Zinn Education Project https://www.zinnedproject.org/ Free lessons and resources for teaching people’s history in K-12 classrooms. For use with books by Howard Zinn and others on multicultural, women’s, and labor history. Mon, 22 Jan 2024 16:44:24 +0000 en-US hourly 1 191940966 The Condemnation of Blackness: Lies We’re Told About Crime https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/khalil-muhammad-condemnation-of-blackness/ https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/khalil-muhammad-condemnation-of-blackness/#respond Tue, 09 Jan 2024 23:17:58 +0000 https://www.zinnedproject.org/?p=167420 Historian Khalil Gibran Muhammad joined educators Jesse Hagopian and T. J. Whitaker to talk about his book, The Condemnation of Blackness: Race, Crime, and the Making of Modern Urban America. This session was part of the Zinn Education Project’s Teach the Black Freedom Struggle online people’s history series.

The post The Condemnation of Blackness: Lies We’re Told About Crime appeared first on Zinn Education Project.

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On January 8, 2024, historian Khalil Gibran Muhammad joined educators Jesse Hagopian and T. J. Whitaker to talk about his book, The Condemnation of Blackness: Race, Crime, and the Making of Modern Urban America, a history of the idea of Black criminality in the making of the modern United States.

This session was the latest in our monthly Teach the Black Freedom Struggle online class series. Don’t miss upcoming sessions — register now.

Participants shared what they learned and the impact of the session:

I am delighted that today’s session was so intergenerational. I got the chance to connect with high school students in my breakout room and it was a refreshing reminder that the Black Freedom Struggle is not only being taught despite truth-teaching being criminalized, but also it is being learned and put into practice!

One of the most important things I learned today is that there are many brave teachers across the country who are helping their students understand the correlation between race and crime. I am so encouraged by this!

I appreciated hearing about the history of how data has been (mis)used to construct a narrative of Black criminality.

Thank you for breaking this down so clearly. You have given me stronger language to use in the classroom and beyond.

This session was so rich. One lesson is to constantly be wary of statistics and efforts to determine criminality. Another powerful lesson for me was the connection between Black education and Black criminality, as if there is causation. I am also thinking of Du Bois, who said that “an educated Black man is a dangerous Black man,” because there is an element of potential danger for education to empower change to the white supremacist status quo.

This was so enlightening. I will be at future classes. Thank you for all you do to bring the truth to educators.

Thank you for making me think, making me connect, and speaking the truth so boldly and clearly.

Event Recording

Recording of the full session, except for the breakout rooms.

 

Transcript

Click below for the full transcript with resources mentioned in the discussion.

Transcript

Jesse Hagopian: On behalf of the Zinn Education Project, we would like to welcome everybody to our class with Khalil Muhammad. My name is Jesse Hagopian, I work with the Zinn Education Project, and I’m an editor for Rethinking Schools. Some of you are joining us for the first time, and some of you have participated since we started. It’s just truly a gift to be able to share this time together with you all in virtual community.

And I want to let you know that today’s class is hosted by the Zinn Education Project, which is coordinated by Rethinking Schools and Teaching for Change as part of our Teaching for Black Lives Campaign. We have members here from our Teaching for Black Lives study groups; if you’re in one of those groups, please add T4BL after your name on Zoom. I also wanted to let folks know that we at the Zinn Education Project offer free, downloadable people’s history lessons that many of you have probably used for middle and high school students, and we also have an important report on Reconstruction that we hope you all will check out and think about how to use in your classrooms.

I am co-facilitating today’s class with high school teacher, Prentiss Charney Fellow, and great all around human being, T. J. Whitaker, who has been part of this series for a long time. T. J., thank you so much for agreeing to help with our session today. It’s good to have you with us. I am very excited to welcome historian Khalil Gibran Muhammad, professor at Harvard’s Kennedy School and author of The Condemnation of Blackness: Race, Crime, and the Making of Modern Urban America. Formally, he was the director of a place that we hold very dear, the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. Thank you so much for being with us.

Khalil Gibran Muhammad: Thanks, Jesse, it’s a pleasure. Thanks, T. J. and all the great folks at the Zinn Education Project for doing what you do, for extending knowledge in every place that we deserve to be free.

Hagopian: No doubt. The work that you’ve been doing on the frontlines of this struggle to make the freedom to learn a reality has been an inspiration to me. I’m really excited for this conversation. The Condemnation of Blackness: Race, Crime, and the Making of Modern Urban America, I think, is a history of the construction of this idea of Black criminality in the making of the United States, and think it reveals the influence of this pernicious myth that’s rooted in statistics on our society and our sense of self, really.

So, we wanted to start off by asking you about your perspective on how crime is defined. Because we know that when police killed Breonna Taylor as she slept, that was not deemed a crime. And we know that when the U.S. killed hundreds of thousands of people in Iraq, there were no generals or presidents who went to jail for that. That wasn’t a crime, either. Or the current U.S. funding of war crimes in Israel and Palestine is not a crime. But when someone steals food so they can eat, that’s a crime in our society. So, how do we make sense of what crime is in our society, and why associating Black people with crime has been such a persistent feature of American politics?

Muhammad: Well thanks, Jesse, that’s certainly the broad context that I think, trying to answer a question like this, makes sense, especially for people who are teaching our young people. Because as every educator knows, we start with simple concepts and then we complicate them as students mature. So what you teach in the primary grades is often a much simpler version than what you teach in the advanced grades.

Let’s start, essentially, with a crime in the most basic sense. Crime identifies a set of behaviors that violate some agreed upon set of norms that most people in the community agree to, whether they agree formally, whether they agree in the abstract through, say, a constitution or body of laws. Or say, often in the global South communities that are under-represented by law enforcement, where communities do just fine dealing with violations of community norms. They may or may not use such languages, but they do understand when someone has breached those norms. I think that’s the best way to start the conversation, because what it is predicated on is some agreed upon definition of a violation. And as we extend that definition to larger groups of people, as we introduce power, we begin to understand that who gets to decide what those rules are and what those norms are becomes much more complicated, and often an expression of political, economic, and cultural power.

One of the most revealing things about the United States, from its history in settler colonialism from the sixteenth and 17th century, is that by any definition of what we recognize in the 20th century as a set of international norms to protect against genocide, the United States was borne out of genocide, borne out of conquest, borne of the right to use violence as a means of land, acquisition, and dispossession, borne of the divine right to use the bodies of enslaved people. And so every child today gets taught that modern slavery is human trafficking, it’s a crime against humanity. But certainly for most of the history of the West these were not considered crimes against humanity.

And so, if we go from where you started Jesse, from the big context, and then we break it down to statutory law — that is, the municipal laws, state laws, and federal laws — then we recognize that the definitions of crime are borne of the imbalance of power, and often protecting private property against poor people, often protecting the wealthy against unlawful violation of their due process rights. One of the most striking things, if you’re an educator, is just to simply show the level of prosecutorial discretion afforded during the Trump administration. where people knowingly or knew that crimes were committed but weren’t sure they could win in court, in which case prosecutors often decline to move forward. Which doesn’t make any sense. To a commonsensical person, we know he broke the law. Prosecutors have evidence, but they don’t think they can win, and so the person goes free.

At the low end of the scale, or the deep end of the pool, as we often say, poor people — who may or may not be innocent — often have just the opposite form of punishment for so-called crimes. That is, the presumption of guilt means that because they’re poor and often of color, they will often lose in court. And so they plead guilty, again, for many things that can either be described as contextual. Meaning a person was poor, they shoplifted, or they even assaulted somebody, or even robbed somebody — many of which are violations even of community norms but don’t necessarily amount to the level of punishment that we often apportion in our society. So I think trying to be thoughtful. The story I tell is essentially that the label of criminality was attached to Black people at the end of slavery as a means of asserting control over their freedom. So this had nothing to do with crime, in most instances, and everything to do with Black people asserting freedom.

Hagopian: Oh, I just love how you broke that down. I can’t wait to have that conversation with students about what is crime, and get to use some of what you said to help spur their thinking.

T. J. Whitaker: if I could pick up where you left off, Dr. Muhammed, connecting your definition of crime to statistics. In The Condemnation of Blackness you write about how the 1890 census was the first to record the lives of Black people borne out of enslavement. You write about how that census was then used in the 1890s by the statistician Frederick Hoffman in his book, Race Traits and Tendencies of the American Negro. You say Race Traits was the first study to include a nationwide analysis of Black crime statistics, making arguably the most influential race and crime study of the first half of the 20th century. So, can you tell us about how the data that was compiled from the 1890 census was then used to create that narrative about Black criminality? What was Hoffman’s argument and how did he use the statistics to construct that narrative?

Muhammad: Sure, yeah, that’s a great question. And I know someone who doesn’t know this work is probably thinking like, what does the census and this have to do with the conversation about crime after the end of the Civil War? Well, it’s an origin story, and the good thing about this — for teaching purposes, from a pedagogical standpoint — is sometimes these ideas about defined crime live up here. And even in the way which I defined it, there’s a lot of big ideas to wrestle with in this story.

We actually have a singular individual who emerges in the late 19th century, a German immigrant. He comes to the United States in the 1880s, he’s unemployed, he’s ambitious, and he has a real knack for statistical analysis. He’s very observant, and one of the things that he observes is that the 1890 census reveals that the Black population is only 13% nationally, which, ironically enough, is about the same today. But it is 30% of the nation’s prisoners. And this statistical disparity — this overrepresentation, almost three times overrepresented in the nation’s prisons — becomes an argument in Hoffman’s seminal work called Race Traits and Tendencies of the American Negro, published in 1896, to essentially say this is the proof that Black people are a criminal race.

Now the lead up to that is fascinating, because, while he looks at the census data to make this claim, the underlying story is the story of power and contestation over Black freedom. Coming out of the end of slavery, Black people made their freedom dreams manifest in attempts to own property, to negotiate their own labor agreements, to build institutions, to take their role in governance, both in state legislative houses as well as in Congress. I know I’m telling you all this history that you all know very well, but putting it in context for the educators and students here this moment, when Black people grasp the reins of their citizenship is a fundamental threat to white Southerners, and increasingly becomes a source of unease and discomfort amongst Northerners. And in that moment, Southerners quickly latch onto the idea that we don’t have to put up with Black freedom. We can just pass a series of laws that criminalize their political activity, that criminalize their parenting, that criminalize their labor rights and right to challenge who they work for, and where they work in the conditions of labor they work under, and quickly from the 1860s to the 1870s, under the Black Codes, to then convict leasing into the 1880s. What happens to everyone? Listening is all of this, turning to the Southern criminal justice system, to police, to restrict Black freedom produces what? What does it produce?

