Virginia to apologize for role in slavery

According to this AP story, legislation was introduced today in which Virginia will apologize for its role in slavery.

The joint resolution urges that Virginia “acknowledges and atones for its pivotal role in slavery” and work to reconcile “centuries of brutal dehumanization and injustices.”

[…]

The effort comes amid preparations to commemorate the 400th anniversary of Jamestown, America’s first permanent English settlement. [State Senator Henry] Marsh called it time for Virginia to again be first.

“It’s important because of the role Virginia played … that we also play a role in seeking reconciliation among the races,” he said.

Virginia played a tremendous role in the slave trade. Richmond was part of what is known as the Slavery Triangle. The other two cities were Benin, Africa and Liverpool, England. Under the cover of darkness, the slaves were moved along a trail, shackled together with the men in the back. I have walked that trail and it is an amazing experience.

After the importation of slaves was outlawed in the US, Virginia’s cash crop became slaves. The climate in Virginia was less conducive to the growing of cotton than in states further south, so Virginia bred and exported them.

Last December, Richmond broke ground on the construction of a monument at the site of the old slave jail. The monument to be erected is the last of the three in the triangle. It is to be revealed on March 30, in conjunction with other events surrounding the 400th anniversary of Jamestown.

If erecting a monument and issuing an apology moves racial reconciliation forward, I’m all for it.

29 thoughts on “Virginia to apologize for role in slavery

  1. As a native Virginian (not from Richmond), I have been deeply troubled after having moved to Richmond five years ago to find people who seem to believe that the Civil War had nothing to do with slavery. How anyone could delude himself about the truth is beyond me, and I was horrified shortly after moving here to find some people actually objected to the placing of a statute of Abraham Lincoln in Shockoe. These wounds need to heal, but they need to be healed honestly and I believe this bill is a wonderfuly way to enhance the healing process. I have also been heartened by the proposal over at The Richmond Democrat that we honor all Virginians involved in the Civil War down on Monument Avenue, including those who stayed loyal to the Union. I hope everyone will come to Richmod to see the new Civil War Center down by Tredegar Ironworks, which handles the whole matter of slavery with frankness and honesty.

  2. In a similar bill, Virginia will apologize for its role in making dinosaurs extinct.

    The joint resolution urges that Virginia “acknowledges and atones for its pivotal role in the extinction of dinosaurs” and work to reconcile “centuries of brutal dehumanization and injustices against dinosaurs.”

    […]

    The effort comes amid preparations to commemorate the 400th anniversary of Jamestown, America’s first permanent English settlement. [State Senator Henry] Marsh called it time for Virginia to again be first.

    “It’s important because of the role Virginia played in wiping out Dinosaurs… that we also play a role in seeking reconciliation among the the remaining species now inhabiting our earth today,” he said.

    Asked by a blogger who alive has had anything to do with slavery in Virginia, State Senator Henry March admitted that while it is true that no one living today had anything to do with the extinction of the Dinosaurs, internal polling data has shown that Dinosaurs remain very popular today and that the opposing the extinction of Dinosaurs is a great way to garner positive publicity – and makes for great talking points in future elections.

    He said that his staff is waiting on the poll numbers to come back and if they are favorable, he may introduce a bill to apologize for the Virginia’s role in the war in Iraq, global warming, prohibition, and lung cancer from smoking tobacco – the primary cash crop that sustained the economy of Virginia for so many decades. Of course he added, “apologizing for stuff that might have been caused by anyone still living is a sticky thing – it may actually result in personal accountability and we in the Senate all understand how that is simply bad politics and not being productive. Proper decorum and political acumen dictates that the airing our dirty laundry is simply bad form and being ‘divisive’ – but we have no problem attacking the actions of those long dead.”

  3. In a related topic, my German side of my family is set to apologize for the holocaust and my Irish side of the family is waiting for New England and the Rail Road builders to apologize to me.

    I also hear Italy is going to apologize for the Roman slaves and I think the Egyptians have something to say to those who built the pyramids.

