#tdih 1965 People began march from Selma to Montgomery in protest of police murder of Jimmie Lee Jackson and violation of const'l rights to vote. Attacked by state troopers.
Textbooks focus on segregation with CRM -- but students should learn that demands were also for end to police violence. Incl. when African Americans exercising right to vote often brutally attacked by police.
To introduce middle and high school students to the story of Selma, we recommend "Selma: The Bridge to the Ballot," an engaging 40 minute documentary film from @learnforjustice.
The @NatlParkService is streaming a 23-minute doc video for visitors, which is also ideal for the classroom, on role of young people in the voting rights movement in Selma and Marion, Alabama, in the 1960s.
Each year on Bloody Sunday anniv., national media focus on iconic images and a few individuals. This version of history emphasizes a top-down narrative and isolated events. But there is a “people’s history” of Selma that we all can learn from. Read⬇️ zinnedproject.org/if-we-knew-our…
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In curriculum workshop yesterday on Vanguard, facilitator Ursula Wolfe-Rocca asked:
"What argument is Dr. Jones making in the title? What is she saying about Black women’s activism?"
Answers included: "At forefront, not on the side, nor an afterthought."
What would you say?
Teachers shared ideas for introducing women in Vanguard to their students.
One teacher said: "Pull excerpts from the book & have students decide who would 'mentor' who from each century given their tactics & strategies & causes." Or, "In whose footsteps are you walking & why?"
#tdih 1971 A cab driver, day care provider, and two professors broke into FBI office in Media, Penn. & stole docs that exposed COINTELPRO campaign to disrupt and destroy a wide range of activist groups, especially civil rights orgs. Read⬇️ #TeachTruth zinnedproject.org/news/tdih/coin…
Despite massive FBI campaign to find "burglars" of Media, Penn. office who exposed COINTELPRO, their identities remained secret until they came forward in 2014. See ⬇️ on @democracynow. For lessons on #CivilDisobedience
#tdih 1857 SCOTUS declared in horrific Dred Scott v. Sandford ruling that "Any person descended from Africans, whether enslaved or free, is not a citizen of the U.S."
Often left out of the traditional narrative is Harriet Scott, who filed a petition for freedom at the same time (April 6, 1846) and with same lawyer as her husband Dred Scott. They were both deeply concerned for their two daughters (Eliza and Lizzie, below). #WomensHistoryMonth
Note that Harriet & Dred Scott met at Fort Snelling in what is now the state of Minnesota.
The Scotts were enslaved on a U.S. military base by U.S. Army officers.
#tdih 1865 the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands was established in the War Department "to undertake the relief effort and the unprecedented social reconstruction that would bring freedpeople to full citizenship." ⬇️ #TeachOutsideTextbookzinnedproject.org/news/tdih/free…
Freedmen’s Bureau issued food & clothing, operated hospitals, helped locate family members, promoted education, legalized marriages, supervised labor contracts, settled freed people on abandoned or confiscated lands, & more. See records at @USNatArchives: archives.gov/research/afric…
Imagine if everyone whose knowledge, skills, & labor had been stolen for generations, for centuries — had been compensated as Richard Brown was promised in doc ⬇️ to “take possession of & occupy forty acres of land, situated in St. Andrews Parish, Island of James.” #reparations
Born #tdih 1868: William Edward Burghardt (W. E. B.) Du Bois, one of most important scholars of 20th century. Sociologist, historian, Pan-Africanist, author, editor; co-founder of @NAACP, leader of Niagara Movement, and editor of NAACP’s @thecrisismag. zinnedproject.org/news/tdih/web-…
"One is astonished in the study of history at the recurrence of the idea that evil must be forgotten, distorted, skimmed over. . . The difficulty, of course, with this philosophy is that . . . it paints perfect man & noble nations, but it does not tell the truth." ― W.E.B. DuBois
"The slave went free; stood a brief moment in the sun; then moved back again toward slavery." -- W. E. B. Du Bois on "Black Reconstruction in America" (1935), just reissued. Video ⬇️of talk about book by Eric Foner, @KeeangaYamahtta, & @HenryLouisGates zinnedproject.org/materials/blac…
#PresidentsDay: "Nowhere in all this information is there any mention of fact that more than one in four U.S. presidents were involved in human trafficking & slavery." -- by @HowardU Prof. Clarence Lusane, "Black History of the White House" #TeachTruth ⬇️ zinnedproject.org/if-we-knew-our…
“When you sing that this country was founded on freedom, don’t forget the duet of shackles dragging against the ground my entire life.” - - @ClintSmithIII on @pbsnewshour reads a "letter to past presidents." #PresidentsDay
Clint Smith, in video above, is author of "How the Word Is Passed" -- an examination of how monuments & landmarks (incl. for U.S. presidents) represent — and misrepresent — central role of slavery in U.S. history & its legacy today.
Book info, lessons ⬇️ zinnedproject.org/materials/how-…