THE CONTINUING ASSAULT UPON AMERICAN HISTORY: A SELF-RIGHTEOUS DISPLAY OF NARROWNESS OF VISION
BY
ALLAN C. BROWNFELD
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In
recent days, we have seen an escalation in the assault upon American
history. Sports-ware company Nike pulled sneakers displaying the
13-star Betsy Ross flag after former NFL football player Colin
Kaepernick, who has a deal with the company, objected because
the flag is sometimes displayed by far-right groups. At almost the
same time, the city of Charlottesville, Virginia decided that it would
no longer celebrate the birthday of Thomas Jefferson—-and the city of
San Francisco announced that it would spend $600,000 to paint over a
mural depicting the life of George Washington.
In
the case of the Betsy Ross flag, there is no connection in any way with
slavery, Mark Pitcavage, a senior fellow at the Anti-Defamation
League’s Center on Extremism, said: “We view it as essentially an
innocuous historical flag. It’s not a thing in the white supremacist
movement.” Lisa Moulder, Director of the Betsy Ross House In
Philadelphia, says of the flag that, “I’ve always seen it as a
representation of early America, a society that was not perfect and is
not perfect today.”
In San Francisco,
there are plans to paint over a mural painted 83 years ago as part of a
New Deal program, which portrays the life of George Washington, at a
cost of $600,000. The painter was Victor Arnatoff, a Russian-born
radical. He portrayed many aspects of Washington’s life, including the
depiction of slavery at Mt. Vernon. The mural consists of 13 panels and
occupies 600 square feet on a wall in George Washington High School.
Richard
Walker, professor emeritus at the Universuty of California at Berkeley,
an outspoken liberal and director of the History Project, argues that
the portrait is an important part of history and should be maintained:
“We on the left ought to welcome the honest portrayal ...Destroying
this work of art is the worst we can do in dealing with history’s
evils.”
The growing attacks upon the
history of our country reflect a narrowness of vision. America, after
all, is a human enterprise, and all human enterprises are deeply flawed.
We define things on the basis of how they differ from other things.
With its many shortcomings, our country’s history stands out in
positive terms. Its critics compare America to perfection—-not to other
very real places.
In
1987, when we celebrated the bicentennial of the Constitution, Dr. Mark
Cannon, Director of the Commission on the Bicentennial, noted that,
“Nearly two-thirds of the world’s national constitutions have been
adopted or revised since 1970, and only fourteen predate World War ll.
...53.5 per cent of the independent states of the world have been under
more than one constitution since the end of the Second World War. The
average nation has had two constitutions since the second World War.
Two states, Syria and Thailand, have each had nine constitutions over
the past forty years...The Constitution of the United States has proven
remarkably durable,”
The
Constitution—-and all of our history—-is found wanting because of the
existence of slavery. Many critics appear to hold the view that slavery
was a uniquely American evil—-our “original sin.” History, however,
tells a far more complex story.
From
the beginning of recorded history until the 19th century, slavery was
the way of the world. in 1787, slavery was legal every place in the
world. What was unique was that in the American colonies there was
strenuous objection to slavery and the most prominent Framers of the
Constitution wanted to eliminate it at the very start of the nation.
The
history of slavery is a long one. in the ancient world, most people
regarded slavery as a natural condition of life, one which could befall
anyone at any time, it has existed almost universally through history
among peoples of every level of material culture—-it existed among
nomadic pastoralists of Asia, among societies of North American Indians,
and sea people such as the Nordemen. The legal codes of Sumer provide
documentary evidence that slavery existed there as early as the 4th
millennium B.C, The Sumerian symbol for slave in cuneiform writing
suggests “foreign.”
When the
Constitutional Convention met in Philadelphia in 1787, , not a single
nation had made slavery illegal. As they looked back through history,
the Framers saw slavery as an acceptable and accepted institution. It
was not until 1792 that Denmark became the first Western nation to
abolish the slave trade. In 1807, the British Parliament passed a
bill,outlawing the slave trade—-and slavery was abolished in British
colonies between 1834 and 1848. Spain ended slavery in Puerto Rico in
in 1873 and in Cuba in 1886. Brazil abolished slavery in 1888.
What
is historically unique is not that slavery was the accepted way of the
world in 1787, but that so many of the leading men of the American
colonies wanted to eliminate it—-and pressed vigorously to do so.
Benjamin
Franklin and Alexander Hamilton were ardent abolitionists. John Jay,
who would become the first Chief Justice, was president of the New York
Anti-Slavery Society. Rufus King and Gouverneur Morris were in the
forefront of the opposition to slavery and the slave trade.
One
of the great debates at the Constitutional Convention related to the
African slave trade. George Mason of Virginia made an eloquent plea for
making it illegal. He declared: “This infernal traffic originated in
the avarice of British merchants. The British government constantly
checked the attempt of Virginia to put a stop to it, ...Every master of
slaves is born a petty tyrant. They bring the judgment of heaven on a
country.”
The provision finally adopted
read: “The Migration or Importation of such Persons as as any of the
States now existing shall think proper to admit, shall not be prohibited
by the Congress prior to the year one thousand eight hundred and eight,
but a Tax or duty may be imposed on such importation, not exceeding Ten
dollars for each Person.” This clause was widely viewed by opponents
of slavery as an important first step on the long road to abolition.
The delay of twenty years was considered the price ten of the states
were willing to pay in order to assure that the original union would
include the three states of Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina.
Even in these states there was sympathy for an end to slavery, but they
wanted additional time to phase out their economic dependence on it.
In
his original draft of the Declaration of Independence, one of the
principal charges made by Thomas Jefferson against King George lll and
his predecessors was that they would not allow the American colonies to
outlaw the importation of slaves.
When
Jefferson was first elected to the Virginia legislature at the age of
25, his first political act was to begin the elimination of slavery.
Though unsuccessful, he tried to further encourage the emancipation
process by writing into the Declaration of Independence that “all men
are created equal.” In the draft of a constitution for Virginia,he
provided that all slaves should be emancipated in that state by 1800,
and that any child born in Virginia after 1801 would be born free. This,
however, was not adopted.
The Founding
Fathers were committed to building a new civilization which would
become a model for the rest of mankind. Even before the Declaration of
Independence, John Adams saw the human hope that was flowering in
America, and wrote: “I always considered the settlement of America with
reverence and wonder, of the opening of a grand scene and design in
Providence for the illumination of the immigrant and the emancipation
of the slavish part of mankind all,over the world.”
Similarly,
James Madison declared, “Happily for Americans, happily we trust for
the whole human race, they (the founders) pursued a new and more Noble
course.”
To judge the founders of
America in 1787 by the values of 2019 is to engage in the sin of
contemporaneity. It is self-righteous in the extreme to find our
ancestors wanting, despite their extraordinary achievements. They
created a Constitution and a government which has endured until today.
They gave it the flexibility to expand the freedoms inherent in its
written words. When religious persecution plagued the world, they
established freedom of religion and separation of church and state.
They limited government power.
Those
who would topple statues and paint over murals because those who created
our country were not perfect are guilty of a narrowness of vision.
Those who have come before us were imperfect human beings, as are we.
We celebrate them for their achievements—-in spite of their faults and
shortcomings. In totalitarian societies, we have seen groups like the
Nazis, the Red Guard and the Taliban burn books, topple statues, and
destroy paintings. We should not permit those in our own society, a
small but vocal group, to succeed in imitating such destructive
behavior.
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