    However, NO ONE in the Middle East will apologize for 9/11, beheading Americans or bombing the Jews, Spain or London (and on and on and on).

    Well, I guess you win some, you lose some.

  4. Is apologizing for other people’s sins something like forgiving those who have not sinned against you?

    That said, I understand that the effects of the sins of our fathers and mothers did not die with them and that their sons and daughters continue to sin — even looking for new ways to sin. Nonetheless, consider the bookkeeping. Even if such apologies actually mean anything, we will not live long enough to apologize for all the sins of previous generations. Our time would be better spent finding out and correcting our own misdeeds.

  5. Pingback: snapped shot
  6. This is a great thing! Vivian is quite accurate in describing Virginia after the Revolution as being a mostly breeding and selling area for slaves. Richmond was bad, but there is one area that might have been worse–Alexandria!

    I am as conservative as you can get, and I have a masters in history. I for the life of me can never understand how people can seperate slavery from the Civil War. In all my studies of the South, I’ve learned that slavery infiltrated every aspect of life in all classes in the South. The blame falls on the Lost Cause myth of the 1890s that STILL exists today in some respects.

    Who is sponsering this legislation?

  7. The point isn’t to “atone” for anything – the point is that this is an effort to avoid allowing history to be in the past – and its clearly politically motivated – in addition, the ISSUE of “slavery” as it applies to the American political landscape is one that the Democrat Party hoes to keep “discussing” – because their polling and political experts inform them such “discussion” benefits the Democrat Party.

    Folks – – No American citizens are “slaves” – at least not legally. No one has been allowed to “own” “slaves” for decades.

    So why does someone that had nothing to do with slavery – now “apologize” for “Virignia”???

    It couldn’t have anything to do with looking to gain a political advantage, now – could it?

    BTW, prior to my family coming to this nation in the 1600s, they were slavic – who do I see about “apologies” and “reparations” for my family’s enslavement?

    Oh .. wait, I’m “white” so that doesn’t “matter”.

    Really? Now why is that?

    Apparently there is no equality and equal justice for all slaves, now is there?

  8. I love that straw man statement that most people make when the issue of slavery in america is discussed. Many peoples in the world were once slaves or wronged in some manner. Why do we not addressed their conserns or issues?

    The issue here is slavery in america, not the problems of peoples of the rest of the world. If you have ancestors who were wronged and abused and enslaved elsewhere, there go there and make a case for justice.

    For white people in this country to take the position that slavery happened in the past and we should not deal with the issue shows how uneducated and ill informed they are. Slavery in america may have ended in the 1860’s, but the so-called free negro had absolutely no opportunity or hope for economic success in america. The plight of the negro in america has only recently improved since the 1960’s. Because many of those who blog are white and not aware of the problems and issues that many blacks have faced in this country as a result of slavery and continued to face long after slavery ended, I find them silly and naive. Today in america, hope and opportunity abounds for everyone who is willing to work hard and shake off the distractions they may face, but just a few decades ago that opportunity did not exist for black americans.

    So please understand that while an apology would be helpful and appreciated, the better result would be an improved educational system that truly educated our children on the history of this country and how it treated blacks in america from slavery through the civil rights movement of the 1960’s.

  9. There’s an idea! How ’bout Virginia apologize for the quality of public education in this state?

    Oh, wait, these particular legislators are actually RESPOONSIBLE for our public schools. Therefore, they will not accept responsibility for them. Oh, well.

  10. Black Virginian — As you seem to realize yourself, Jack is on target. The apology is a useless distraction.

    Consider this thought. When it exceeds its rightful authority, government makes slavery possible. Otherwise, slaves just flee their masters. Instead of pointless and useless apologies, we need leaders that ensure our government does only what it should do.

    You want a better education system? Let parents choose. When we give our money to politicians so they can provide children a “free” education, what we accomplish is to give politicians full control of our money. That benefits special interests, not children.

    Government should not own and operate our schools. Just as it should not enforce slavery, government should not now be enforcing an education monopoly.

