PICK3 said:Really? What if their are a few oriental students?
I think it should be offered as an elective ... not mandatory.
Hengst said:Great news!!
Finally, a course in african history that will include an examination of the tribes that captured and sold their fellow africans to the atlantic slave trade, and to the arab slave trade.
Or do you think it will be an excersize in white guilt and only focus on the devil white man?... a la:
The African American Odyssey, by Darline Hine
A quick look at Amazon's review says the book "begins in sixteenth century Africa with the beginning of the forced migration of millions of Africans to the Americas. Succeeding chapters present the struggle of black people to maintain their humanity during the slave trade and as slaves in North America during the long colonial period."
Gambino said:just so you know bor their's a lot more to african history than the slave trade...you act as if this is the focus of african history![]()
Hengst said:It's my cynicism. 'diversity training' is usually an excersize in bashing whitey. Anyway, what else could they teach? Not one single SUB-SARAHA African tribe/group had a written language until they were colonized.
Not to diminish the artistic achievements of the Benin culture, or the stone ruins of Zimbabwe, the truth is, not much was going on on that continent. African explorers? Great inventions? Classical literature?
I do not want to turn this into some sort of school yard "i'm better than you" pissing contest, simply because I want the Africans to succeed !!! But the constant repetition of "It's all the white man's fault" is tired, lame and slowly being proven untrue and does NOTHING to promote true racial harmony. For ultimately, the African curriculum is an attempt to deconstruct and undermine Western Civilization and create more "dead white males." This has already been done pretty much in literature, where great writers like Joseph Conrad and Charles Dickens are now more and more overlooked.
What will happen with an "Afro-Centric" curriculum will be to start by saying that the Greek philosophers somehow plagiarized
African "geniuses" without giving them credit, so that for thousands of years we haven't realized all the African contributions. So before you know it, Plato, Socrates and Aristotle, among others, will enter the "black hole" of history, as has happened to more and more of the heroes of our race over the past several decades. And the curriculum will obviously end by emphasizing the evils of European colonialism and how, were it not for the evil Europeans, African nations would now be up to the level of the First World countries of the world.
Gambino said:.....Don't be afraid of knowledge...
Gambino said:.....the african history classes i took in college ......
\Hengst said:That's the difference - COLLEGE - I also studied African History and African Political Systems in college as part of my political science major (EEK!!).
Hengst said:Great news!!
Finally, a course in african history that will include an examination of the tribes that captured and sold their fellow africans to the atlantic slave trade, and to the arab slave trade.
Or do you think it will be an excersize in white guilt and only focus on the devil white man?... a la:
The African American Odyssey, by Darline Hine
A quick look at Amazon's review says the book "begins in sixteenth century Africa with the beginning of the forced migration of millions of Africans to the Americas. Succeeding chapters present the struggle of black people to maintain their humanity during the slave trade and as slaves in North America during the long colonial period."
Hengst said:Experience has taught me that things will most likely work out the way I outlined them. After all this is a public school in a 2/3rds black, urban school system. Could it work out any other way?? It would be interesting to see what the syllabus for the proposed classes will be, though.
(don't worry about my 'fear of knowledge', I am very inquisitive. Indeed, it is this desire to learn that has led me to the positions I take today - well thought out and educated)
Breeze said:I've been seeing this "fear of knowledge" crap more and more lately. If you disagreed with a liberal in the past you were a "bigot, racist, or fascist". Now it seems that "fear of knowledge" is the new buzzword. You make good points and seem to have plenty of knowledge.
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