7 22:13pm by Ms. Bard [98.217.189.159]

It's that type of ignorance (thoughts of the Mar. 5 writer) that makes Black History Month necessary. To say there is no white history month is just silly -- every day is white history month! It was shoved down my throat so much in school that it made me a collector of Black history. No white organizations? They are all white, that's why Black organizations were started. White magazines, that's why Black magazines were started - we are not covered. All white news agencies, that's why we have the Banner. White TV, we'll we're still working on that one. Black history month need not end until history classes INCLUDE more than white history. Maybe this writer's children, who are FORCED to celebrate Black history at school, will belong to a better generation of thinkers than the writer.To say that people of color have more chances than whites -- give me a break. Just ask any Black professor trying to get in his home and gets arrested if things are better. The funny thing is, when whites and other races become enlightened to all that Blacks have accomplished in this and other countries, they ask ME why they didn't know it before...I just tell them, "You know it now, tell someone."

 
Mar 5 0:16am by Teri [75.223.160.41]

Yes Black History month needs to end. There is not a White History month, if there was it would be called racists. Enough is enough. There are black only organizations everywhere. How do they get away with it without being called racists? America is full of all shades and color. Slavery is history and people need to quit pulling the race card and the government needs to quit letting them. It is 2010 and equal means equal. No race should be allowed to have organizations for only one race. NAACP speaks freely and publicly, now put a white only organization in the public view and they will be called racists. what is the difference? Black people or people of color have more chance in America now a days that the white person. Quit putting skin color in the way and join 2010. My children are forced to celebrate Black History at school and it is wrong and racists to push anything on children. Teach all year or give every race their own history month. Be equal and fair.

 
Feb 23 17:09pm by Doris V. [67.41.8.188]

Until Black history is given more coverage in classroom texts, YES, there is a reason for Black History Month.  Seems to me that history is not gven much attention and young students have little idea of any history.

 

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