  11. Ahhh – the politics of government school indoctrination! Hey .. Does this quest for “education” include explaining the truth about what really happened in New Orleans BEFORE and during the aftermath of Hurricane Rita and Katrina? The TRUTH about the culture of entitlement that lead to the fabled “chocolate city” [racist Ray Nagan quote] to such a human disaster due to the failure of its citizens to heed the warnings and take personal responsibility for their own well being? How about the “history” of looters – and the culture that resulted in gunfire being directed at first responders – people placing themselves in harm’s way to help?

    You know, “Black Virginian”, you’re right – we should do a better job teaching our children the truth about “Black America” – such as the hate speeches of Louis Farrakhan and the true role of the Black Panthers as a organized terrorist group.

    But do you know what? I don’t advocate doing that either. I advocate the best use of our K-12 taxpayer-funded public education is to teach our children facts and to provide them with the KSAs they need to compete and succeed in their lives. This includes filling tem with optimism and enthusiasm for their futures.

    Keeping our future generations looking forward with optimism for a better future is a far better use of their time – and our money – then the propensity of politically motivated “scab pickers” that want to focus precious time on painting our nation as evil and our history as a path of shame and “injustice’. Picking the scab sop the wounds will not heal – race-baiters such as Al Sharpton and Jessie Jackson make a living from picking scabs to prevent healing to take place.

    Face it – “American” slavery is long past – and those that seek “victim hood status” would be far better served in looking to the future- instead of languishing in the woes of the past. A past that many of them never experienced in their own lives.

  12. Ten Reasons: A Response to David Horowitz by Robert Chrisman and Ernest Allen, Jr.*

    David Horowitz’s article, “Ten Reasons Why Reparations for Slavery is a Bad Idea and Racist Too,” recently achieved circulation in a handful of college newspapers throughout the United States as a paid advertisement sponsored by the Center for the Study of Popular Culture. While Horowitz’s article pretends to address the issues of reparations, it is not about reparations at all. It is, rather, a well-heeled, coordinated attack on Black Americans which is calculated to elicit division and strife. Horowitz reportedly attempted to place his article in some 50 student newspapers at universities and colleges across the country, and was successful in purchasing space in such newspapers at Brown, Duke, Arizona, UC Berkeley, UC Davis, University of Chicago, and University of Wisconsin, paying an average of $700 per paper. His campaign has succeeded in fomenting outrage, dissension, and grief wherever it has appeared. Unfortunately, both its supporters and its foes too often have categorized the issue as one centering on “free speech.” The sale and purchase of advertising space is not a matter of free speech, however, but involves an exchange of commodities. Professor Lewis Gordon of Brown University put it very well, saying that “what concerned me was that the ad was both hate speech and a solicitation for financial support to develop antiblack ad space. I was concerned that it would embolden white supremacists and antiblack racists.” At a March 15 panel held at UC Berkeley, Horowitz also conceded that his paid advertisement did not constitute a free speech issue.

    As one examines the text of Horowitz’s article, it becomes apparent that it is not a reasoned essay addressed to the topic of reparations: it is, rather, a racist polemic against African Americans and Africans that is neither responsible nor informed, relying heavily upon sophistry and a Hitlerian “Big Lie” technique. To our knowledge, only one of Horowitz’s ten “reasons” has been challenged by a black scholar as to source, accuracy, and validity. It is our intention here to briefly rebut his slanders in order to pave the way for an honest and forthright debate on reparations. In these efforts we focus not just on slavery, but also the legacy of slavery which continues to inform institutional as well as individual behavior in the U.S. to this day. Although we recognize that white America still owes a debt to the descendants of slaves, in addressing Horowitz’s distortions of history we do not act as advocates for a specific form of reparations.