Crime statistics. It produces arrest data, it produces the evidence of Black people going to prison or prison farms, or serving on convict leases. So, when the German immigrant shows up in 1884, looks at the 1890 census, which is one generation removed from slavery, he looks at the numbers and says, “The numbers speak for themselves. These people, relative to other struggling immigrant populations,” which happen to be Southern and Eastern Europeans at the time. He says, “They’re the worst of the bunch, and the statistics tell us that we should be suspicious of them, that we should surveil them, that we should restrict their freedom and movement because they are a threat to society.” That’s the basic argument. That’s the context. So we know, and his students, too, recognized that his argument was unfair  because there was discrimination, there was racism, there was violence directed towards Black people. Black people were arrested literally for voting. They were arrested and prosecuted for defending themselves against violence. I could go down the list. The point is that a huge number of Black people, in that seminal moment, were innocent. Some were not.

And so, it’s important to establish that for those who were not innocent, because they lived under extreme economic and political repression and when they turned to either theft or violence, they were doing essentially what human beings have always done as forms of resistance — including the patriots who use violence, so-called, against the crown, Great Britain, to free themselves from the tyranny of that oppression. So, you put all that together and the contribution that Hoffman makes is to establish this argument on a national scale that becomes the dominant framing of understanding the disproportionate rate of crime by Black people. And it takes off everywhere. Northerners accept the argument, Southerners accept the argument. Big city, small city. I mean, it really spreads all over society, and the only people to resist this were civil rights leaders of the time. People like Du Bois or Ida B. Wells. We’ll talk about them again later. So, there was resistance. And there were a few allies resisting as well.

Hagopian: Yeah, I want to ask you about that resistance. Because I think Black intellectuals and activists really did develop a powerful critique of these crime statistics. I’d read about Ida B. Wells’ campaigns against lynching and I was fascinated by W. E. B. Du Bois’s work on Reconstruction. He had an important critique of standardized testing that I’ve read about, but I didn’t know until I read your book about their critiques of these crime statistics. Then also, later, by people like Anna J. Thompson. So I was hoping you could talk about these people, these Black intellectuals and activists, who really debunked this idea of Black criminality.

Muhammad: Yeah. So I’m hoping that Ida B. Wells, sometimes known as Ida B. Wells-Barnett, is increasingly becoming a household name and being taught more commonly in high school, especially in Chicago, where I’m from. There are more monuments having been built to her in the last few years, and there were always streets named for her in the Chicago of my childhood. So this Black woman starts her career as a journalist in Memphis, Tennessee, and she witnesses the killing of three friends, three Black friends, who own a grocery store. They are killed for the crime of their economic success. Literally, their business is so successful that it poses a threat to local business owners. They refuse to shut their business down, and in exchange for their success, they are killed in a triple lynching. She writes about it in her newspaper.

And for her commitment to speaking truth to power, her newspaper is burned to the ground. She leaves Memphis and goes to Philadelphia where she continues to speak about lynching. She’s so committed and passionate about speaking about mob violence and terror. We hear a lot about terror in the news these days. It literally is an uninterrupted campaign of anti-Black terror that is sweeping the South, of which she had been a direct witness. She takes this to the international court of public opinion and travels to the U.K. to tell these stories. What’s fascinating is, she’s one of the first Black antiracist activists of that era to do an in-depth statistical analysis of the reporting on lynchings.

What she wants to know is, she looks at 18 months of data covered in the Chicago Tribune, which was the dominant paper in Chicago at the time, kind of like the Washington Post does today, keeping track of police killings. So, she looks at this data over 18 months in 1892, and she discovers that the vast majority of lynchings that had been committed, against Black men in particular, were done in the name of protecting white women from rapists. But what she finds is that only in 31% of news coverage over an 18 month sample, were Black men even accused of rape that the majority of lynchings, the accusation that so-called justified the mob violence, were instances of a Black person killing a white person. And from her vantage point, Ida B. Wells, in the instance of self-defense. So she debunks this rape myth by looking at the statistics in white newspapers. She’s really the first person, and she publishes a book called Southern Horrors. She’s the first person to take on this myth of Black male criminality.

The second is W. E. B. Du Bois, who is a Harvard trained social scientist, and he writes a massive tome called The Philadelphia Negro, which at its heart is a way of understanding the social and environmental context in which a disproportionately poor population was overrepresented in crime statistics. What’s interesting about Du Bois is he did not consider himself an activist at the time. He considered himself a true social scientist. So he was unafraid to define Black people’s criminality in moral terms. He wasn’t proud that Black people were overrepresented in crimes of poverty and in crimes of violence, but he understood that poor people faced with certain constraints on participation in legal economies are one, likely out of survival to commit crimes of property. And two, because they cannot sue people when they are taken advantage of, they often have to use violence or the threat of violence to negotiate their own personal safety. He understood this, and so he wrote his book, which takes on Hoffman’s arguments. Du Bois is having an intellectual debate with Hoffman and actually calls him kind of a foreigner who doesn’t know what he’s talking about. It’s pretty fascinating, and there’s an article that we can share with you all later where you can see Du Bois taking on Hoffman.

So we fast forward from that point, in the 1890s — both of those books were published in the 1890s — to someone like Anna Thompson, who’s writing an investigative report for the Philadelphia Urban League in the 1920s, and she’s basically doing the same thing. She’s looking at the overrepresentation of arrest statistics in Philadelphia. We’re outside of the South, it’s past the period of the great migration, and she discovers that Black people are about 7% of the population of Philadelphia at the time. But they’re 25% of all arrests. And so people like Hoffman use such data to say, “See, they’re even criminals in a place like Philadelphia, where Black people have lots of opportunities, as compared to say, Birmingham, Alabama.”

But what Anna Thompson, a Black woman, discovered when she looked closely at the data — and this was true across multiple studies published in the 1920s — was that the vast majority of Black people were arrested for things that weren’t even criminal. It was disorderly conduct. People were considered trespassing on the steps of their own homes. They were picked up for considered vagrancy, and vagrancy was a very elastic crime that often attached to people who appeared out of work, which is essentially criminalizing poverty. Of those, 25% who were overrepresented in arrest statistics for the city were guilty of violent crime, or even things such as robbery or burglary. So when you put it all together, what you have here is decade after decade of the production of crime statistics — which are borne of Black people being over surveilled, subject to racist treatment, no recourse in court — and the accumulation of these disparities that are not read as evidence of racism, but disparities that are read as evidence of people who are degenerate, who have a crime problem, who are a dangerous race. And unfortunately, while Black people were able — like Du Bois and Ida B. Wells and Anna Thompson — to win some of these arguments, and were able to convince some of their white peers to change how they wrote about and explained the crime problem. Ultimately, Black people did not win that battle, and we carried forward the same logic and thinking right up to the present day.

Whitaker: So, we want to shift gears a little bit, and just look at the dichotomy in terms of how crime is looked at in two communities. We were fascinated to read in your book about how different European immigrant populations were racialized in the U.S., and then how their acceptance into whiteness transformed the narrative around structural causes of criminality in those communities. So, if you could talk about the way crime evolved into becoming evidence of the inequities that European immigrant communities were subjected to, whereas Black people or Black crime is explained as a result of personal failure, degenerate culture, biological inferiority, a narrative that really reminds some of us of the discussion that’s going on currently. So, can you touch on some of that?

Muhammad: I actually think, T. J., that’s the best way to shorten the learning curve, or to flatten the learning curve, on this issue. We are currently living through a moment when most law enforcement and elected officials, and certainly the public health community, looks at crimes like heroin or methamphetamine use and abuse, and related crimes associated with the use of those drugs, as a public health crisis of addiction as compared to, even to this day, the criminalization of Black drug addiction. Heroin remains a problem in terms of how it is treated in the Black community alongside the crack epidemic of the 1980s and 1990s, which drove much of the problem of mass incarceration today.

Some of our political leaders would like us to believe that everyone’s more enlightened today. But if we were more enlightened today, we would have seen a massive reduction in the incarcerated population of people who were sentenced under the harsh drug war and drug laws of the 1980s and 1990s. But we have not seen that. We’ve seen a very small number of people who have been let out of prison, who were sentenced under those very racist and Draconian drug laws. So when we go back 120 years, literally 120 years, many people learn in history books that Southern and Eastern European immigrants — first the Irish, then the Italians — often, as the story goes, were subjected to tremendous nativist, xenophobic racism, and were subject to police brutality.

For example, the first blue-ribbon study of police brutality in the country took place in 1894 in New York City, and mostly the victims of police brutality were Irish. They were victimized by Anglo-Americans — they called them “Old Stock Americans” — and they just beat the Irish with impunity, for looking the wrong way, for walking down the wrong street, for not showing proper deference, for voting for the wrong candidate, you name it. So most American students, even to this day, learn something about the racism that European immigrants face, including Jews in the early 20th century. What they don’t learn is that at that precise moment progressives and liberals step in to save them, to change the laws, to build settlement houses, to focus on police reform.

The fact that I mentioned the first blue-ribbon commission on police brutality is in the interest of helping the Irish is a perfect case in point. There’s an entire set of public policies that come on the books in the 1890s, 1900s, 19-teens really, right on through the New Deal era, to essentially help these people be less subjected to racism as xenophobia. There is an immigration law, for example, that passed in 1924 that does restrict many of these populations to very small numbers, which is kind of the end of the era of xenophobia. But over the twenty years before that, a lot of social scientists who were self-defined liberals and progressives tried to help them, and they did a pretty good job of it.

The most important thing they did is they redefined their crime, not as crimes of nationality, of an innate culture. They defined them as crimes of environmental stigma. They invite crimes of inequality, as we would understand it today. Hoffman himself, when he’s writing about Black people, is simultaneously writing about high rates of crime committed in white immigrant communities, and says that it is a problem of inequality in society. He says, “The health of the people must come before the wealth of the people, and that’s why we have so much crime in white communities.” The hypocrisy was breathtaking.

Jane Addams similarly made contradictory statements. She talked about prostitution experience among immigrant girls in Chicago. She talked about high rates of juvenile delinquency. She talked about crimes of violence committed between Polish and Irish kids, shooting each other with weapons. She said, “This is a problem that repeats itself every day in the daily newspapers.” And her solution was not personal responsibility. Her solution was not to denigrate the cultures of these people. Her solution was a massive campaign of public recreation, a massive campaign to help these people. She actually says, “We cannot expect the fathers and mothers who have immigrated from faraway places to fix this problem. This is our problem to fix.” And so from that moment through the rest of the 20th century, white criminality increasingly became a symptom of a social problem, whereas Black criminality increasingly became a symptom of Black people’s problem.

Hagopian: Incredible research you did on that. And it’s so revelatory about how crime gets discussed in the news today as well. I hope everyone will read that. I want to ask one more question before we move to breakout rooms. One of the most fascinating parts of the book for me was to read about how you develop this argument that Black education has been associated with criminality. You write, “Calls for greater African American access to public education, for example, were challenged by statistical arguments that education turned Black people into criminals.” I hear echoes of this argument when, for instance, Trump blamed Howard Zinn’s writing for inciting the riots during the 2020 uprising. But talk about this history of tying Black education to Black criminality.

