Ibram X. Kendi Profile picture
Jun 19 13 tweets 3 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
As we celebrate #Juneteenth, let us keep in mind that African Americans during the Civil War distinguished between *abolishing slavery* and *freeing people.* Many formerly enslaved people did not feel *free* in 1865 and thereafter, and they clearly articulated why. A thread 1/
On January 12, 1865, General William T. Sherman met with twenty Black leaders in Savannah, Georgia, over the future of African Americans in the area. These African Americans gave this Union general a crash course on their definitions of slavery and freedom. 2/
Slavery meant “receiving by irresistible power the work of another man, and not by his consent,” said the group’s spokesman, Garrison Frazier. Freedom was “placing us where we could reap the fruit of our own labor.” To accomplish this—to be truly free—we must “have land.” 3/
Formerly enslaved people were saying everywhere to Union officials: Do not abolish slavery and leave us landless. Do not leave us landless and force us to work the land of our former enslavers. Do not force us to work the land of our former enslavers and call that *freedom.* 4/
Four days after meeting with Savannah’s Black leaders, General Sherman's issued Special Field Order No. 15 to rid his camps of runaways and punish Confederates. The order provided African Americans with as many as 40 acres of land in coastal GA and SC and an old army mule. 5/
But reparations did not fit racist illogic. White settler colonists on US-provided land, taken from Native nations, were deemed receivers of American freedom. Black people on US-provided land, redistributed from rebel Confederates, were deemed receivers of American handouts. 6/
Racist Americans claimed African Americans were demanding reparations because they were lazy. If any group should be called lazy, it was the enslavers, who had “lived in idleness all their lives on stolen labor,” a free Black woman wrote to Pres. Lincoln during the Civil War. 7/
Many Americans said African Americans did not have an economic right to the Confederate land. “We has a right to the land," Virginia’s Bayley Wyat replied. "Our wives, our children, our husbands, has been sold over and over again to purchase the lands we now locates upon.” 8/
Racist Americans imagined that African Americans would not be able to take care of themselves on redistributed land. “We used to support ourselves and our masters too when we were slaves and I reckon we can take care of ourselves now,” one African American responded. 9/
In the summer and fall of 1865, African Americans were evicted from redistributed lands as former Confederates passed "Black codes" at southern constitutional conventions. These racist codes—like written and unwritten codes today—bound the very people who were called free. 10/
Reflecting on all this anti-Black racism, on all this racial injustice and inequity after the Civil War, one Union veteran asked, “If you call this Freedom, what do you call Slavery?” 11/
On #Juneteenth, we can connect those who fought to preserve and expand slavery with those fighting to preserve and expand racism today. Their racist ideas are similar. Their attacks on antislavery/antiracism are similar. Their wars for freedom *to dominate* are similar. 12/
On #Juneteenth, let us celebrate the end of chattel slavery *and* those antiracist efforts today to end the afterlife of slavery: racism. Because African Americans during the Civil War did not just want to end slavery. They wanted to be free. 13/13

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More from @DrIbram

Jun 17
The paperback edition of HOW TO RAISE AN ANTIRACIST is out! In time for Father’s Day. This is without question my most vulnerable book. Hitting closer to home than any other. Let me explain. A thread 1/
penguinrandomhouse.com/books/671925/h… Image
Hardly anything is more important to me as a parent and teacher, than protecting vulnerable children from racist messages—verbal and non-verbal. And we won’t be able to protect our children if we continue to believe—against all evidence to the contrary—that our kids. . . 2/ Image
. . .won’t ever internalize any of the racist messages polluting their environment, won’t ever connect positive and negative traits to skin colors, won’t ever subject others to or be subjected to racist bullying, won’t ever see racist posts on social media, 3/ Image
Read 11 tweets
Jun 16
Gov. Greg Abbott signed a racist law that orders all state-funded colleges and universities in Texas to close their diversity, equity, and inclusion offices. Let’s put this action in perspective. A thread. 1/

nbcnews.com/politics/polit…
Texas Republicans pushed this bill through on the White supremacist talking point that diversity is anti-White. They ignored all the studies showing that diversity is beneficial to White students. So Texas Republicans don’t care about White Texans. 2/
We already knew they didn’t care about Texans of color who make up the majority in this state. Yet another day in the United States when Republican state legislators pass a bill that harms all of their constituents. 3/
Read 4 tweets
Jun 6
Six years ago I became enamored by the power of comics. To clarify the complexity of history. Keeping us thinking and laughing and learning. Like our graphic history of racist ideas, Stamped from the Beginning, which I'm proud to announce is out today. 1/

penguinrandomhouse.com/books/665573/s… Image
There is something special about comics. This artistic form takes people places, allows people to overcome their fear and go on a journey of history that they know or suspect they must see. And this graphic novel with Joel Christian Gill is a must-see. 2/

penguinrandomhouse.com/books/665573/s… Image
Because so much of how we see this society is shaped by anti-Black racist ideas. 3/

penguinrandomhouse.com/books/665573/s… Image
Read 12 tweets
May 30
In the 1930s and 40s, zoot suits were the hottest trend for young Filipino, Mexican, and African American men like Malcolm X. An emblem of swag, of pride, of defiance. What White servicemen hated. Their mass attack on zoot suiters began #OTD 80 years ago in Los Angeles. A 🧵1/ Image
The zoot suit style began at the tail end of the Harlem Renaissance in 1930s. Young men flocked to urban dance halls to socialize and dance. As a compliment to their moves, dancers started wearing zoot suits. Wide pants. Long coats. Wide-brimmed hat. And watch chain. 2/ Image
Zoot suits grew in popularity, especially with young Black, Filipino, and Mexican American men residing in coastal cities. A young Malcolm X donned “sky-blue pants thirty inches in the knee” in Boston. Cesar Chavez was “challenging cops” looking “sharp and neat” in Delano, CA. 3/ ImageImage
Read 11 tweets
May 22
To explore his conception of history, Gillian Brockell reviewed DeSantis's first book (which is out of press): "Dreams from Our Founding Fathers," a troll of Obama's first book, "Dreams from My Father." 1/

washingtonpost.com/history/2023/0…
DeSantis dismisses slavery as a "personal flaw" of the Founding Fathers, while also excusing those flaws by saying slavery existed "throughout human history." DeSantis imagines that "slavery was doomed to fail in a nation whose Constitution embodied" freedom. 2/
No matter that the Constitution also embodied and protected slavery. No matter that certain Founding Fathers fought for the freedom *to* enslave. No matter that there were Indigenous, Black, and White abolitionists before the Founding Fathers wrote the Constitution.” 3/
Read 5 tweets
May 16
On this day in 1943, German Nazis suppressed the four-week-long Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. It was the largest and longest Jewish uprising during the Holocaust. Remembering this rebellion today as Jewish people, as we all, face a resurgence of neo-Nazi violence across the world. 1/ Image
The term “ghetto” first described an area of Venice, Italy where authorities segregated Jews in 1516. Nazis created the Warsaw ghetto in Poland in 1940, enclosing it with a 10-foot brick wall. Nazis created at least 1,143 “ghettos” in occupied eastern territories like Poland. 2/ Image
Around 500,000 Jewish people were forced to live in the 1.3 square-mile Warsaw ghetto, many houseless, conditions deplorable. In the so-called "Great Action" in 1942, Nazis brought 265,000 people to the Treblinka extermination camp, while killing 35,000 more within the ghetto. 3/ Image
Read 9 tweets

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