    1. There Is No Single Group Clearly Responsible For The Crime Of Slavery

    Horowitz’s first argument, relativist in structure, can only lead to two conclusions: 1) societies are not responsible for their actions and 2) since “everyone” was responsible for slavery, no one was responsible. While diverse groups on different continents certainly participated in the trade, the principal responsibility for internationalization of that trade and the institutionalization of slavery in the so-called New World rests with European and American individuals and institutions. The transatlantic slave trade began with the importation of African slaves into Hispaniola by Spain in the early 1500s. Nationals of France, England, Portugal, and the Netherlands, supported by their respective governments and powerful religious institutions, quickly entered the trade and extracted their pieces of silver as well. By conservative estimates, 14 million enslaved Africans survived the horror of the Middle Passage for the purpose of producing wealth for Europeans and Euro-Americans in the New World.

    While there is some evidence of blacks owning slaves for profit purposes–most notably the creole caste in Louisiana–the numbers were small. As historian James Oakes noted, “By 1830 there were some 3,775 free black slaveholders across the South. . . . The evidence is overwhelming that the vast majority of black slaveholders were free men who purchased members of their families or who acted out of benevolence.” (Oakes, 47-48.)

    2. There Is No Single Group That Benefited Exclusively From Slavery

    Horowitz’s second point, which is also a relativist one, seeks to dismiss the argument that white Americans benefited as a group from slavery, contending that the material benefits of slavery could not accrue in an exclusive way to a single group. But such sophistry evades the basic issue: who benefited primarily from slavery? Those who were responsible for the institutionalized enslavement of people of African descent also received the primary benefits from such actions. New England slave traders, merchants, bankers, and insurance companies all profited from the slave trade, which required a wide variety of commodities ranging from sails, chandlery, foodstuffs, and guns, to cloth goods and other items for trading purposes. Both prior to and after the American Revolution, slaveholding was a principal path for white upward mobility in the South. The white native-born as well as immigrant groups such as Germans, Scots-Irish, and the like participated. In 1860, cotton was the country’s largest single export. As Eric Williams and C.L.R. James have demonstrated, the free labor provided by slavery was central to the growth of industry in western Europe and the United States; simultaneously, as Walter Rodney has argued, slavery depressed and destabilized the economies of African states. Slaveholders benefited primarily from the institution, of course, and generally in proportion to the number of slaves which they held. But the sharing of the proceeds of slave exploitation spilled across class lines within white communities as well.

    As historian John Hope Franklin recently affirmed in a rebuttal to Horowitz’s claims:

    “All whites and no slaves benefited from American slavery. All blacks had no rights that they could claim as their own. All whites, including the vast majority who had no slaves, were not only encouraged but authorized to exercise dominion over all slaves, thereby adding strength to the system of control.

    “If David Horowitz had read James D. DeBow’s “The Interest in Slavery of the Southern Non-slaveholder,” he would not have blundered into the fantasy of claiming that no single group benefited from slavery. Planters did, of course. New York merchants did, of course. Even poor whites benefited from the legal advantage they enjoyed over all blacks as well as from the psychological advantage of having a group beneath them.”

    The context of the African-American argument for reparations is confined to the practice and consequences of slavery within the United States, from the colonial period on through final abolition and the aftermath, circa 1619-1865. Contrary to Horowitz’s assertion, there is no record of institutionalized white enslavement in colonial America. Horowitz is confusing the indenture of white labor, which usually lasted seven years or so during the early colonial period, with enslavement. African slavery was expanded, in fact, to replace the inefficient and unenforceable white indenture system. (Smith)

    Seeking to claim that African Americans, too, have benefited from slavery, Horowitz points to the relative prosperity of African Americans in comparison to their counterparts on the African continent. However, his argument that, “the GNP of black America makes the African-American community the 10th most prosperous “nation” in the world is based upon a false analogy. GNP is defined as “the total market value of all the goods and services produced by a nation during a specified period.” Black Americans are not a nation and have no GNP. Horowitz confuses disposable income and “consumer power” with the generation of wealth.