Muhammad: I had not thought about this, Jesse. This is why it’s so important for us to be in community. What you said about Trump tying Howard Zinn to the riots, I mean . . . Some of you know from watching the news that the hearings on December 5th, where the university presidents opened with remarks that people who have been teaching this radical ideology on college campuses, that Virginia Fox described as antiracism or Critical Race Theory, are responsible for the antisemitism on campus. That’s a way of literally criminalizing the teaching of these topics that we’re talking about today, to say very little of the 20-plus states that had passed laws to literally criminalize the right to learn, to read, to speak on these issues.

So of the many surprising things looking at the origin story that I tell in The Condemnation of Blackness, I could not have predicted that I would come upon a debate that starts really around the late 1890s. In the same moment as Hoffman is working, where there’s a census report, and this is fascinating. The census report shows that the disproportionate arrest rates among Blacks compared to whites is higher in northern cities than it is in southern cities. So if you are thinking with a racist logic you would say Black people are even more criminal in the north than they are in the south, because the disparity was higher in northern cities than it was in southern cities. And so someone propagated the idea that because the arrest rates were even higher in the north — like Chicago, Philadelphia, New York — and that Black people had more educational opportunities in Chicago, New York, and Philadelphia as compared to the south, that the association, which they considered causation, was that the more access to education Black people got, the more criminal they became.

Now none of this makes sense. The math doesn’t add up. But guess what? We live in a time right now in 2024, where things don’t have to make sense. Facts don’t actually have to matter. Logic is relevant or irrelevant. It just depends. And that’s exactly what happened then. Now though, what’s fascinating is, the way I tell the story is, I tell it through the debate, not because I’m imposing my presentist view on the past. I tell it because Black people call these people out on their BS. So, Du Bois calls them out and says, “This doesn’t make any sense.” A Black mathematician at Howard University calls these people out and says, “This is just racist.” In fact, the best counter argument was from this Black sociologist named Kelly Miller. It’s just fascinating, and it’s math. It’s looking at racism through the lens of math. He says, “Okay, fine.” If it’s true that, for example, in Massachusetts, Black people are five times overrepresented in the arrest statistics, and in Massachusetts Black people have far more options for schooling than they do in Mississippi. This is the argument, hypothetically. This is what Kelly Miller says. He says, “Then why is it the case that in Massachusetts white men are ten times overrepresented in arrest statistics as compared to white men in Mississippi?” And it’s kind of like a drop the mic moment. Because if the logic applies, then you have a problem. You would essentially say it’s even more the case that going to school in Massachusetts drives white men to more crime than compared to in the South. And so Kelly Miller says the reason this doesn’t make sense is because it didn’t make sense in the first instance.

This wasn’t just a debate between intellectuals and census data. It turns out that by the early 1900s, major spokespersons like Theodore Roosevelt, who was then President, would go around the country and give graduation speeches at Black colleges. He did it at Hampton in 1905. He did it at Tuskegee in 1906, and in his remarks which were covered in the New York Times, he said such things as

Today, you graduates of Hampton are continuing a tradition of law-abiding Black men, because at this college something like 6,000 graduates have come from here, but only two have proven to be criminals. So keep up the good work, and make sure that you are against the criminals in your own community more than any other thing, because that’s the worst thing for you people.

It’s astonishing because what it turned out to be was that there was a tradition, a new tradition then, of counting the alumni of Black colleges in terms of their crime statistics. And you could kind of judge whether the school was doing a good job or a bad job based on the crime rates. Now, the thing that I say in the book is that this wasn’t happening at predominantly white colleges and universities. But if you applied the same logic at Harvard University, where I work today, over its almost 400 year history, and you applied an economic analysis to the amount of crime or the cost of crime to society, you would have a number in the billions for the amount of white collar criminality coming out of Harvard University and the scale of damage done to people’s lives, and the justification for every form of exploitation.

For example, what number do you put on the thousands of Indigenous remains that are still on the property of Harvard University today, or the stolen bodies that were used for scientific research? So, the crime numbers game was always an expression of the power of people to oppress you by defining your community as criminal. That’s why Black scholars like Kelly Miller pointed out the statistical fallacies that were being circulated at the time, and that were showing up in commencement speeches and all sorts of things, similar to the way that these lies about Black criminality continue to circulate on social media right now.

Hagopian: Thanks for breaking that all down. . . . All right. So let’s get back into the conversation, y’all. I think T. J. wants to start us off with a question.

Whitaker: I think our students will appreciate this one, too, because we were watching the interviews earlier today. But those in power are very afraid, very scared, of all this history we’ve been talking about. There have increasingly been bans on teaching honestly about race, gender, sexuality, and capitalism in the United States. You said in a Democracy Now! interview, quote, “What Florida Governor DeSantis is doing is actually shaping national education standards,” and made the case that Florida is a laboratory of fascism at this point. More recently you said that Claudine Gay’s resignation as president of Harvard after the December 5th House Committee hearings was the next step in what is now a 3-year long campaign to destroy this country’s capacity to address its past and its present. Can you say more about what you think is at stake in the struggle for Black education and teaching about true history?

Muhammad: If we applied the same standard of national security to Soviet Russia all of us would be essentially arrested for political activity in this conversation. I mean that when our own political leaders today, like Ron Desantis and others, talk about American freedom, and they contrast it with Russia and the former Soviet Union, they are describing a situation where freedom of speech, freedom of the press, our political rights to due process, are all held up in contrast to those totalitarian societies where people did not have those freedoms. And so Ron DeSantis is constantly beating his chest about American freedom. Nikki Haley answered a question recently in Iowa where she was asked “What role did slavery play in the Civil War?” And I’m not even sure she actually was asked; it wasn’t a leading question. It was like “what caused the Civil War,” and she talked about the struggle over government and government’s right to abridge people’s freedoms and the need for capitalism to thrive.

So we are living through a time in this country which is not the first time that fascism has created political movements, the most obvious of which actually coincided with the growth of what we call fascism today, in the late 1920s and early 1930s in Italy and Germany. There was also fascist movement here, and even fascism as it connected with anti-semitism was a homegrown phenomenon in parts of this country going back to earlier periods of time. There was a fascinating book I reviewed in the New York Times by Sam Friedman this past summer about Hubert Humphrey. It talks a lot about Minneapolis as kind of the capital of anti-semitism in the early 20th century. So, what we see in Florida has been innovating how much fascism you can actually get away with in electoral politics. How much can you push the limit on criminalizing speech, books, the right to protest and the freedom of expression, personal autonomy, and actually continue to be elected, to have a political mandate? Because everyone who studies fascism knows that fascists are always democratically elected to then destroy democracy. So Ron DeSantis, in his innovative efforts to destroy the ability of Florida educators to teach an honest and accurate American history, started to experiment around the ability to control not just speech and learning, coming on the hills of pushing back against gains made against voter suppression in that state. I don’t want to go too far down the rabbit hole, but I just want to make a simple point that the right to vote and the right to protest came before the restrictions on the right to vote, and restrictions on the right to protest in Florida came before restrictions on the right to learn these histories, or the right to care for the needs of non gender conforming youth.

So when we get to the AP story of the college board capitulating to Florida’s pressure by describing whole bodies of knowledge as illegitimate to the state of Florida, we saw early on the potential for one state. in this case Florida, to impact a national curriculum. Because the AP curriculum is used as a standard curriculum across every state, and every student takes one of those classes — in this case, it would be the future African American studies class. He then extended his efforts to restrict the autonomy of a local college called New College, where he replaced the entire board with people supportive of his agenda, which is a fascist agenda in the state of Florida. Most recently, they’ve removed one of the Gen. Ed. requirements for the entire state system in Florida, because sociology apparently is radical Marxist teaching, because anything that focuses on inequalities is now being rendered a crime against the state of Florida. I’m mentioning and emphasizing Florida because they showed us exactly what they intended to do, they’ve done exactly what they’ve intended to do, and they’ve become a model for other states like Texas, Arkansas, Iowa, and Oklahoma. And of course, most recently, those states also have passed legislation restricting public funding for DEI programs in higher education.

So, fast forward to the Congressional hearing, where most people have focused only on the challenge to whether the college presidents should have answered that they would punish students for being critical of Israel. I’m not going to take the bait because no one on any campuses called for genocide against Jews. But using such language as “Freedom from the River to the Sea” or “Intifada” are appropriate terms of debate as to what they mean to different people, which is precisely what all the people who believe in so-called “freedom” in America — they should have a right to say what you want to say, including that Black people are criminals. So anyway, I digress.

That testimony opened, not with setting the table for understanding what is the appropriate line between academic freedom and hate speech, it opened explicitly with calling out the radical ideology of Critical Race Theory and antiracism and intersectionality as the primary drivers of anti-semitism on college campuses. And if you watch the five hours of testimony, about half of it was focused on equity and DI as the real problem. Now, just to close on this point, two presidents have since resigned since December 5th, and in the wake of Claudine Gay’s resignation last week, a forced resignation, the chairwoman of that committee has promised to continue to go after Harvard, because, as she said, this is not about an individual, this is about an institution.

At least Stefanik has called Harvard “institutional rot and corruption” and Virginia Fox described the problem as “woke faculty and partisan administrators.” So what started in the public arena of K through 12, and extended to higher education and Florida public college and universities, has now extended to private universities. And a billionaire donor class are using their influence against private elite institutions by withholding their dollars to rip the heart out of academic freedom and the autonomy of teachers like myself to teach these histories, where one day it is not inconceivable that people like me would be in jeopardy of either losing my job or violating some laws that these people have put on the books.

Hagopian: Thank you for breaking that down it. It truly is chilling to think about the fact that Florida has made the official state curriculum say that slavery was a quote “personal benefit to Black people.” I really appreciate how you look at this laboratory for fascism. But you don’t limit it to Florida. I think that the CRT tracking project out of UCLA has now shown that almost half of the students in the American public school system are subjected to one of these laws that criminalize teaching the truth about race or gender or sexuality. So we are in a struggle.

I think we talked before the session started that that looks a lot like McCarthyism, that it looks a lot like some of the most severe repression in the U.S. history. So, thank you for breaking that down for us. I wanted to ask you a question about the settlement houses. This was a fascinating part of the book that I didn’t know anything about before I read Condemnation. You look at the case of settlement houses in Philadelphia and how they were positioned on the frontlines of strategies for crime prevention during the Progressive era. I was hoping you could talk about how this Progressive era initiative was used to address the roots of crime for European immigrants, and how that same analysis wasn’t extended to Black people?

Muhammad: It’s another part of the archival record. Again, I want to be mindful both of time, since we’re starting to come to an end, but also to teachers. You are often limited in your ability to teach certain topics by the dependence upon primary sources rather than secondary sources. I mean, one of the big problems with the so-called AP African American Studies curriculum was the debate over what was a primary source versus secondary source. And one of the things that’s very powerful is to look at settlement house records, some of which I profile extensively in the book where, on the one hand, when it comes to European immigrants, they literally define the problem of community violence, meaning gun violence. Actual gun violence, not hypothetical gun violence, not like the Martin Scorsese version of Italians back in the day. Gun violence, actual gun violence that was occurring within white immigrant populations. They talk about drug use. They talk about crimes of poverty, etc. They show single parenting by immigrant women having too many babies. It’s all there in the settlement houses.

