African
American
history was celebrated at this year’s Super
Bowl. It was
the first time that two Black quarterbacks
faced off against each
other. Jalen Hurts of the Philadelphia
Eagles and Patrick Mahomes
played a good game, and the Chiefs won
narrowly. The NFL is more than
100 years old. What took so long for it to
reach this milestone?
NFL
Commissioner Roger Goodell trumpeted the
historic moment when he gave
a press conference on “The State of the
League.” When asked why
it took so long, he replied, “there are
probably a variety of
reasons, probably none of them good.” The
NFL has a history of
virulent racism. According to Dave Zirin, an
MSNBC columnist, “only
eight Black men have ever quarterbacked in a
Superbowl.” And Colin
Kaepernick, the courageous African American
who took a knee to
protest racism, has not yet found a place in
the NFL.
The
Black National Anthem, rousingly delivered
by Sheryl Lee Ralph, was
featured live at the Superbowl for the first
time. The anthem was
written 123 years ago by James Weldon
Johnson, an NAACP official, and
teacher. It was a family affair, with his
brother John Rosamond
Johnson composing the music to accompany the
song. The Superbowl was,
in some ways, a celebration of African
American History. But Black
folks can’t celebrate our history with
others offering resistance
and backlash.
The
conservative Congresswoman Lauren Boebert
twitted, “America only
has ONE NATIONAL ANTHEM. Why is the NFL
trying to divide us by
playing multiple? Do football, not
wokeness.” Boebert and her
sidekick, Marjorie Taylor Green, shamelessly
and thoughtlessly carry
the right-wing agenda, operating publicly
without a shred of dignity.
At the State of the Union Address last week,
Taylor Green, clad in
all white, including a white fur collar,
should have worn a matching
hat (or hood) to make herself clear.
Boebart’s
Twitter racism generated nearly 92,000
likes, more than 10,000
retweets, and much attention. Her backlash
to Black excellence is
similar to the conservative backlash to
truth and Black history.
According to Sarah Schwartz of Education
Week, 44 states have
“introduced bills or taken other steps that
would restrict teaching
‘critical race theory’ or limit how teachers
can discuss racism.”
Eighteen states, of this writing, have
passed this pernicious
legislation.
More
than 1600 books have been banned in 138
school districts in 33 states
so far, as the momentum for ignorance is
increasing. Among the banned
books – Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye and
Beloved; and Margaret
Atwood’s, The Handmaid’s Tale. This
book-banning,
history-ignoring climate has some teachers
frightened and
intimidated. In some school districts,
teachers who mention race can
be fined or incarcerated. One teacher
covered her books with plain
book covers so students couldn’t see titles
that might be perceived
as “offensive.” Many of the banned books
have themes that deal
with sex and sexuality. All the books
apparently tell a truth that
conservatives can’t handle.
Legislators
are
passing laws that are vague and silly. In
South Carolina, a
proposed law would prevent teachers from
discussing anything that
creates “discomfort, guilty, or anguish on
the basis of political
belief.” Florida has passed similar laws,
and its governor has been
a leading proponent in limiting teacher
speech around race matters.
Sarah Huckabee, the new governor of
Arkansas, said she didn’t want
students being taught to “hate their
country.” But many African
Americans, despite the oppression our people
have experienced, love
our country.
It
is no surprise that Florida’s governor has
attacked an Advanced
Placement (AP) Black Studies class and says
it cannot be taught in
Florida public schools. He has created a
national controversy and
prevaricated his interactions with the
College Board, the
organization that developed the class. His
lies are not unusual. It
reflects the lies he’d like teachers to tell
when he waters down
American history.
Black
history is American history. The history of
enslavement, lynching,
and Jim Crow isn’t pleasant, but it
happened. The theme of this
Black History Month is resistance, which
Black folks must do
economically, politically, and
educationally. Black educators and our
allies have work to do. We must teach the
truth and tell the truth,
or the entire nation will suffer.