A platform for artistic expression
A portal for anti-racist* education and action
MARCH 2021 ISSUE
SAY HIS NAME - ACT TO CHANGE
According the Oregon Public Broadcasting website, “Jenoah Donald is the second Black man killed by Clark County Sheriff’s Office deputies in approximately three months … The shooting of Donald occurred around 7:40 p.m. on Feb. 4, 2021, after deputy Sean Boyle stopped Donald for a broken tail light in Hazel Dell, an unincorporated community north of Vancouver … Donald does not appear to have been armed during the encounter. A search warrant affidavit released Thursday reported no weapons recovered from the vehicle he drove that night.
ERASED
Artwork by Tania L. Abramson
Why We Still Need Black History Month
BY TANIA L. ABRAMSON, MFA
I created this work, Erased, in response to the continuing need for Black History Month. Now that we are on the cusp of Women’s History Month, I wanted this artwork to serve as a bridge between the two by focusing on the contributions of Black women, many of whom that are listed herein are not necessarily household names.
Towards the end of Trump’s term, he established the 1776 commission, which released The 1776 Report two days before Biden was inaugurated. That commission included no historians specializing in US history and the report itself was condemned by US historians for its partisan politics, errors and outright lies. Biden, not surprisingly, dissolved that commission hours into his term. The 1776 Report was in part a response to the 1619 Project, which explores American history through an African American lens. The latter came into existence for the very reason we still need Black History Month.
The contributions of Black men, women and children have been erased and whitewashed from mainstream US history books and classrooms. Our textbooks are filled with revisionist histories that spotlight only the most famous of our black leaders, thereby intentionally creating the illusion that racial injustice is a thing of the past. If the aim is to integrate and contextualize Black history into the whole fabric of American history- it must be inclusive, without bias, and tell our complete story. We are, sadly enough, far from our goal of honoring diversity in our classrooms while simultaneously challenging dominant narratives.
How will we write the next chapter of American history? Will we continue to erase, oppress and hate? Or will we ultimately recognize, honor, and elevate?
BLACK LIVES MATTER
INDIGENOUS LIVES MATTER
WHO GOVERNS MATTERS
ART MATTERS
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