Their solutions, though, are to actually help to eliminate the social causes of these problems, to give these folks the economic opportunity that they need, and to protect them from the retrograde racist forces that often prey upon them. When you look at the same settlement houses that operate in communities that often have Black residents in them, Black people are literally excluded from them, they are segregated from them, they cannot have access to the same resources. Hull house, which is the most famous of them, the one that is most studied and most remembered for Jane Addams and her influence. Jane Addams was a wonderfully influential and generous, compassionate person. But there were limits to her compassion and her generosity. She did not extend that compassion and generosity fully to Black people in her own community, and as a result, Black people were kept from some of the same remedies and access to opportunities that were extended to these immigrant populations.

Hagopian: I think another fascinating historical part of the book is your look at the 1918 race riot in Philly and then the Red Summer 1919 race riots across the country. I was hoping you could comment on what the underlying causes of this racial violence were, and then how policing in the U.S. was radically altered, how it was shaped by this era?

Muhammad: It’s a really rich period during the Great Migration era, and I hope that all the educators here, since there’s so many, enjoy that period in U.S. history like I do. It’s a period when Black people kind of take their agency back, when they vote they vote with their feet by leaving the Jim Crow South, and they begin to move to Northern cities. This is the period when jazz leaves New Orleans and becomes, eventually, a global phenomenon. It’s just a rich period. And of course the Harlem Renaissance may be the most studied part of the Great Migration period. Well, there are two things that are underappreciated from that period that I write about. One is the level of violence that Black migrants experience in all of these Northern cities. I mean, these are pogroms against the Black community, and largely, the underlying cause is that Black people are beginning to demand access to housing and jobs in ways that threaten the monopoly on such things that white immigrant populations have.

And what’s interesting is the Great Migration helps to force greater homogeneity amongst immigrant populations that had often previously been separated. So there was Little Italy, there was the area where the Irish had a kind of lock on things, and Polish Catholics. And there was the Jewish Ghetto, and all of this because of the increasing presence of Black folks to integrate migration. Many of those white immigrant populations start to band together, to keep their communities all white, and to keep their workplaces all white. And so part of forging a communal whiteness is also the collective violence directed towards Black migrants that occurs in this period. And that’s what those race riots were about.

The second thing that’s under-appreciated is the role of policing in those race riots. There’s no period — no period exists ever at any point in the past — when Black people got due process in policing, when their interests were protected and served. By and large, poor people have been very poorly served by police in general, including poor white people.

But what emerges in this period is that policing in the North begins to take on some of the same work and function that lynch mobs do in the South, and they’re not necessarily the primary distributors of violence towards the Black community. But they are often there when it happens. Sometimes they participate, and oftentimes they either disarm Black people from having the capacity to defend themselves or they arrest them. So you can have entire instances where the Black community is literally being massacred, and the police show up and arrest the Black people.

And what comes out of this period? I mean, it’s fascinating. The best study ever done on this is a book called The Negro in Chicago. It’s a riot report published in 1922, and you can teach it. It’s huge. There’s lots of material there. But one of the things that comes out of it — and you have to kind of brace yourself for this — in the study they interview white criminal justice officials, police officers, chiefs. They talk to court officials, judges, you name it. And basically, these people admit that there’s wide scale prejudice against Black people, and that Black people are subjected to unlawful scrutiny. That Black people are arrested with no evidence. They’re sent to jail for things that wouldn’t be a crime if a white person committed them. All of this is admitted to and the solution that they come up with in the 1920s is unconscious bias training.

Whitaker: I mean, that’s amazing. It’s remarkable.

Muhammad: So 100 years ago, when white criminal justice officials were honest about what was going on in a place like Chicago, they came up with the same solutions offered to us in the era of Black Lives Matter protests.

Whitaker: So we are stuck on stupid.

Muhammad: I just don’t know what other way to describe it, because time and time again those recommendations led to no action. They went nowhere. And you have reports in the 1930s and 1940s, the current commissioner report in the 1960s. By the time we get to the 1990s, the federal government is producing reports all over the place, in almost every major city. So, stuck on stupid.

Hagopian: I hear you. What an incredible conversation.

Muhammad: But I have to answer the question, though, Jesse, because nobody answered, so I’ll take it. I’ll take it very quickly. The answer to the question about why Black man and white man were overrepresented in Massachusetts as compared to Mississippi, is because Massachusetts had a much larger criminal justice bureaucracy. You are much more likely to be arrested, charged, and convicted of a crime in Massachusetts, simply by virtue of the density of population and the age of that system, than in Mississippi, which was more like a frontier society. That’s the answer.

Hagopian: Wow! So much wisdom being dropped tonight. And I can see so many applications of your research for educators, for language arts teachers, math teachers talking, using the research you did on statistics. And of course, history and social studies teachers. There’s just such a rich body of work that I hope everybody will dig into and get your book and use it in class. So, I want to thank you so much for your time this evening. What a wonderful conversation! And I look forward to being in the struggle with you for honest education in the future.

Muhammad: Thank you, Jesse. It’s been a real pleasure to be here, and thanks so much for the very thoughtful questions. And T. J., too, thanks for bringing students.

 

While this transcript was edited, there may be minor errors or typos — if you notice something you believe to be incorrect please contact us at zep@zinnedproject.org.

 

Audiogram

In this audiogram, Khalil Gibran Muhammad discusses Reconstruction, the 1890 census, and the misleading statistical narrative of Black criminality.

Resources

Many of the lessons, books, and other resources recommended by the presenters and participants.

Lessons

The Color Line by Bill Bigelow

Who Killed Reconstruction? A Trial Role Play by Adam Sanchez (Rethinking Schools)

Reconstructing the South: What Really Happened by Mimi Eisen and Ursula Wolfe-Rocca

The Heroes We Need Today: Teaching About the Radical Ida B. Wells by Matt Reed (Rethinking Schools)

Subversives: Stories from the Red Scare by Ursula Wolfe-Rocca

“Riots,” Racism, and the Police: Students Explore a Century of Police Conduct and Racial Violence by Ursula Wolfe-Rocca; see more classroom resources in the Teach the History of Policing collection.

 

Books

book cover showing young Black man holding a protest sign.

In addition to The Condemnation of Blackness: Race, Crime, and the Making of Modern Urban America, the following books were referenced.

Chokehold: Policing Black Men by Paul Butler (The New Press)

I Saw Death Coming: A History of Terror and Survival in the War Against Reconstruction by Kidada E. Williams (Bloomsbury Publishing)

The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness by Michelle Alexander (The New Press)

No More Police: A Case for Abolition by Mariame Kaba and Andrea Ritchie (New Press)

Teaching for Black Lives edited by Dyan Watson, Jesse Hagopian, Wayne Au (Rethinking Schools)

W. E. B. Du Bois’s Data Portraits: Visualizing Black America by the W. E. B. Du Bois Center (Princeton Architectural Press)

Articles

Remembering Red Summer (graphic) | Zinn Education Project

A Call for Anti-Bias Education by Erica Licht and Khalil Gibran Muhammad at Learning for Justice.

Interviews on Democracy Now!:

Khalil Gibran Muhammad On Why Educating Kids On Race In America Is More Important Than Ever (Time Magazine video interview)

Five Ways Textbooks Lie About Reconstruction by Mimi Eisen (an addendum to the Zinn Education Project report, Erasing the Black Freedom Struggle)

Remembering Red Summer — Which Textbooks Seem Eager to Forget by Ursula Wolfe-Rocca (from the Zinn Education Project’s If We Knew Our History series)

More than McCarthyism: The Attack on Activism Students Don’t Learn About from Their Textbooks by Ursula Wolfe-Rocca (from the Zinn Education Project’s If We Knew Our History series)

This Day In History

The dates below come from our This Day in History collection, which contains hundreds of entries all searchable by date, state, theme, and keywords.

partial book cover showing four faces of people lynched on Long Island.

Bloody Sunday

painting of Trayvon Martin.

Dec. 6, 1865: 13th Amendment Ratified

Oct. 31, 1891: Coal Creek War

March 25, 1931: Scottsboro Nine

Aug. 21, 1939: African Americans Arrested for Going to Public Library

Sept. 14, 1941: Rally Against Police Brutality

Feb. 5, 1946: Ferguson Brothers Killed By Police on Long Island

Feb. 8, 1946: WWII Veteran Timothy Hood Killed

July 16, 1949: Groveland Four Arrested

Oct. 30, 1959: Luther Jackson Murdered

March 15, 1960: Police Attack SC Students in Peaceful Protest

Feb. 26, 1965: Jimmie Lee Jackson Murdered

March 7, 1965: Bloody Sunday

Feb. 8, 1968: Orangeburg Massacre

May 23, 1968: Acclaimed Writer Henry Dumas Fatally Shot by Police

Dec. 4, 1969: Black Panther Party Members Assassinated

Sept. 9, 1971: Attica Prison Uprising

Oct. 11, 1972: D.C. Jail Uprising

May 17, 1980: Miami Riots Begin

May 13, 1985: Philadelphia Police Bomb MOVE

April 19, 1989: “Central Park Five” Arrested

May 15, 2010: Kalief Browder Arrested, Held for Three Years with No Trial

Feb. 26, 2012: Trayvon Martin Murdered

Sept. 14, 2013: Jonathan Ferrell Killed by Police

Aug. 9, 2014: Michael Brown Killed by Police

July 6, 2016: Philando Castile is Killed by Police

March 13, 2020: Breonna Taylor Killed by Louisville Police

Participant Reflections

With more than 270 attendees present, the conversation and chat was lively, engaging, and full of history, teaching ideas, and more. Polls showed participants included 31% K–12 teachers, 20% teacher educators, and 11% K–12 students.

Teaching for Black Lives study group coordinator Linnet Early (in St. Louis, Missouri) spoke briefly about the impact of being a part of a Teaching for Black Lives study group. She said, “The biggest impact the group had was allowing participants to start seeing the inequities that exist in their own sphere of influence.”

Here are more comments that participants shared in their end-of-session evaluation.

What was the most important thing (story, idea) you learned today?

Honestly, there was so much that I didn’t know and am just learning. It is so humbling to realize that I did not realize how much the economic gains of Black people were masked as Black criminality, and all of the history to support that.

To be mindful of how data is used and how we use data to look at our communities today.

There were so many important things that I learned today. One that resonates with me is the intentional history of the criminalization of Black people and the impact that it still has today on our right to education, work, quality of life, and how to “read between the lines” to recognize it.

The through-line of crime classification, statistics, and racism.