    3. Only A Tiny Minority Of White Americans Ever Owned Slaves, And Others Gave Their Lives To Free Them

    Most white union troops were drafted into the union army in a war which the federal government initially defined as a “war to preserve the union.” In large part because they feared that freed slaves would flee the South and “take their jobs” while they themselves were engaged in warfare with Confederate troops, recently drafted white conscripts in New York City and elsewhere rioted during the summer of 1863, taking a heavy toll on black civilian life and property. Too many instances can be cited where white northern troops plundered the personal property of slaves, appropriating their bedding, chickens, pigs, and foodstuffs as they swept through the South. On the other hand, it is certainly true that there also existed principled white commanders and troops who were committed abolitionists.

    However, Horowitz’s focus on what he mistakenly considers to be the overriding, benevolent aim of white union troops in the Civil War obscures the role that blacks themselves played in their own liberation. African Americans were initially forbidden by the Union to fight in the Civil War, and black leaders such as Frederick Douglass and Martin Delany demanded the right to fight for their freedom. When racist doctrine finally conceded to military necessity, blacks were recruited into the Union Army in 1862 at approximately half the pay of white soldiers–a situation which was partially rectified by an act of Congress in mid-1864. Some 170,000 blacks served in the Civil War, representing nearly one third of the free black population.

    By 1860, four million blacks in the U.S. were enslaved; some 500,000 were nominally free. Because of slavery, racist laws, and racist policies, blacks were denied the chance to compete for the opportunities and resources of America that were available to native whites and immigrants: labor opportunities, free enterprise, and land. The promise of “forty acres and a mule” to former slaves was effectively nullified by the actions of President Andrew Johnson. And because the best land offered by the Homestead Act of 1862 and its subsequent revisions quickly fell under the sway of white homesteaders and speculators, most former slaves were unable to take advantage of its provisions.

    4. Most Living Americans Have No Connection (Direct Or Indirect) To Slavery

    As Joseph Anderson, member of the National Council of African American Men, observed, “the arguments for reparations aren’t made on the basis of whether every white person directly gained from slavery. The arguments are made on the basis that slavery was institutionalized and protected by law in the United States. As the government is an entity that survives generations, its debts and obligations survive the lifespan of any particular individuals. . . . Governments make restitution to victims as a group or class.” (San Francisco Chronicle, March 26, 2001, p. A21.)

    Most Americans today were not alive during World War II. Yet reparations to Japanese Americans for their internment in concentration camps during the war was paid out of current government sources contributed to by contemporary Americans. Passage of time does not negate the responsibility of government in crimes against humanity. Similarly, German corporations are not the “same” corporations that supported the Holocaust; their personnel and policies today belong to generations removed from their earlier criminal behavior. Yet, these corporations are being successfully sued by Jews for their past actions. In the same vein, the U.S. government is not the same government as it was in the pre-civil war era, yet its debts and obligations from the past are no less relevant today.

    5. The Historical Precedents Used To Justify The Reparations Claim Do Not Apply, And The Claim Itself Is Based On Race Not Injury

    As noted in our response to “Reason 4,” the historical precedents for the reparations claims of African Americans are fully consistent with restitution accorded other historical groups for atrocities committed against them. Second, the injury in question–that of slavery–was inflicted upon a people designated as a race. The descendants of that people–still socially constructed as a race today–continue to suffer the institutional legacies of slavery some one hundred thirty-five years after its demise. To attempt to separate the issue of so-called race from that of injury in this instance is pure sophistry. For example, the criminal (in)justice system today largely continues to operate as it did under slavery–for the protection of white citizens against black “outsiders.” Although no longer inscribed in law, this very attitude is implicit to processes of law enforcement, prosecution, and incarceration, guiding the behavior of police, prosecutors, judges, juries, wardens, and parole boards. Hence, African Americans continue to experience higher rates of incarceration than do whites charged with similar crimes, endure longer sentences for the same classes of crimes perpetrated by whites, and, compared to white inmates, receive far less consideration by parole boards when being considered for release.

