Originally published in the Crimaon White Online on 4/22/2004 [here]
Lawyer argues for academic reparations
Touré says society has bred feeling of inferiority among blacks, other minorities
Rose Sanders Touré, a
Harvard-educated civil rights lawyer who works in Selma, said Wednesday
night that the University and the rest of the country should pay
academic reparations for minority groups. While that may be a hard sell
to some people at the University, student and faculty leaders pushing
racial equality at the Capstone won major victories in the past week,
with UA President Robert Witt announcing efforts to recognize the
school's racial past and the Faculty Senate voting Tuesday to apologize
for the actions of former slaveholders at the University.
Touré said she thinks the recent events are important steps toward
achieving equality, which she says still lacks in public schools almost
50 years after the Supreme Court's decision to desegregate them.
"I'm proud of you, but don't stop there," she told an audience of about
30 people at Bidgood Hall. "There are still many African-American
children who suffer from this discrimination right in your midst. They
need scholarships; they need reparations."
Touré said gifted tracks in public schools and magnet schools are ways
of continuing the tradition of "separate but unequal" and keeping a
mutual feeling of inferiority among blacks and superiority among
whites. She advocated a "leveling of the playing field" in schools with
academic reparations for blacks and other minorities who have been
historically discriminated against in the United States.
"To separate primarily the children of color and poverty under the
guise of ability grouping and to pretend it's democratic is meaner than
slavery and pre-[ Brown v. Board of Education ] segregation," she said.
Touré said a system that sustains a feeling of inferiority among blacks
early in the classroom has led many to crime and poverty.
"Why do you think the jails are filled with black men?" she asked. "The
problem is we have accepted the inferior status of African-American
children and people."
She blamed the government and politicians for appointing federal judges
"who are determined to uphold that blacks, Hispanics and poor people
have no rights that whites have to accept."
Touré also said the public school system has been perpetuating a
"miseducation" regarding U.S. history, citing that today's teachers
were taught, like many before them, automatically to venerate
slaveholding men like George Washington.
"We have not made up our mind to stop the miseducation of this
country," she said. "If so, then we'd all be out protesting Christopher
Columbus Day every year."
Because the dehumanizing effects of slavery, a government-sanctioned
institution, have produced an inferiority complex in blacks that is
still there today, the government ought to be responsible for
implementing "whatever is necessary to level the playing field," Touré
said. She said every black person who wants to go to college should be
able to do so for free.
Asked if affirmative action policies could have the reverse effect - to
further a feeling of inferiority among minorities - Touré said that
attitude is one adopted by the people who benefit from the unequal
system.
She said no one questions the families of victims of the Sept. 11,
2001, terrorist attacks when they ask for compensation, and she said it
should be no different for families of former slaves.
Asked why people who had nothing to do with racism in the past should
have to pay taxes to fund reparations, Touré said she wished she did
not have to pay taxes for a lot of things, like the Bush
administration's compensation of Halliburton in the Iraq war.
"Once we repair and deal with the truth, then there can be reconciliation," she said.
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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