The use of statistics to shape the myths. I also appreciated the breakdown of the dichotomy of standards between European immigrants and Black Americans.

That we as Black people create our own stories, so we should not rely on often distorted statistics to impact the way we see ourselves.

The most important fact I learned today was that Ida B. Well-Barnett produced the first in-depth statistical analysis of lynching in the United States by gathering 18 months of data and analyzing newspaper articles in 1892. The second most important idea I learned today is that fascists are typically democratically elected and then move to destroy democracy.

One astonishing story I learned was how the three Black business owners were killed simply for being successful.

I didn’t know about the racism in the settlement houses barring Blacks from services.

This was a great session! This lesson connects with a recent documentary about misdemeanors and how they are used to criminalize Black, Brown, and poor people. It also reminded me about the information in the documentary 13th.

I really appreciated learning about the research and contributions to addressing the issues of criminalization from Ida B. Wells, Ana Thompson, and W. E. B. Du Bois.

What will you do with what you learned?

Foster in students the habit and skill of digging deep and not taking numbers at face value. Helping students understand that though numbers may not lie, people use numbers to tell the story they want to tell.

I plan to use this with the Teaching for Black Lives study group I facilitate. I also use Dr. Muhammad’s work to accompany Ida B. Wells as examples of how we challenge the neutrality and objectivity of science and statistics.

I will be bringing this history back to my fifth graders as they already know that the truth about United States history is being kept from us.

I am teaching Reconstruction this semester and will be reading more about Ida B. Wells.

I will use this information to help students interrogate the mayor of Philadelphia’s platform to address crime.

I have known some of this information but will need to keep educating myself so that I can share more with my colleagues and as a conversation topic in our Teaching for Black Lives study group. I continue to be blown away by how much of this information I was never taught!! It makes me more resolute to bring it to our district and to our students. I love the ideas of picture books and primary sources for young children, too.

I plan to start a book group with my grandchildren and their friends.

I now feel primed to engage more critically and mindfully with statistics in my courses, and through my research. I am struck by Dr. Muhammad’s research and how he traced the ways that statics have been historically used as evidence of Black criminality instead of evidence of white supremacist anti-Blackness. When I become a postsecondary teacher, I really want to prioritize the use of primary sources, particularly sources that use statistics to formulate and justify their claims.

Encourage student journalists to feature Ida B. Wells among their profiles of influential journalists during Black History and Women’s History months.

I teach very young students (6-8 year olds), but plan on expanding our conversation of race and gender being social constructs to include crime as a social construct.

I will try to make lesson plans incorporating the history of criminalization and abolitionist ideas into K–5 Art.

This is a good reminder to me to continue being aware and proactive in looking for opportunities to educate people on the impact that systemic racism has historically had, and continues to have. I am also going to take a trip to the library and pick up some of the books referenced in the discussion.

Presenters

Khalil Gibran Muhammad is the Ford Foundation Professor of History, Race and Public Policy at Harvard Kennedy School. He directs the Institutional Antiracism and Accountability Project and is the former director of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, a division of the New York Public Library. His writing and scholarship have been featured in national print and broadcast media outlets, such as the New Yorker, Washington Post, The Nation, National Public Radio, PBS Newshour, Moyers and Company, MSNBC, and the New York Times.

Jesse Hagopian teaches Ethnic Studies and is the co-adviser to the Black Student Union at Garfield High School in Seattle. He is an editor for Rethinking Schools, the co-editor of Teaching for Black Lives, editor of More Than a Score: The New Uprising Against High-Stakes Testing, and on the leadership team of the Zinn Education Project.

T. J. Whitaker is a high school language arts teacher in the New Jersey South Orange-Maplewood School District, and a Prentiss Charney Fellow.

The post The Condemnation of Blackness: Lies We’re Told About Crime appeared first on Zinn Education Project.

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Challenging Anti-History Education Laws: Teachers Receive 14,000 Books on African Americans During WWII https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/14000-copies-half-american-book https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/14000-copies-half-american-book#respond Tue, 09 Jan 2024 06:30:17 +0000 https://www.zinnedproject.org/?p=168714 Thanks to a generous collaboration with Dartmouth College historian Matthew Delmont, the Zinn Education Project offered 14,000 copies of Delmont's book to public school teachers, school librarians, and teacher educators, who shared a plan for using the text.

The post Challenging Anti-History Education Laws: Teachers Receive 14,000 Books on African Americans During WWII appeared first on Zinn Education Project.

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While right-wing legislatures restrict the teaching of Black history, we are pleased to support teachers who work to teach truthfully about U.S. history.

Thanks to a generous collaboration with Dartmouth College historian Matthew Delmont, the Zinn Education Project sent 14,000 copies of Delmont’s book Half American: The Epic Story of African Americans Fighting World War II at Home and Abroad to public school teachers, school librarians, and teacher educators. This included 4,000 hardback copies in 2022 and 2023 — and 10,000 copies of the 2024 paperback edition.

Half American chronicles the lives of African Americans who fought in World War II and in the war against racism in the United States. The book includes stories that can be woven into the curriculum of key people and events, such as: Thurgood Marshall, the chief lawyer for the NAACP, who investigated and publicized violence against Black troops and veterans; Ella Baker, the civil rights leader who advocated on the home front for Black soldiers, veterans, and their families; James Thompson, the 26-year-old whose letter to a newspaper laying bare the hypocrisy of fighting fascism abroad when racism still reigned at home set in motion the Double Victory campaign; and poet Langston Hughes, who worked as a war correspondent for the Black press.

In a class with teachers, Delmont explained the relevance of learning this history.

If we look back and think that World War II was a simpler time, or a more peaceful or unified time, it makes it seem like protests around racial justice today are surprising, or that they’ve come out of thin air. If you tell the actual history about what happened in World War II, it’s clear that these battles have been going on for generations. Part of the urgency of the Black Lives Matter movement in the last decade is that people’s grandparents were fighting these same battles in these same streets, going back to World War II and earlier.

Distribution of Delmont’s book is a direct challenge to the widespread removal of books from libraries and classrooms across the country.

In addition to the support of Delmont and Dartmouth College for the books and shipping, individual donors to the Zinn Education Project made possible the outreach, screening of requests, and follow-up story collection.

Teaching Stories

Teachers who received the hardback edition have shared their appreciation and teaching stories, including those below. We’ll add more once teachers use the new paperback edition. 

High school history teacher Amanda Sandoval was one of hundreds of educators who received copies of Half American: The Epic Story of African Americans Fighting World War II at Home and Abroad from the author Matthew Delmont and the Zinn Education Project.

Delmont’s book asks readers to rethink what they know about the war by centering Black protagonists. He writes, “Nearly everything about the war — the start and end dates, geography, vital military roles, the home front, and international implications — looks different when viewed from the African American perspective.”

Sandoval had her students create blackout poems with the books’ introduction, making evident the power of the text.

Amanda Sandoval shared the slide instructions for the blackout poetry that she used for this activity.

 


Reading the book Half American has changed my perspective on teaching about World War II. I had always heard the traditional narrative of how the home front came together to support the war effort, but the stories told in the book showed me the myriad ways this was not true for African Americans. While I was aware of segregation and racism in the military at this time, and the response to returning veterans like Isaac Woodard, I hadn’t realized all the ways African Americans were discriminated against, particularly with regards to the violence shown towards them and the efforts to keep them from fighting in Europe and the Pacific.

—Courtney Bennis
High School Social Studies Teacher, Virginia Beach, Virginia


Delmont Books Blackout Poems


photo of Joelie McCrary

I received Matthew Delmont’s book, Half American: The Epic Story of African Americans Fighting World War II at Home and Abroad, from the Zinn Education Project. I really enjoyed the book and wanted to share it with my students.

At the beginning of our unit on the WWII, I talked to the students about how the war, like many events in American history, impacted people in different ways and our goal was to see the war with new eyes through specific groups of people who lived it.

We started by watching an interview with Matthew Delmont about the purpose of his book and how he hoped to shed light on the vital role African Americans had in the war effort and their hope of a Double Victory. Then, at the beginning of each class period for the entire unit, we spent 15 minutes reading from the text. It was a really positive way to start and frame each class period.

We finished the unit with a culminating project that was inspired by a fellow history teacher, Amanda Sandoval. Students created blackout poems, which highlighted a major theme from the book. Each student chose one page from the book that would be the base of their poem. On that page, they selected words or phrases that supported the overall theme. Students covered the rest of the book page with an image that connected back the main idea. The only words remaining visible were those that created a new statement or poem about the African American experience in WWII.

I currently have pictures of the students’ final products on display in the hallway of our school for the rest of the student body to see and read.

—Joelie McCrary
High School Social Studies Teacher, Smithville, Missouri

Read More Classroom Stories

We received copies of Matthew Delmont’s Half American: The Epic Story of African Americans Fighting World War II at Home and Abroad and are beginning our social studies department reading group around this book. It has been a great resource so far presenting perspectives that are often overlooked in the larger narrative about WWII. It has been influential in thinking about the resources we choose to put in front of students.

The introduction brought up an interesting point when discussing Saving Private Ryan. The opening scene of that movie is commonly used throughout history classes that discuss D-Day and World War II, but the intro brings up an interesting point and makes us reconsider the resources we use and who is centered and who is left out.

As we continue our discussions around this topic we will strengthen our content knowledge around the topic of World War II and more specifically United States and African American involvement in World War II. This book will be a valuable resource in our unit on World War II which is covered in 10th and 11th grade. It will also be helpful when thinking about the resources we choose for other topics to try and think about which stories we leave out.

—Michael Klukojc
High School Social Studies Teacher, Waterloo, New York

Three years ago I joined a Teaching for Black Lives study group and have been using the Stories from the Climate Crisis: A Mixer lesson and Reconstructing the South: A Role Play ever since. The lessons are engaging and have my students consider perspectives that they would not usually be exposed to. I was even able to take the Climate Change Mixer and use it to create similar assignments for other subjects or lessons that the students liked. In my experience, the Zinn Education Project encourages students to think and problem solve based on their own ability to reason. These valuable skills can carry beyond the classroom and help make for responsible citizens out in the world.

Furthermore, students have enjoyed reading Sugar, Half Americanand Paradise on Fire. These stories add visibility and diversity to the classroom — something that is often hard to come by and hard to afford as a public education teacher. Anything and everything that the Zinn Education Project shares with a classroom is a vital component of that class going forward.

—Colten Fox
High School Social Studies Teacher, Washougal, Washington


In my U.S. History class I teach a lesson about the African American experience in WWII using primary sources. Students read the James Thompson editorial “Should I Sacrifice to Live Half American?” from the Pittsburg Courier and the Double V campaign. Students later consider Executive Order 9981, which desegregated the military, and write their own editorial like James Thompson about racial equality in America and in the military.

The book Half American has sparked many ideas to add depth and empathy to this lesson. Additionally, the book was fascinating and engaging to read, and I really appreciate the Zinn Education Project for providing this book to me for free to add to my personal and professional library.