    Slavery was an institution sanctioned by the highest laws of the land with a degree of support from the Constitution itself. The institution of slavery established the idea and the practice that American democracy was “for whites only.” There are many white Americans whose actions (or lack thereof) reveal such sentiments today–witness the response of the media and the general populace to the blatant disfranchisement of African Americans in Florida during the last presidential election. Would such complacency exist if African Americans were considered “real citizens”? And despite the dramatic successes of the Civil Rights movement of the 1950s and 60s, the majority of black Americans do not enjoy the same rights as white Americans in the economic sphere. (We continue this argument in the following section.)

    6. The Reparations Argument Is Based On The Unfounded Claim That All African-American Descendants of Slaves Suffer From The Economic Consequences Of Slavery And Discrimination

    Most blacks suffered and continue to suffer the economic consequences of slavery and its aftermath. As of 1998, median white family income in the U.S. was $49,023; median black family income was $29,404, just 60% of white income. (2001 New York Times Almanac, p. 319) Further, the costs of living within the United States far exceed those of African nations. The present poverty level for an American family of four is $17,029. Twenty-three and three-fifths percent (23.6%) of all black families live below the poverty level.

    When one examines net financial worth, which reflects, in part, the wealth handed down within families from generation to generation, the figures appear much starker. Recently, sociologists Melvin L. Oliver and Thomas M. Shapiro found that just a little over a decade ago, the net financial worth of white American families with zero or negative net financial worth stood at around 25%; that of Hispanic households at 54%; and that of black American households at almost 61%. (Oliver & Shapiro, p. 87) The inability to accrue net financial worth is also directly related to hiring practices in which black Americans are “last hired” when the economy experiences an upturn, and “first fired” when it falls on hard times.

    And as historian John Hope Franklin remarked on the legacy of slavery for black education: “laws enacted by states forbade the teaching of blacks any means of acquiring knowledge-including the alphabet-which is the legacy of disadvantage of educational privatization and discrimination experienced by African Americans in 2001.”

    Horowitz’s comparison of African Americans with Jamaicans is a false analogy, ignoring the different historical contexts of the two populations. The British government ended slavery in Jamaica and its other West Indian territories in 1836, paying West Indian slaveholders $20,000,000 pounds ($100,000,000 U.S. dollars) to free the slaves, and leaving the black Jamaicans, who comprised 90% of that island’s population, relatively free. Though still facing racist obstacles, Jamaicans come to the U.S. as voluntary immigrants, with greater opportunity to weigh, choose, and develop their options.

    7. The Reparations Claim Is One More Attempt To Turn African-Americans Into Victims. It Sends A Damaging Message To The African-American Community

    What is a victim? Black people have certainly been victimized, but acknowledgment of that fact is not a case of “playing the victim” but of seeking justice. There is no validity to Horowitz’s comparison between black Americans and victims of oppressive regimes who have voluntary immigrated to these shores. Further, many members of those populations, such as Chileans and Salvadorans, direct their energies for redress toward the governments of their own oppressive nations–which is precisely what black Americans are doing. Horowitz’s racism is expressed in his contemptuous characterization of reparations as “an extravagant new handout that is only necessary because some blacks can’t seem to locate the ladder of opportunity within reach of others, many of whom are less privileged than themselves.” What Horowitz fails to acknowledge is that racism continues as an ideology and a material force within the U.S., providing blacks with no ladder that reaches the top. The damage lies in the systematic treatment of black people in the U.S., not their claims against those who initiated this damage and their spiritual descendants who continue its perpetuation.

    8. Reparations To African Americans Have Already Been Paid

    The nearest the U.S. government came to full and permanent restitution of African Americans was the spontaneous redistribution of land brought about by General William Sherman’s Field Order 15 in January, 1865, which empowered Union commanders to make land grants and give other material assistance to newly liberated blacks. But that order was rescinded by President Andrew Johnson later in the year. Efforts by Representative Thaddeus Stevens and other radical Republicans to provide the proverbial “40 acres and a mule” which would have carved up huge plantations of the defeated Confederacy into modest land grants for blacks and poor whites never got out of the House of Representatives. The debt has not been paid.

