
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: lee on 11/07/2009 7:57AM
Oh and one more thing. If the teacher just picked "white" to do the slave parts then the blacks would be in an outrage because "how could you use just white kids, that is denying our hertitage, those white kids could never understand the feeling of what it is to be black in america and what our ancestors had to deal with!!!!" give me a break!!! white beat you down? ya right you walk around calling eachother "nigga" and that is wrong. You beat yourselves down. whites or anyone else don't do it, your doing a great job of your own!!!
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By: lamarr eddings on 11/07/2009 7:42AM
The idea of slavery SHOULD make everyone cringe. The black kids shouldn't be allowed to forget what their forefathers went through. The white kids families probably weren't part of the system but they probably were silent observers. Both sides are worth more thought, and that is education at its best...........BRAVO.
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By: haleejr73 on 11/07/2009 7:47AM
Does the teacher bind the white kids arms behind their backs when he teaches about whites being slaves to blacks along the barbary coast. Does he also bind white kids arms behind their backs when he teaches about white people being slaves to blacks in egypt? If not then he is not being acurate.
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By: liz Carrillo on 11/07/2009 7:45AM
the teacher was keepin it real, i would do it! I wouldnt be embarrased to show and act out the past of what my people went thru. I love Theater Art, NY Broadway etc.... I love the movie "The Color Purple", oh, ask Ophra if she was embarrased. People please why is this a big thing, every race in the past has suffered, read ur history books.
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By: haleejr73 on 11/07/2009 7:50AM
Instances like this shows the need for our parents to teach or buy the books so that our children can learn the truth about ourstory. White people want to keep us in the slave mentality. Black history month should not stop at slavery because ourstory goes back to when there were no white people on this earth. If you don't have the books in your house to prove what I am saying then you need to get busy!
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By: mark on 11/07/2009 8:25AM
Where is the white spin on aol? not having one is racest!
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By: ward on 11/07/2009 8:01AM
This oversensitivity to racial issues is stupid. If they make all the females act out female roles are they being "sexist'? History is just what was. Stop being microsensitive. The teacher didn't do anything wrong. Perspective is in the eye of the beholder.
Get over the perceived injustices that were not done to YOU anyway. History -- it is in the past. It can be talked about and taught accurately or representationally without fear.
Sheesh!
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By: Isis Millward on 11/08/2009 2:35AM
"Sorry Vickiss.Latino`s suffered hard times, but were never slaves."
Ludicrousness abounds. Latinos in great part are the progeny of slaves.
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By: wilder on 11/07/2009 7:56AM
jeezus, they never miss a chance to complain about the past or play the race card. Blacks and mexicans are whats wrong with this country. If they dont like the way things are, by all means ship em back to the jungle, and good riddance!
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By: gianni_p on 11/07/2009 8:13AM
There are virtually NO white Americans who were in any way connected to slavery. That ended SIX generations ago. There are horrible injustices readily recountable for ethnic group. This hyper-sensitivity, masked as black racism, creates far more racism than it averts. GRGOIMO (Get Real, Get Over It, Move On).
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