This lesson always sparks very good conversation about what it means to be an American and the important and unique struggle for rights minority groups like Black Americans have led. This lesson gets students to see part of the story of the long Civil Rights Movement that began well before the sit-ins and bus boycotts.

In conjunction with this lesson, I also teach one about the Japanese-American experience in WWII that adds complexity to students’ understanding of rights and freedoms in wartime and how minorities face unique challenges and experiences. All told, this book has added so much to my ability to teach a richer and more complete U.S. stories.

—Alex Powell
High School Social Studies Teacher, West Haven, Utah


I first attempted to do a book study the week before Thanksgiving (short week), but the students complained the book was too long; though they did like the subject matter. So, I decided to focus on chapters 7, 3, 5, and 12 during Black History Month. It produced some amazing discussions.

Many of the students, of all races, were angry that the military didn’t allow the Black soldiers to handle weapons, and felt they were “slaves to the White soldiers” by doing their laundry, shining their shoes. They also said our government was two-faced: Talking about soldiers working together against the common enemy but having segregated quarters for the Black and white soldiers.

Before giving them their written assignment, I showed them a clip from Pearl Harbor, where Cuba Gooding Jr., portraying Doris Miller, proceeds to use the gun to fight the Japanese pilots. They were angry that the government took four months to identify and give Miller a medal for being a hero, when white soldiers received recognition right away. I later showed them that the Navy christened a frigate in Miller’s name, an honor only given to former presidents.

Since we are a secured facility (juvenile detention), I printed research for the following people: Langston Hughes, Thurgood Marshall, Doris Miller, James G. Thompson, Benjamin O. Davis, Della Raney, Private Robert Brooks, Charles McGee, Wallace P. Reed, Ella Baker, W.E.B. Du Bois, and the “Black Rosies.” They wrote an essay about one of the people: List three (or more) facts about the person, explain how his/her character enabled him/her to rise above the adversity of their community, and justify how their actions made an impact on U.S. history. Once written, they then had to present the person they researched, and in their presentation, explain why their chosen person was a hero. Almost every student stated that the fact they stood to honor and protect a country that didn’t treat them right made them heroes.

Many of the students asked why they never heard of some of these people during WWII. Many were shocked that “Black Rosies” were doing the same things as Rosie the Riveter. I will definitely present this unit again.

A student asked if he could take the book to his room to read, but there’s a policy against having hard covered books on the living units. I went to a supervisor, showed her the book and explained what I was doing, and she was impressed. She took down the information, and she said she’d look into ordering soft covered copies to put on each unit.

—Wilma Rice
High School Language Arts/English Teacher, Phoenix, Arizona


I received multiple copies of Matthew Delmont’s book Half American: The Epic Story of African Americans Fighting World War II at Home and Abroad. I teach a variety of classes, grades, and extracurriculars, so I knew I could incorporate this text in many ways.

One way I used this text was to have students read excerpts from Chapter 3, “The March on Washington,” as part of a unit about community organizing and advocating for the changes you believe are needed in your community. I paired it with the lesson on Zinn Education Project website around the various stakeholders in the DAPL debate, and a culminating assignment asking students brainstorm, write, gather support, edit, and send proposals to their school board regarding improvements they wanted to see in their own education.

In particular, a quote from pg. 62 of Delmont’s book was useful, and I returned to it many times:

For Randolph and millions of other Black Americans, the lesson from the March on Washington Movement was that ordinary Black citizens possessed a tremendous amount of political potential. The key was to harness it to fight for specific goals. “You possess power, great power,” Randolph said. “In this period of power politics, nothing counts but pressure, more pressure, and still more pressure.”

Thanks for sending these texts to me. I appreciate it!

—Steph Schares
Middle School Extended Learning Teacher, Ames, Iowa

Half American by Matthew F. Delmont has completely changed the way I teach World War II and the Civil Rights Movement in my 12th grade government class. Typical textbook curriculum teaches the Civil Right Movement as an isolated event; however, Delmont’s book taught me that the movement’s roots are with injustices and hypocrisies during World War II. Students are shocked to read the quotes from articles written by the African American newspapers that show a completely different perspective of the war (abroad and domestically) than that described in textbooks.

After reading this book, I will always teach the WWII Double V campaign in order to include these voices. A part of the book that particularly affected me was the treatment of Black troops on U.S. military bases. I was stunned by the soldier’s letter to the NAACP from Pearl Harbor prior to the attack about the treatment of Black sailors by the Navy. Again, it’s an example of how a textbook completely leaves out voices that are vital in understanding events.

—Tasha Stevens Garcia
High School Social Studies Teacher, Roseburg, Oregon

I recently used Matthew Delmont’s book Half American to challenge students’ perceptions about World War II. Students read the introduction and completed blackout poems. Afterwards, small groups of students were assigned a specific chapter of the book to read, discover claims made, and see how the author used evidence to support these claims.

Students were tasked with a creative way to demonstrate their learning and could choose between the following: Creating an African-American “heroes” gallery; creating a movie trailer for the chapter using WeVideo or another platform; creating an infographic to demonstrate learning by numbers; creating a digital collage; or curating a collection of additional primary and secondary sources based on original research, or a student generated idea. I was very pleased with the student engagement and the creativity used to demonstrate learning.

Delmont’s book is an incredible resource for the classroom that challenges students’ perspectives about World War II. Delmont recenters African Americans in the narrative of the war to show what it really meant for African Americans from a variety of walks of life. I highly recommend teachers consider this exquisite resource. My students encountered people and ideas that they had never heard of, and leveraged technology and creativity to produce resources that not only demonstrate but advance learning.

—Keith Long
High School Social Studies Teacher, Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania

Our school district has banned books on the Black experience. So, we did a Zoom session with veterans and their grandchildren, nieces and nephews, and shared from the Half American’s specific parts that spoke to them or that they experienced in real life. We had conversations so that all could learn from the book and from actual life experiences of the adult to middle/high school participants.

Some of the high schoolers were considering going into the service and felt enlightened about the racism that persisted and the determination of the veterans in the story, as well as the determination of their relatives who shared that they too lived during this time period. It was a living history lesson on both levels, via the book and via accounts shared by veteran relatives.

The challenge going forward is to think of ways to persist under hardship or crisis and find ways to reinvent the self under these conditions with dignity and honor. The students were to make a dream board of a story chosen from the book, use them as a mentor for their future, and pick pictures and words or quotes that would continue to inspire them.

—Teresa Rollins
Middle and High School History Teacher Educator, Levittown, Pennsylvania

I ask my students to read a book about walking in someone else’s shoes. We discuss the issues of under-represented views and stories all year long in literature and social studies. Social studies culminates with a unit on major reformers throughout history and how they changed things.

Here is what two of my students said about Half American.

I thought it was very interesting that I had no idea about all this. I have learned about WWII several times, and have heard nothing about this. It was very interesting to read and I like the perspective. I think it is really important to learn about this.—Agatha

I thought it was interesting in the book Half American that it was Black Americans who identified the threat from fascism long before much of the rest of the nation did, and who were among the first to see the war as an existential struggle between forces of fascism against the forces of freedom, democracy, and human rights. —Makenzie

—Rachael Van Fleet
Middle School Literature and Social Studies Teacher, Corvallis, Oregon

Although I was given a copy of Half American, I was not allowed to utilize it in my classroom. As a teacher who prides themselves on inclusive teaching, I was instructed at least three times this school year to ensure I am teaching about and praising white people in my class. My administrator is constantly worried about white students in my class, even though I am white myself. I am super thankful for the Zinn Education Project sending me a copy of this amazing book but in Oregon we are not permitted to truly teach about BIPOC people in our classes.

— Anonymous
High School Teacher, Oregon

In my African American history class we read and had discussion responses to excerpts from chapters 14 and 17. These chapters really underscored the important role African Americans played in the War and the terrible betrayal they received when they returned. This activity was the culminating activity of our lesson on African Americans in the first half of the 20th century.

—Joshua Toth
High School Social Studies Teacher, Falls Church, Virginia

Learn More

Listen to an interview with historian Matt Delmont in conversation with ZEP team member Jesse Hagopian in our Teach the Black Freedom Struggle online class. Excerpt below and the full class here.

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Teach Truth, Teach Banned Books https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/teach-truth-teach-banned-books/ https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/teach-truth-teach-banned-books/#respond Mon, 08 Jan 2024 21:32:19 +0000 https://www.zinnedproject.org/?p=168729 In 2024, not only are books being banned, but also the right to teach about racism and LGBTQ+ identity — essentially placing thousands more titles off limits. Official lists of banned books (including those in the poster above) reveal …

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This graphic is available to download and print as an 11 x 17 poster.
Credit: Zinn Education Project. Creative Common License to copy and distribute for noncommercial purposes. 

In 2024, not only are books being banned, but also the right to teach about racism and LGBTQ+ identity — essentially placing thousands more titles off limits. Official lists of banned books (including those in the poster above) reveal only the tip of the iceberg.

In Florida, classroom teachers and librarians are emptying bookshelves rather than risk a felony for having the an unapproved title.

The Oklahoma law HB 1775, passed in 2021, restricts teaching that could make a student “feel discomfort, guilt, anguish or any other form of psychological distress on account of his or her race or sex.”

What book that looks honestly at U.S. history does not risk causing some discomfort for the reader?

Proponents of the bills argue they are protecting children from feeling guilty and from propaganda.

In truth, what concerns the right is young people learning to ask critical questions about our society, to organize for social change, and about the power of interracial solidarity.

In addition to banning books and curriculum, the right threatens teachers who pledge to teach truthfully. They often name particular curricula they seek to ban. For example, the Kennewick School Board in Washington passed a policy in August that prohibits teaching that the United States is fundamentally or systemically racist. In school board discussions, there were references to ensuring that the wording would bar specific curricula, including the 1619 Project and the Zinn Education Project

In Oklahoma, the state has gone beyond attacking individual teachers to punishing entire school districts. Lawmakers’ intent is to stifle discussions about race and justice in every classroom in the state. As Jeremy C. Young and Jeffrey Sachs explain in the Tulsa World,

By wielding censorious punishments on school districts, students, and teachers for imagined violations, [Oklahoma state] has undermined educational freedom on an unprecedented scale.

The recent attacks draw on the same language used over the past decade in attempts to ban people’s history in K–12 classrooms in Arizona, Arkansas, and Indiana. In those cases, outlined below, grassroots efforts helped to protect students’ right to learn.

What Can We Do?


Don’t Let Intimidation Define the Curriculum

When Georgia teacher Katie Rinderle was fired for reading My Shadow Is Purpledozens of Georgia teachers signed up to receive copies of the book to read to their students and defend their freedom to learn.


Engage Young People: Teach About Book Bans

A team of 4th-grade teachers in D.C. introduced their students to the importance of representation in children’s literature and then they read about book bans across the nation. Students created posters to raise an alarm schoolwide.

