As we
celebrate Black History Month, one thing is certain: President Donald
Trump knows absolutely nothing about Frederick Douglass.
Listening
to Trump at the White House Black History Month breakfast last week
with African-American “leaders” such as Omarosa
Manigault, Pastor Darrell Scott and Dr. Ben Carson, one would have
thought the iconic statesman and abolitionist was still alive.
Maybe he is a reality
show star…or perhaps Trump is going to give him a job!
“Frederick
Douglass is an example of somebody who’s done an amazing job
and is being recognized more and more, I notice” Trump said in
front of cameras.
When translated, that
means absolutely nothing, because Trump doesn’t have the first
idea who Frederick Douglass is. Just ask the alleged White House
staffer who’s leaking inside information on Trump:
Ultimately, Trump made
his Black History Month “listening session” more about
himself than the contributions of African Americans in this country.
But while we’re
on the subject, who exactly was Frederick Douglass? And what would he
have to say about Donald Trump?
In Trump’s
America, black people have very limited roles, often limited to
athletes, entertainers or criminals. President Trump lacks
fundamental knowledge and, in his own words, is “low energy”
from an intellectual standpoint. He won’t even take the time to
educate himself on the most prominent black Republican statesman in
American history.
Douglass
was a
refugee
who
fled the state-sponsored terrorism that was U.S. slavery. He was a
runaway slave, an undocumented alien–or what Trump would call
an “illegal.” He was an author, an activist, an
abolitionist and orator. He was also a preacher in the AME church and
an ambassador who served as U.S. consul-general to Haiti.
Simply put: the man was
great. So great that his face should be on a U.S. bill by now. His
advocacy work and contributions to dismantling the system of slavery
solidifies him as an American hero, one who should’ve been
president.
As an orator, Douglass’
words were powerful. “The white man’s happiness cannot be
purchased by the black man’s misery,” he once said.
On the absurdity of
slavery and oppression he said, “No man can put a chain about
the ankle of his fellow man without at last finding the other end
fastened about his own neck.” And on the implications of
challenging one’s First Amendment right he declared: “To
suppress free speech is a double wrong. It violates the rights of the
hearer as well as those of the speaker.”
Frederick Douglass had
much to say about tyranny, power and injustice–all of which
certainly speak to the times in which we live today.
“If there is no
struggle, there is no progress,” he proclaimed. “This
struggle may be a moral one; or it may be a physical one; or it may
be both moral and physical; but it must be a struggle. Power concedes
nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will.”
He added: “Find
out just what any people will quietly submit to and you have found
out the exact measure of injustice and wrong which will be imposed
upon them, and these will continue till they are resisted with either
words or blows, or with both. The limits of tyrants are prescribed by
the endurance of those whom they oppress.”
If he were alive today,
Frederick Douglass would’ve likely given Trump a verbal
beatdown. Had Trump known who Douglass actually was and what he
represented, it’s doubtful that he would have praised him as he
did.
Ultimately, as the
president, Trump should be familiar with this American hero, who was
a radical freedom fighter. But as a leader who’s invoked white
nationalism across the country, Trump couldn’t care less, and
need not bother.
Trump is not alone.
A nation that does not
value or respect black people does not care about their history.
Black history is an afterthought, if anything at all, and regarded as
a sideshow distraction rather than an integral part of the whole…a
nuisance white folks must endure each February as a concession to
keep black folks happy and quiet.
Sadly, very few white
Americans truly know who Frederick Douglass is, or any other black
historical figure for that matter. They aren’t taught the truth
about slavery, Jim Crow and 400 years of oppression and exploitation.
They don’t see the countless images of lynchings that are
forever engrained in the memory of African Americans. They don’t
know about black achievements in building this country.
Schools don’t
teach children about America’s multicultural history, and its
implications for today. And they certainly won’t learn it now
that Trump has taken America back to make it great and white again.
Because America fails
to learn history and the lessons it provides, we are doomed to repeat
it, just as we are doing right now.
Who was Frederick
Douglass? A strong and great man. Everything that Donald Trump could
never be.
This commentary
originally appeared in The Grio
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