The
countdown to the Carruthers Center for Inner City Studies (CCICS) and
the Black United Fund of Illinois (BUFI) sponsored Black History
Month Kick-Off lecture has arrived. On Friday, January 31, 2020, Dr.
Greg Carr, Chair of Africana Studies at Howard University will be the
featured speaker on the topic, “A Tribute to Dr. Carter G.
Woodson and the Continuing Challenges of Miseducation.” The
program will be held at CCICS, 700 East Oakwood Boulevard in Donn F.
Bailey Legacy Hall. Doors open
The
movement to implement an appropriate African Centered Curriculum in
predominately African in America inner city schools is critical to
the on–going struggle for the liberation of African people in
this country. We must continue to demand that the truth be taught as
the new school year begins.
This
movement has now become popularly known as the African Centered
Education Movement. Simple stated, it focuses on teaching the
truth concerning the contributions of African people to the
development of civilization in all subjects. During the school year
we must heighten the dialogue concerning the importance of this
movement, particularly as it relates to the future of our children.
Throughout
the country, Africans in America have become more sensitive to
challenging the racist and white supremacist basis of the American
public school curriculum.
Through
the National Black United Front (NBUF) and its world African Centered
Education Plan, more Africans in America are beginning to see the
need for massive curriculum change in the public schools of this
country and the youth must take leadership in this project.
People
throughout the country continue to call my office seeking information
and help on how to start the process of changing the curriculum in
their school. Parents are becoming more and more dissatisfied with
what their children are being taught. They are also beginning to
realize how much isn’t taught.
It
is clear that the public school system is the place where African
America children receive a significant portion of their view of the
world and the history of the world. And, it also is a place where
large numbers of African in America youth are miseducated under the
system of white supremacy through the ideas and interpretation of
history that is presented to them.
Let’s
turn to Carter G. Woodson’s great book, The
Mis-Education of the Negro
to
get some further insights into this problem. Woodson observes “the
so–called modern education, with all its defects, however, does
others so much more good than it does the Negro, because it has been
worked out in conformity to the needs of those who have enslaved and
oppressed weaker people.”
For
example, Woodson says, “The philosophy and ethics resulting
from our educational system have justified slavery, peonage,
segregation and lynching. The oppressor has the right to exploit, to
handicap, and to kill the oppressed.”
Continuing
on Woodson explains that, “No systematic effort toward change
had been possible for, taught the same economics, history,
philosophy, literature and religion which have established the
present code of morals, the Negro’s mind has been brought under
control of his oppressor.”
Concluding
on this point Woodson states, “The problem of holding the Negro
down, therefore, is easily solved. When you control a man’s
thinking you do not have to worry about his actions.”
Therefore,
it is inspiring to see so many of our people waking up all over
America and seeking the truth concerning the real contributions of
African people to the world. Through study groups, conferences, Black
talk radio, information network exchanges, African Americans are
coming into a new African consciousness that seeks to reclaim the
African mind and spirit.
Through
the Portland Model Baseline Essays, the work of the Kemetic
Institute, the Association for the Study of Classical African
Civilizations (ASCAC), and other writings and curriculum materials,
African people in America are becoming much more aware of the
following points that must be incorporated into the curriculum.
1.
Africa is the home of early man.
2.
Africa is the cradle of modern man.
3.
Africa is the cradle of civilization.
4.
Africa once held a position as world teacher including the teacher
for the western world.
5.
There was and there still is a continental wide unity in Africa and
in the African communities around the world.
6. The
first time Africans left the continent was not on slave ships.
7.
Africa and African people all over the world have been under siege
for nearly 2000 years and only recently by European slavery and
colonization.
8.
There is an African Diaspora all over the world today.
9.
African people have resisted domination on the continent and all over
the world.
10.
Even under slavery, colonization, segregation, apartheid, African
people have made monumental contributions to arts, science and
politics.
These
ten points, and others, have become the basis upon which we can judge
the white supremacy public school curriculums content in textbooks
and other learning materials.
In
other words, these points have become the basis of determining
whether the truth is being taught in the public schools of this
country.
The
Truth will set us all free!
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