    “Welfare benefits and racial preferences” are not reparations. The welfare system was set in place in the 1930s to alleviate the poverty of the Great Depression, and more whites than blacks received welfare. So-called “racial preferences” come not from benevolence but from lawsuits by blacks against white businesses, government agencies, and municipalities which practice racial discrimination.

    9. What About The Debt Blacks Owe To America?

    Horowitz’s assertion that “in the thousand years of slavery’s existence, there never was an anti-slavery movement until white Anglo-Saxon Christians created one,” only demonstrates his ignorance concerning the formidable efforts of blacks to free themselves. Led by black Toussaint L’Ouverture, the Haitian revolution of 1793 overthrew the French slave system, created the first black republic in the world, and intensified the activities of black and white anti-slavery movements in the U.S. Slave insurrections and conspiracies such as those of Gabriel (1800), Denmark Vesey (1822), and Nat Turner (1831) were potent sources of black resistance; black abolitionists such as Harriet Tubman, Frederick Douglass, Richard Allen, Sojourner Truth, Martin Delany, David Walker, and Henry Highland Garnet waged an incessant struggle against slavery through agencies such as the press, notably Douglass’s North Star and its variants, which ran from 1847 to 1863 (blacks, moreover, constituted some 75 % of the subscribers to William Lloyd Garrison’s Liberator newspaper in its first four years); the Underground Railroad, the Negro Convention Movement, local, state, and national anti-slavery societies, and the slave narrative. Black Americans were in no ways the passive recipients of freedom from anyone, whether viewed from the perspective of black participation in the abolitionist movement, the flight of slaves from plantations and farms during the Civil War, or the enlistment of black troops in the Union army.

    The idea of black debt to U.S. society is a rehash of the Christian missionary argument of the 17th and 18th centuries: because Africans were considered heathens, it was therefore legitimate to enslave them and drag them in chains to a Christian nation. Following their partial conversion, their moral and material lot were improved, for which black folk should be eternally grateful. Slave ideologues John Calhoun and George Fitzhugh updated this idea in the 19th century, arguing that blacks were better off under slavery than whites in the North who received wages, due to the paternalism and benevolence of the plantation system which assured perpetual employment, shelter, and board. Please excuse the analogy, but if someone chops off your fingers and then hands them back to you, should you be “grateful” for having received your mangled fingers, or enraged that they were chopped off in the first place?

    10. The Reparations Claim Is A Separatist Idea That Sets African-Americans Against The Nation That Gave Them Freedom

    Again, Horowitz reverses matters. Blacks are already separated from white America in fundamental matters such as income, family wealth, housing, legal treatment, education, and political representation. Andrew Hacker, for example, has argued the case persuasively in his book Two Nations. To ignore such divisions, and then charge those who raise valid claims against society with promoting divisiveness, offers a classic example of “blaming the victim.” And we have already refuted the spurious point that African Americans were the passive recipients of benevolent white individuals or institutions which “gave” them freedom.

    Too many Americans tend to view history as “something that happened in the past,” something that is “over and done,” and thus has no bearing upon the present. Especially in the case of slavery, nothing could be further from the truth. As historian John Hope Franklin noted in his response to Horowitz:

    “Most living Americans do have a connection with slavery. They have inherited the preferential advantage, if they are white, or the loathsome disadvantage, if they are black; and those positions are virtually as alive today as they were in the 19th century. The pattern of housing, the discrimination in employment, the resistance to equal opportunity in education, the racial profiling, the inequities in the administration of justice, the low expectation of blacks in the discharge of duties assigned to them, the widespread belief that blacks have physical prowess but little intellectual capacities and the widespread opposition to affirmative action, as if that had not been enjoyed by whites for three centuries, all indicate that the vestiges of slavery are still with us.

    And as long as there are pro-slavery protagonists among us, hiding behind such absurdities as “we are all in this together” or “it hurts me as much as it hurts you” or “slavery benefited you as much as it benefited me,” we will suffer from the inability to confront the tragic legacies of slavery and deal with them in a forthright and constructive manner.

