Quantcast

Truth and guilt, by Dr. E. Faye Williams

6/10/2021, 6 p.m.
I’ve always enjoyed observing the unique behaviors of children. With youngsters, what you see is what you get. They present ...
Dr. E. Faye Williams

I’ve always enjoyed observing the unique behaviors of children. With youngsters, what you see is what you get. They present an unvarnished, no-excuse look at human behavior and become genuinely interesting when they are old enough to understand the difference between right and wrong.

Their clean-up after doing something they know—and you know—to be wrong can be creative and amusing. Most amusing are their efforts to pretend they are blameless or that your interpretation of reality is faulty or that what you see did not really happen.

While this behavior may be amusing in a child, in adults, or as characteristic of a political system, an element of society, or an organizational structure, this behavior is abhorrent and inexcusable.

We witness this inexcusable conduct in the historical revisionism of the Republican Party. From them we learn that America’s “original sin” of racism and brutal violence against people of color was and continues to be a figment of our imagination. Like the child, but with the animus of white-hot racism, racist revisionists would have you believe that what we’ve seen, experienced and know to be true didn’t happen or was misunderstood.

Any argument against this revisionism is considered “Critical Race Theory” and is considered invalid. But real history is on our side. With the exception of humans who were kidnapped from Africa to perform “free” labor, whether openly articulated or not, Northern Europeans invaded this land with the intent to establish a racially exclusive enclave. Without a self-serving purpose for white people, people of color were expendable, as was their history, and the elimination of both was/is pro forma.

The history of America’s systemic violence toward people of color, even if only to eliminate an immediate or situational “problem,” is well documented. Some of the most egregious events follow:

• Wounded Knee Massacre in South Dakota – Dec. 29, 1890: More than 300 mostly unarmed men, women and children of the Lakota tribe killed by the U.S. Cavalry.

• Chinese Exclusion Act 1882: Congressional immigration law denying Chinese (Asian) immigration into the United States.

• Red Summer of 1919: Across the nation between April and November 1919, there would be approximately 25 racially based civil disturbances and instances of mob violence and 97 recorded lynchings.

• 1919 Chicago Riot – July 27 to Aug. 3, 1919: Violence sparked by white people in a beach incident when a Black man on a float crossed an imaginary line. Conflict followed for the next eight days with the loss of 25 Black lives and related property damage.

• Elaine, Ark., Massacre – Sept. 30, 1919: Sharecroppers attempting to organize for higher wages were attacked. More than 200 Black men, women and children were killed. Those attempting to defend themselves were tried criminally.

• Tulsa Race Massacre – May 31 to June 1, 1921: More than 300 Black people killed and 35 square blocks destroyed. Black Wall Street was demolished.

• Rosewood Massacre in Florida – Jan. 1 through 7, 1923: Predominately Black town attacked and destroyed by white aggressors. Eyewitnesses estimate up to 150 people, mostly Black, killed.

• Immigration Act of 1924: This included the Asian Exclusion Act and National Origins Act. Not only did this law ban immigration from the entirety of the Asian continent, it restricted immigration from Southern and Eastern Europe.

These events and more, too numerous to count, color the history of our nation. Rather than acknowledging the truths of Nikole Hannah-Jones’ 1619 Project, Republicans and other revisionists vigorously advocate for a 1776 Project that colors the nation’s history in a more favorable light.

Just like in Tulsa, where an obvious and deliberate effort to hide the facts of that injustice failed, events cannot be erased from the tablets of time. Revisionists who fear that guilt will promote a movement toward a more equitable society may just be right. The truth will always win.

The writer is president of the National Congress of Black Women.