We encourage educators to engage students in similar studies of this critical issue.


Create a Pop-up Display

Create an interactive display for your school or library to promote discussions about the dangers of banned books and efforts to defend the freedom to learn. We provide free downloadable display materials and guidelines.

For displays and/or readings of banned books, Teaching for Change’s Social Justice Books offers a list of recommended titles.

With thousands of books banned, Social Justice Books has selected titles that address social issues, such as When Wilma Rudolph Played Basketball. Many of them are not widely known.


Collective Action

Historian Kidada E. Williams reminds us that teachers must work collectively to defend the right to teach truthfully. In the clip below from the Howard Zinn Centennial she notes,

One of the things that we can learn is that there is power in saying that people’s lives, freedoms, and futures matter, and that those declarations inspired people across the generations to collective action.

They still have that power to inspire people to build a more just world today. There are some interconnected lessons that we can learn from our predecessors, and this is something that teachers can take in mind.

One is that fighting for freedom and justice is best done collectively. That fits the Zinn Education Project so well. Teachers can fight and win by working with other educators, with librarians, with students and activists. . . . We also fight these unjust laws by reaching out to lawmakers, by running for office, and by direct action protests.


Library Read-Ins

On July 16, 1960, seven students from Sterling High along with college freshman, Jesse Jackson, entered the library and were arrested. This group became known as the Greenville Eight.

On July 16, 1960, seven students from Sterling High along with college freshman, Jesse Jackson, entered the library and were arrested. This group became known as the Greenville Eight. Source: Greenville County Library

In 1960, high school students led a read-in at a public library in Greenville, South Carolina. May their action, one of countless efforts to demand full access to books, inspire students and teachers today.


Teach Banned History

The book bans and anti-education laws are united in their larger political goal: to rob children of access to a usable past, an account of history that helps them fully see and understand their present. We must not let them. Check out the free downloadable lessons in the #TeachTruth syllabus.

Wear Teach Banned History buttons to promote awareness of how the current legislation bans more than books.

Invite conversations about the need to actively oppose book bans, teach truthfully, and defend LGBTQ+ rights. Remind people that the bans go way beyond books — the attacks target the teaching of history and a more inclusive curriculum. Order buttons.


More

Stay informed. Follow PEN America which issues reports, such as Banned in the USA: The Growing Movement to Censor Books in Schools. Sign up for AAPF Truth Be Told updates.

Hold media accountable for accurate coverage of the threats to our freedom to teach and learn.

Engage with your school board by voting, testifying, and consider running for office.

Display Banned in the U.S.A. graphic. Print as an 11 x 17 poster.


Prison Censorship

In addition to book bans in schools, there is a long and ongoing practice of book censorship for prisoners. Take a look at the Marshall Project’s list of The Books Banned in Your State’s Prisons. Ask students to examine the list for their state and consider why books are censored for prisoners and in schools today. There are also lessons that educators can learn from how prisoners have challenged and evaded the censorship.

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Apply Now for NEH Summer Institutes 2024 https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/neh-summer-institutes-2024/ https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/neh-summer-institutes-2024/#respond Tue, 02 Jan 2024 19:38:23 +0000 https://www.zinnedproject.org/?p=168758 Tuition-free opportunities for K–12 educators to study a variety of humanities topics.

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Each year, the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) funds summer institutes for teachers.

These are tuition-free opportunities for K–12 educators to study a variety of humanities topics. Stipends help cover expenses for these programs, which vary in length from one to four weeks. The deadline to apply is March 5, 2024. Visit the NEH website to browse all of the 2024 summer programs.

The institutes featured below are a few of the ones that could be of interest to people’s history educators.

Understanding Puerto Rican Migration and Community Building Through the Arts and Humanities

Location: New York, NY
Date: July 14 — July 27, 2024

Freedom Summer: 60 Years Later — A Landmarks Of American History Teacher Workshop

Location: Jackson, MS (available virtually)
Date: July 8 — 12, and July 22 — 26, 2024

Heart Mountain, Wyoming and the Japanese American Incarceration

Location: Cody, WY
Date: June 16 – 21, and June 23 – 28, 2024

LGBTQ+ Histories of the United States: Summer Institute for Middle and High School Teachers

Location: New York, NY
Date: July 8 — 19, 2024

Wilmington 1898: Geographies of Rage, Resistance, and Resilience

Location: Wilmington, NC
Date: July 8 — 19, 2024

And Many More

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Martin Luther King Jr.: Beyond “I Have a Dream” https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/mlk-jr-beyond-i-have-a-dream/ https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/mlk-jr-beyond-i-have-a-dream/#respond Tue, 02 Jan 2024 00:22:11 +0000 https://www.zinnedproject.org/?p=166377 Resources about Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., beyond the traditional narrative.

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The right wing twists Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s words to attack anti-racist education, focusing almost exclusively on MLK’s “I have a dream” declaration.

But Dr. King was a radical — in the most profound sense.

He denounced the Vietnam war, when it was politically risky, and did not mince words about U.S. racism: “The doctrine of white supremacy was imbedded in every textbook and preached in practically every pulpit. It became a structural part of the culture.”

On this holiday weekend, take a moment to read King in context, including his thoughts on Reconstruction, war, nuclear weapons, and police brutality.

Cartoon used with permission of artist Barry Deutsch.

Themes

On War

A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death . . .

Our only hope today lies in our ability to recapture the revolutionary spirit and go out into a sometimes hostile world declaring eternal hostility to poverty, racism, and militarism. — Martin Luther King Jr., A Revolution of Values


Check out our growing list of resources for teaching about Palestine and Israel.


On Nuclear Weapons

These days, some textbooks acknowledge Dr. King’s critique of the Vietnam War. However, King’s actions against nuclear weapons began a full decade earlier in the late 1950s. From 1957 until his death, through speeches, sermons, interviews, and marches, King consistently protested the use of nuclear weapons and war. King called for an end to nuclear testing, asking, “What will be the ultimate value of having established social justice in a context where all people, Negro and White, are merely free to face destruction by Strontium-90 or atomic war?” — Vincent Intondi in “The Untold History of the Movement to Ban the Bomb”


On Police Brutality

In a lesser-known part of his March on Washington speech, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. proclaimed, “We can never be satisfied as long as the Negro is the victim of the unspeakable horrors of police brutality.” He described “the total pattern of economic exploitation under which Negroes suffer” in northern cities as a “system of internal colonialism” where police and the courts act as “enforcers.” — Jeanne Theoharis in The Atlantic


Resources

Here are resources about Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., beyond the traditional narrative.

Books

A More Beautiful and Terrible History (Book) | Zinn Education Project
Memphis Martin and the Mountaintop 9781629797182 (Book Cover) | Zinn Education Project

A More Beautiful and Terrible History: The Uses and Misuses of Civil Rights History by Jeanne Theoharis

Be a King: Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s Dream and You by Carole Boston Weatherford. Illustrated by James E. Ransome (Bloomsbury Publishing Inc.)

Memphis, Martin, and the Mountaintop: The Sanitation Strike of 1968 by Alice Faye Duncan. Illustrated by R. Gregory Christie (Calkins Creek Books)

The Radical King by Martin Luther King Jr. Edited by Cornel West (Beacon Press)

Lessons and Articles

A Revolution of Values Teaching Activity based on speech by Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

Dr. Martin Luther King on Reconstruction” by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. from The Radical King (Beacon Press).

Growing Up Racist in the Shadow of Dr. King” by David McGrath. Chicago Sun Times

Martin Luther King Jr.’s Challenge to Liberal Allies — and Why it Resonates Today” by Jeanne Theoharis. Washington Post

“Martin Luther King Knew That Fighting Racism Meant Fighting Police Brutality” by Jeanne Theoharis. The Atlantic

Martin Luther King Jr. Was a Strong Friend of Labor” by Peter Cole. Chicago Sun Times

My Trip to the Land of Gandhi” by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Stanford University MLK Research and Education Institute.

“The Crisis in America’s Cities: Martin Luther King Jr. on What Sparked the Violent Urban Riots of the “Long Hot Summer” of 1967by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. The Atlantic.

“The Man Who Was a Fool, Sermon Delivered at the Detroit Council of Churches’ Noon Lenten Services” by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Stanford University MLK Research and Education Institute

The Sanctification — and Sanitization — of Martin Luther King Jr.” by P. R. Lockhart. Vox.

W. E. B. Du Bois to Coretta Scott King: The Untold History of the Movement to Ban the Bomb” by Vincent Intondi. Zinn Education Project.

When Martin Luther King Jr. Came Up Against Chicago Racism” by Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor. Truthout.

Videos

MLK 1967 | Zinn Education Project

At the River I Stand Documentary film on the African American sanitation workers’ 1968 fight for human dignity and a living wage in Memphis.

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.: “Beyond Vietnam”  Dramatic reading of Dr. Martin Luther King’s “Beyond Vietnam” (1967) speech by Michael Ealy.

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in His Own Words 2020 segment of Democracy Now!

This Day In History

Martin Luther King and Malcolm X

Dec. 1, 1955: Rosa Parks Refuses to Give Up Her Seat

Dec. 1961: Christmas Shopping Boycott

Aug. 28, 1963: March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom

March 26, 1964: Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X

April 30, 1967: “Why I Am Opposed to the War in Vietnam” Speech

March 14, 1968: King Speaks About the “Other America” in the North

March 22, 1968: March for Justice and Jobs

May 12, 1968: The Poor People’s Campaign Began

Class: The Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. You Won’t Read About in Textbooks

On January 10, 2022, the Zinn Education Project hosted historian Jeanne Theoharis in conversation with Jesse Hagopian about the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. not found in textbooks and school curricula. As Theoharis notes in The Atlantic, “Critics of Black Lives Matter have held up King as a foil to the movement’s criticisms of law enforcement, but those are views that King himself shared. Martin Luther King Jr. proclaimed, ‘We can never be satisfied as long as the Negro is the victim of the unspeakable horrors of police brutality.’ King understood that police brutality — like segregation — wasn’t just a southern problem.”

Below is a video recording of the class.

Below is an audio recording of the class. Find other audio recordings from the Zinn Education Project Teach the Black Freedom Struggle online classes here.

Presenters: Jeanne Theoharis is a distinguished professor at Brooklyn College. She is the author or co-author of nine books and numerous articles on the Civil Rights and Black Power movements and the politics of race and education. Her books include the award-winning titles The Rebellious Life of Mrs. Rosa Parks and A More Beautiful and Terrible History: The Uses and Misuses of Civil Rights History. Jesse Hagopian teaches Ethnic Studies and is the co-adviser to the Black Student Union at Garfield High School in Seattle. He is an editor for Rethinking Schools, the co-editor of Teaching for Black Lives, and editor of More Than a Score: The New Uprising Against High-Stakes Testing.

