
There is a bit of an uproar in Charlotte, N.C., as parents, teachers and the local NAACP are livid over a civil war lesson that supposedly went wrong during a Rea View Elementary school class trip to Latta Plantation on Wednesday.
According to WSOCTV.com, Ian Campbell, a black historian, had three black students, already a racial minority in their class, model cotton-picking slaves, with bags around their necks, in front of their peers.
Kojo Nantambu, president of the NAACP in Charlotte-Mecklenburg, is one of many who believes the demonstration was both insensitive and poorly executed:
There is a lingering pain, a lingering bitterness, a lingering insecurity and a lingering sense of inhumanity since slavery. Because that's still there, you want to be more sensitive than politically correct or historically correct.
Campbell, though, begs to differ. As a historian of 15 years, he argues that he has had kids partake in demonstrations before, and this is the first time there has been a complaint. Campbell also believes he is being historically accurate:
I am very enthusiastic about getting kids to think about how people did things in 1860, 1861 -- even before that period. ... I was trying to be historically correct not politically correct.
Nantambu, however, argues that the method of selecting all-black students to recreate that portion of history is problematic:
Even if the black children had volunteered, I probably would have tried to use all of the children. That would have made all the children feel equal in the experience.
With both parents and teachers writing letters to the plantation to communicate their disdain, Campbell now plans to reform his approach:
I'm going to start asking for volunteers instead of calling people from the audience. I think that would make it a lot easier that way if someone is afraid of public speaking or getting up in front of peers it wouldn't embarrass them.
I actually agree with Campbell's insistence of driving home history with a hands-on experience. Most people learn best when they can take part in an exercise that allows one to "relive" the experience. Often, kids and parents alike bemoan the lack of creativity as well as the didactic manner in which information is taught to students.
Campbell is obviously trying to impress upon kids who visit his plantation how challenging it must have been for slaves to have subsisted during slavery. His attempt to encourage students to embody the realities of their ancestors is noteworthy. Where Campbell got it wrong, though, was context.
Making the few black students act out antebellum roles in front of their white peers had to be both embarrassing and humiliating for those involved. We may be 145 years removed from slavery, but as Nantambu said, that pain, that memory, lives. Perhaps it will take another 145 years for African Americans to say that they are definitively removed from slavery. Unfortunately for Campbell, we aren't there yet, so the idea of being singled out in front of white kids to act out compromising and submissive roles was narrow-minded in the least. Nantambu had it right when he said that Campbell should have had the sensitivity to select white students as well in order to broaden the experience.
What do you think?


Comments: (322)
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By: Tiffany on 11/06/2009 3:52PM
Why does slavery need to be acted out in order to grasp the struggle? I think that we, black people, have a fairly firm grasp of what went on in that part of our history. We aren't the ones who sugar coat it, or try to lessen the severity of slavery. If anyone needs a reality check, its probably the white students. Let them re-enact what our ancestors were forced to go through.
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By: crp on 11/07/2009 7:48AM
"Perhaps it will take another 145 years for African Americans to say that they are definitively removed from slavery. "
I doubt it . Beat a dead horse over the slavery thing why don't you. Yes , it happened. BUT, the way it is still talked about ,you'd think it was just yesterday . My ancestors came from Poland and Slovakia ,none of which owned any (African) slaves . So quit forcing the whole slavery issue on me . If ( by lack of better wording)you (not you personally , but a general "you")people would just get off the subject and help yourselves instead of looking to play the whole race card,you owe me 40 acres and a mule ,poor me- i been held down by the man...The only ones keeping you down is yourselves. Change the subject and move on.
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By: KaLee on 3/25/2010 1:09PM
A portion of my ancestors were wealthy Plantation owners in Georgia and Arkansas from 1750 to til the Reconstruction. Though I am not proud of what they did, I will not be ashamed of my heritage. They were not "bad" people, but products of an insensitive age. Do not punish me. The sins of the father should never be blamed on the son. As a history major I believe in the accurate portrayal of historical events, and though Campbell probably should have approached the demonstration a little differently, he was trying to teach a lesson. Sure those black students were probably uncomfortable, but certainly their peers were just as embarressed. I know I would be, having to watch my friends and fellow students be berated and humiliated as I did nothing. I would be moved to make sure, that no scourge so blantently contradictory to the very Constitution that founded my beloved country as slavery ever existed within or beyond our borders.