    “Most important, we must never fall victim to some scheme designed to create a controversy among potential allies in order to divide them and, at the same time, exploit them for its own special purpose.”

    ——————————————————————————–
    *Ernest Allen, Jr. is Professor of Afro-American Studies at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst; Robert Chrisman is Editor-in-Chief and Publisher, The Black Scholar (April 2, 2001)
    ——————————————————————————–

    BIBLIOGRAPHY

    2001 New York Times Almanac (New York: Penguin Books, 2000).

    Richard F. America, Paying the Social Debt: What White America Owes Black America (Westport, CT: Praeger, 1993).

    J. D. B. DeBow, “The Interest in Slavery of the Southern Non-Slaveholder,” in Slavery Defended: The Views of the Old South, ed. Eric L. McKitrick (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1963), 169-77.

    Ira Berlin and others, Slaves No More: Three Essays on Emancipation and the Civil War (Cambridge [England]; New York: Cambridge University Press, 1992).

    Dalton Conley, Being Black, Living in the Red: Race, Wealth, and Social Policy in America (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999).

    LaWanda Cox, “The Promise of Land for the Freedmen,” Mississippi Valley Historical Review 45 (December 1958): 413-40.

    Dudley Taylor Cornish, The Sable Arm: Black Troops in the Union Army, 1861-1865 (1956; rpt. Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 1987).

    Eric Foner, Free Soil, Free Labor, Free Men: the Ideology of the Republican Party Before the Civil War (New York: Oxford University Press, 1970).

    John Hope Franklin and Alfred A. Moss, Jr., From Slavery to Freedom: A History of African Americans, 7th ed. (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1994).

    Andrew Hacker, Two Nations: Black and White, Separate, Hostile, Unequal, rev. ed. (New York: Ballantine Books, 1995).

    James Oliver Horton and Lois E. Horton, In Hope of Liberty: Culture, Community, and Protest Among Northern Free Blacks, 1700-1860 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1997).

    James L. Huston, “Property Rights in Slavery and the Coming of the Civil War,” Journal of Southern History 65 (1999): 249-86.

    James Oakes, The Ruling Race: A History of American Slaveholders (New York: Vintage Books, 1983).

    Melvin L. Oliver and Thomas M. Shapiro, Black Wealth/White Wealth: A New Perspective on Racial Inequality (New York: Routledge, 1995).

    Benjamin Quarles, Black Abolitionists (New York: Oxford University Press, 1969).

    ——-, The Negro in the Civil War (Boston: Little, Brown, 1953).

    Walter Rodney, How Europe Underdeveloped Africa, rev. ed. (Washington, DC: Howard University Press, 1981).

    Jack Salzman, David Lionel Smith, and Cornel West, eds., Encyclopedia of African-American Culture and History, 5 vols. (New York: Macmillan Library Reference USA: Simon & Schuster Macmillan; London: Simon & Schuster and Prentice Hall International, 1996).

    Diana Jean Schemo, “An Ad Provokes Campus Protests and Pushes Limits of Expression,” New York Times, 21 March 2001, pp. A1, A17.

    Abbot Emerson Smith, Colonists in Bondage; White Servitude and Convict Labor in America, 1607-1776 (Chapel Hill: Pub. for the Institute of Early American History and Culture at Williamsburg, Va., by the University of North Carolina Press, 1947).

    Barbara L. Solow and Stanley L. Engerman, eds., British Capitalism and Caribbean Slavery: The Legacy of Eric Williams (Cambridge [Cambridgeshire]; New York: Cambridge University Press, 1987).

    Eric Williams, Capitalism & Slavery (1944; rpt. New York: Russell & Russell, 1961).

  13. “If erecting a monument and issuing an apology moves racial reconciliation forward, I’m all for it.”

    As am I Vivian.

    Vivian, you know I love you, I respect you more than any other lefty blogger. But as a fourth generation Irishman, I ain’t got nuthin’ to apologize for.

    Please don’t lump all us whiteys in together, OK?

Comments are closed.