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Art & Culture in the Movement — A Roundtable Discussion https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/art-culture-sncc-roundtable-discussion/ https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/art-culture-sncc-roundtable-discussion/#respond Mon, 01 Jan 2024 23:10:07 +0000 https://www.zinnedproject.org/?p=168774 The SNCC Legacy Project is hosting a livestreamed roundtable conversation on Art & Culture in the Movement with Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) veterans and humanities scholars.

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The SNCC Legacy Project is hosting a livestreamed roundtable conversation on Art & Culture in the Movement with Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) veterans and humanities scholars on Friday, February 2 at 7:00 p.m. ET.

Art and culture were central to how SNCC engaged with communities during the Civil Rights Movement. SNCC hired and trained photographers; gave cameras to local people; and used community-based collaboration to create film strips and other visual materials as educational tools. But nothing was more important than the singing and movement culture at the heart of mass meetings, marches, and every other aspect of the movement. Join SNCC veterans Charles E. Cobb Jr. and Jennifer Lawson, and humanities scholars Wesley Hogan and Joshua Myers, to learn more about the impact of art and culture in the Movement.

Register Now

Generously supported by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, this roundtable conversation is part of a two-day community gathering at North Carolina Central University, the inaugural event of the SNCC and Grassroots Organizing: Building A More Perfect Union discussion series. The series focuses on SNCC’s grassroots community organizing and its relevance to ongoing efforts to build a more just, inclusive, and sustainable society. At its core, SNCC helped community members feel empowered to make choices and act on the issues that most impacted their lives and their communities.

Visit the SNCC Legacy Project website for details, future events, and to learn more.

 

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Identity and Resistance: NYC Students Study Rosa Parks https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/nyc-students-study-rosa-parks/ https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/nyc-students-study-rosa-parks/#respond Mon, 01 Jan 2024 17:50:02 +0000 https://www.zinnedproject.org/?p=168745 New York City high school teacher Abby MacPhail shared this powerful story about her students' study of Rosa Parks.

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Abby MacPhail, a high school teacher at the United Nations International School in New York City, shares a powerful story about her students’ study of Rosa Parks through the lens of identity and resistance.

I used the young readers’ edition of The Rebellious Life of Ms. Rosa Parks with my grade 9 students as part of our unit on “Identity and Resistance.” By learning about the life of Rosa Parks and about the Civil Rights Movement, my students were able to develop a deeper understanding of how groups of oppressed peoples have demanded their rights in the United States and of what factors enable resistance movements to cause change (two of our unit’s essential questions).

We began our unit with an introduction to the work of Dr. Erica Chenoweth. Chenoweth is a Harvard professor who studies political violence and its alternatives. Chenoweth looked at the success rates of 627 revolutionary campaigns — violent and nonviolent — over the past 120 years and found that nonviolent resistance is a stunningly successful method of creating change. Their findings show that over 50% of the nonviolent revolutions from 1900 to 2019 succeeded outright — while only 26% of the violent ones were successful.

To introduce my students to Chenoweth’s work, we began by reading sections of their recent book Civil Resistance: What Everyone Needs to Know and learned about the four factors that they identified as making nonviolent civil resistance more likely to succeed: mobilizing a wide and diverse population, using a diversity of tactics, shifting loyalties from the government/regime’s pillars of support and remaining nonviolent and maintaining discipline and resilience in the face of state repression. Then, as we studied the Civil Rights Movement and read The Rebellious Life of Rosa Parks, we kept coming back to these four factors as we looked for evidence of them, and ultimately discussed and debated the extent to which the Civil Rights movement had been successful.

Beyond reading The Rebellious Life of Rosa Parks, we journaled and debriefed our responses in small groups, engaged in the Zinn Education Project’s mixer activity by Bill Bigelow, and watched some Democracy Now! clips of interviews with the book’s author Jeanne Theoharis.

After reading the chapter about Mrs. Parks’ life in Detroit, my students wanted to know more about redlining and segregation, so we devoted some time to exploring these topics. Their favorite part was when I handed out Home Owners’ Loan Corporation (HOLC) maps of the five boroughs of New York City so they could look up their own addresses to see what grade they had been awarded. I found the maps on Mapping Inequality: Redlining in New Deal America, a digital repository of 225 U.S. “security maps” produced by the HOLC produced between 1935 and 1940. I had mine printed out on giant paper but these can all just as easily be viewed online.

We ended the unit in the Art room. With the support of my wonderful colleague, Marc Smith, students turned their learning into works of art. They identified themes from the unit, found images on the internet and turned these into stencils, and then used words from the book to create collages. Tyler focused on the idea of resistance, stenciling the word equality in small letters next to the word RESISTANCE in large letters because as he explained, “while the amount of equality was small at that time, the amount of resistance was big.” Stella emphasized the theme of distortion, blurring words from the book and cutting off half of Rosa Parks’ face in her image to illustrate how the single focus on Park’s unwillingness to give up her seat on the bus, distorts her overall story.

And ultimately, this was one my students’ most important understandings from this unit, as Hanna so eloquently summed up in our final debrief,

What I learned most was that Rosa Parks was actually a lifelong activist and her life shouldn’t be put in a box of only one moment where she would give up her seat on one day, but rather that she was a part of a bigger movement, and a part of the NAACP to help improve the civil rights of Black people at the time.

But the final take away came from Alizeh Agha, the student who assisted me in creating the video (above) to share with parents, highlighting our study of Rosa Parks. After her fifth round of editing, when the video was finally finished, I said to her:

You have now spent hours filming, watching and editing the footage from our class. What is your biggest takeaway from all of this?

Her response:

It made me question what I thought I knew about history. Now I realize that we have to think about which parts of the story are not being covered.

Abby MacPhail is the author of the lesson, Dirty Oil and Shovel-Ready Jobs: A Role Play on Tar Sands and the Keystone XL Pipeline, originally published in the Rethinking Schools magazine.

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Challenging Bans on Teaching Black History https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/challenging-bans-on-teaching-black-history/ https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/challenging-bans-on-teaching-black-history/#respond Sat, 30 Dec 2023 20:04:03 +0000 https://www.zinnedproject.org/?p=168688 To counter attacks on history education, we secured donations from authors and publishers to increase classroom access to thousands of books on African American history.

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In 2023, there were increased attacks on teaching Black history, including anti-CRT laws, book bans, and revisions of the AP African American history course.

To counter these attacks, we secured donations from authors and publishers to increase classroom access to the books listed below on African American history.

11,500 copies of Half American: The Epic Story of African Americans Fighting World War II at Home and Abroad

3,087 copies of the young readers’ edition of The Rebellious Life of Mrs. Rosa Parks 

200 copies of Voices of a People’s History of the United States in the 21st Century

150 copies of the Spanish translation of A Young People’s History of the United States

300 copies of the young readers’ edition of The Sum of Us: How Racism Hurts Everyone 

100 copies of How the Word Is Passed

700 copies of a selection of titles from The New Press, including: Charisma’s Turn: A Graphic Novel by Monique W. Couvson; Denmark Vesey’s Garden: Slavery and Memory in the Cradle of the Confederacy by Ethan J. Kytle and Blain Roberts; Lies My Teacher Told Me: Young Readers’ Edition by James Loewen; The Lost Education of Horace Tate: Uncovering the Hidden Heroes Who Fought for Justice in Schools by Vanessa Siddle Walker; The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness by Michelle Alexander; and more

Our staff did the outreach and screening to ensure that the invitation to request books reached teachers and school librarians throughout the country. In most cases, we offered a choice of a single title for background reading, five copies for a literature circle, or 24 copies for a class set. We also collect and post stories from the classroom about the use of the books, such as these examples from The Rebellious Life of Mrs. Rosa Parks.  

While the books are donated, it takes considerable staff time to promote and process the requests — and to collect teaching stories. Donations from individuals — like YOU — make that possible.

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Good News: People’s History Is Reaching More Classrooms https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/2023-highlights https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/2023-highlights#respond Sat, 30 Dec 2023 18:36:31 +0000 https://www.zinnedproject.org/?p=168684 More than 10,000 teachers signed up to access people’s history lessons in 2023.

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No wonder the right is upset.

More than 10,000 teachers signed up to access people’s history lessons in 2023, bringing our full registration at the Zinn Education Project to more than 160,000 teachers from every state in the country!

This means that young people are learning to read the news with a critical eye, to assess current events through the lens of history, and to see through red-baiting and fear-mongering scare tactics.

Read highlights from our work in 2023 — our 15th anniversary — and help us provide more teachers with resources to teach outside the textbook in 2024.

In 2023, we:

  • Developed and updated lessons on Reconstruction, environmental justice, and labor
  • Organized a national day of action to protest the wave of attacks on teaching truthfully — with dozens of groups, including the National Education Association; Teach Rock; GLSEN; Red, Wine, & Blue; Who We Are Project; Learning for Justice; and more
  • Offered monthly “Teach the Black Freedom Struggle” online classes

The right-wing wants to force educators to teach only conservative “patriotic” narratives.

In this perilous time, please donate so that we can defend teachers’ right to teach people’s history.

Donate Today

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People’s History Lessons to Fight Voter Suppression https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/fight-back-voter-suppression/ https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/fight-back-voter-suppression/#respond Tue, 26 Dec 2023 18:30:02 +0000 https://www.zinnedproject.org/?p=164096 Lawmakers continue to enact laws that will make it harder to vote. Help us reach more teachers with people's history lessons on voting rights in 2024.

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Art by Ricardo Levins Morales

How can we fight voter suppression?

Equip young people with lessons from history on organizing for voting rights.

That is why GOP lawmakers are making it illegal for students to learn from history how to defend voting rights — at the same time they are making it harder to vote.

The “anti-CRT” campaign is what voter suppression looks like in school.

Textbooks ignore or minimize the long struggle for voting rights — and the equally long campaign to suppress these rights.

It is essential that the Zinn Education Project continue to provide free lessons to teach outside the textbook — and defend teachers’ right to teach a full and accurate history.

Help us reach more teachers with people’s history lessons on voting rights in 2024.

Donate Today


I used the first lesson in the unit, Who Gets to Vote? Teaching the Struggle for Voting Rights in the United States, in my United States government course. It fostered great conversation and insight for my students in considering the importance of voting and factors that hinder voting (especially educated voting). My students hadn’t much considered the importance of voting, and some were despairing about the worth of their vote following my lesson on the Electoral College.

Fannie Lou Hamer’s excerpts, especially the second excerpt, revealed to my students something that they hadn’t previously considered: while they didn’t see value in their vote, they hadn’t considered the challenges that have historically and contemporarily prevented citizens from the ability to vote in the first place.

This lesson led my students to reconsider the value of their voice in federal and local elections. I taught it on election day and I believe that it inspired many of them to vote in the election, some of whom left for the polls straight from school! Thank you, as always, for your great resources!

—Mike DeSalvo
High School Social Studies Teacher, Lakewood, Ohio

The fight for voting rights continues.

Your donation will help the Zinn Education Project continue to
share free lessons on voting rights and publish new ones.

Donate Today

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