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By: ruthsgardens on 11/07/2009 9:16AM
As a historian,he would do better to teach all of history.He could first start to be historically correct and tell his students that all races have been enslaved to another at some point in history.And that there is still slavery now.Many enslaved by their own race.As long as people keep connecting the word slavery to blacks,that racism will always be there.Many activists keep it going so they keep a job.Even Rev.Jeremiah Wright is guilty of this.His substitution of the word "Blacks" into scriptures,made theologians pull their hair out.Especially when he was quoting scriptures centuries before the black race came into existence.Can't find it in a history book? Research it in the Bible.Back before all of Africa was called Ethiopia.You will also find that blacks were not the first people who lived there.You will also find the origin of the N-word which was used against Arabs.Slavery and racism is ignorance.It doesn't go away because some people use it to perpetuate their own agendas.And that is all races.
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By: DICKIE on 11/07/2009 9:16AM
Tiffany: I guess it wouldn't be in YOUR best interest not to go back to the start of slavery. Can you tell me which tribes in Africa were the sellouts? Who hunted down the African for the Dutch and Jewish slave traders? Find out that truth first!
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By: aabmh on 11/07/2009 9:59AM
At some point all of our ancestors were slaves, the Irish, the Jews, the Indians, whites were the first slaves and slavery still exists today in some countries. If you want to forget it just stop talking about it. Eventually it will be forgotten and will go away. But then that would be like Iran and some people saying that the holocaust never happened. I don't think you want that either.
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By: Tiffany on 11/07/2009 11:25PM
@Usmarine - We'll have to agree to disagree...I still think that black people have a better understanding of that part of our history in comparison to whites. For the most part, it's all we ever hear about. I never learned anything, in school at least, about our history prior to being bought and brought to this country.
@crp - Who is forcing "the whole slavery issue" on you? In this situation it was forced on a group of kids. If you don't want to hear about it, why did you read this article? That makes no sense. And why are you telling me about "40 acres and a mule"? I didn't say anything about anyone owing me anything. Another thing, not everyone is "holding themselves down"...read up on institutional racism and it may make sense to you. If it doesn't, oh well.
@ruthsgarden - I'm all for people learning the entire history, on that we can agree.
@DICKIE - What are you talking about? Re-read my original post. I want the entire history taught. I already know about the sell-outs, NOT that their actions excuse the actions of those who bought my ancestors, brought them here, and treated them horribly. Believe me, I know what's in MY best interest...knowing my history keeps me from repeating it. So please, chill.
@aabmh - That's a good point; people would be outdone if folks said "Let's sweep the Holocaust under the rug...stop forcing it down our throats...blah blah blah..."
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By: NikonF2-AS on 11/08/2009 8:52PM
There are some very good posts here. But, there seems to be a general consensus that the white children are the ones who need a reality check. You are clueless. Tiffany, and others spoke in terms that they knew what their ancestors went through. You can not speak with authority, as none of you actually know what it felt like, the pain, the indignity suffered, etc. Many posts were so pompous, full of anger. You want to punish someone, down deep you know the ones you want to hurt are no longer alive. So, you focus on the whites of today. They are no more knowledgeable of slavery than you are. Just like you, they were not there either. We've all read the same history books. In essence, we're all on the same page. Or rather, we should be. For some reason, you seem to have a need to hang on to history as though you lived it, you didn't. Yes, know your history, where you came from, just stop acting as though you lived it. That's why it's call history! Because, you weren't there!
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By: mike on 11/10/2009 4:01AM
"If anyone needs a reality check, its probably the white students. Let them re-enact what our ancestors were forced to go through"........are you being serious? do you not realize blacks are just as guilty of slavery as well? go back and read your history books when blacks and jewish people as slaves, you dont hear the jewish people whining about it.
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By: Tiffany on 11/10/2009 10:02AM
Hi Mike,
Read my response post and you'll see what I said regarding the sell-outs. That said, your response only reinforces my feelings on the subject. If you were trying to change my mind, sorry, no dice.
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