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- <text id=94TT0346>
- <title>
- Apr. 04, 1994: Teaching Reverse Racism
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Apr. 04, 1994 Deep Water
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SCIENCE, Page 74
- Teaching Reverse Racis
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A strange doctrine of black superiority is finding its way into
- schools and colleges
- </p>
- <p>By Leon Jaroff--With reporting by Massimo Calabresi/New York and Hilary Hylton/Austin,
- with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> The teachings are sheer fantasy, unsubstantiated by any credible
- evidence: ancient Egyptians mastered flight with gliders, which
- they used for both recreation and travel. They invented electric
- batteries and mastered electroplating, discovered the principles
- of quantum mechanics and anticipated Darwin's theories of evolution.
- Furthermore, all Egyptians were black, and their abundance of
- the dark skin pigment, melanin, not only made them more humane
- and superior to lighter-skinned people in body and mind but
- also provided such paranormal powers as ESP and psychokinesis.
- </p>
- <p> Incredible as it may seem, these fallacies are being included
- in public school multicultural courses in a growing number of
- U.S. cities and espoused in black-studies departments on some
- college campuses. The ideas represent the views of extremists
- within the Afrocentric movement, which is intended to acquaint
- U.S. blacks with their long-ignored African heritage and raise
- their pride and self-esteem. While approving of the legitimate
- aims of Afrocentrism, many educators, both black and white,
- are concerned that its excesses will subvert the very goals
- it seeks to accomplish.
- </p>
- <p> "It defeats what we're trying to do because it's going to be
- discredited," says David Pilgrim, a sociologist at Ferris State
- University in Big Rapids, Michigan. "All the good reasons why
- it was proposed are going to come back tenfold as negatives
- on the black community--and on the black intellectual community
- specifically." Pilgrim, who is black, calls the claims of the
- extremists "pseudoscience" and "reverse Jensenism," referring
- to the controversial theories of Arthur Jensen, who argued that
- blacks were genetically less intelligent on average than whites.
- </p>
- <p> Much of the Egyptian lore of Afrocentrism stems from the African-American
- Baseline Essays, published in 1987 by the largely white Portland,
- Oregon, school district to encourage multiculturalism. This
- series of seven essays has since been used as a guide by public
- school systems in Atlanta; Detroit; Fort Lauderdale, Florida;
- and other cities. Teachers are encouraged to read the essays
- and incorporate at least some of the material into their lesson
- plans.
- </p>
- <p> The science essay is a strange, error-filled melange of pseudoscience,
- the Egyptian religion Ma`at and other fanciful ideas, written
- by Hunter Adams, a former environmental technician at Argonne
- National Laboratories in Illinois. Yet despite the essay's bizarre
- claims, it has been accepted not only by Afrocentric extremists
- but also by apparently scientifically illiterate school boards.
- </p>
- <p> The dissemination of the science essay dismays Bernard Ortiz
- de Montellano, an anthropologist at Detroit's Wayne State University
- who has long lobbied for greater minority representation in
- science. "The danger of an Afrocentric scientific curriculum,"
- he says, "is that if you start doing pseudoscience in schools
- under the guise of getting more minorities into science, you
- actually end up with fewer minorities in the real sciences."
- </p>
- <p> Adams is a member of a loose-knit consortium of Afrocentrists
- and "melanin scholars" that includes Leonard Jeffries, the controversial
- chairman of black studies at City College in New York; Wade
- Nobles, a psychology professor at San Francisco State University;
- Asa Hilliard, a professor at Georgia State University; and other
- black scholars and psychiatrists. These "melanists," Ortiz de
- Montellano writes in the latest issue of the Yearbook of Physical
- Anthropology, provide a supposedly scientific explanation for
- the excessive claims of Afrocentrism.
- </p>
- <p> Basing their beliefs largely on a speculative scientific paper
- published in 1983 by Dr. Frank Barr, a San Francisco physician,
- the melanists assert that blacks--who indeed have more of
- the skin pigment than other races--possess superior and supernatural
- traits that can be ascribed to the magical qualities of neuromelanin,
- a little-studied substance in the brain. Yet while neuromelanin
- is markedly different from the skin pigment, the melanists often
- fail to differentiate between the two and ignore the fact that
- all humans have similar amounts of neuromelanin. According to
- the melanists, neuromelanin can convert light and magnetic fields
- to sound and back again, and can capture sunlight and hold it
- in a "memory mode." Furthermore, they say, melanin granules
- are minicomputers that can respond to and analyze stimuli without
- interacting with the brain.
- </p>
- <p> Barr is aghast at the distortion of his writings: "I wrote a
- paper for a theoretical journal about specific properties of
- an interesting, neglected molecule," he says. "It included no
- stupid things like the more melanin you have, the smarter you
- are."
- </p>
- <p> That kind of disclaimer apparently has little impact on the
- school boards that embrace Afrocentric extremes. In Detroit
- the public schools' radio station has rebroadcast in their entirety
- Adams' rambling lectures. Adams has participated in seminars
- for the school system's science teachers, who in one session
- accepted without protest the assertion that Egyptians were flying
- around in gliders thousands of years ago. And in Atlanta, Gladys
- Twyman, coordinator of the African-American infusion program
- for public schools, confirms that the concept of melanin is
- used both as a teaching tool and as part of the curriculum.
- That concept, she explains, "is the thread, the core of the
- project."
- </p>
- <p> Afrocentrist myths have taken hold in higher education as well,
- extending beyond black-studies courses. In one of the required
- multicultural courses for freshmen at Southern Methodist University,
- for example, the Rev. Clarence Glover, director of intercultural
- education and minority affairs, tells students that melanin
- content generates certain emotional reactions. He suggests that
- those with little melanin and a Nordic background are "member-object"
- oriented: they rely on objects like warm clothing made of animal
- skins to survive. But Africans, with more melanin, he says,
- "have a `member-member' orientation and value human relationships
- more than objects."
- </p>
- <p> Even some well-educated black professionals are not immune to
- the odd tenets of Afrocentrism. Covering the annual convention
- of the black National Medical Association last summer, Andrew
- Skolnick, an editor at the Journal of the American Medical Association,
- listened in disbelief as Dr. Patricia Newton, a psychiatrist
- affiliated with Johns Hopkins University, waxed eloquent about
- the wonders of melanin. It has "one of the strongest electromagnetic
- field forces in the universe," she proclaimed, and was responsible
- not only for imparting traits that make blacks superior to other
- races but also for stimulating healing through movement.
- </p>
- <p> "No joke," she explained. "Because when you hear that bass drum...it creates a melatonin increase surge, causing it to be
- released in the body, induces the opiate system--the endorphin
- and enkephalin system--and gives you a sense of well-being."
- From the audience, Skolnick says, "there was not a single murmur
- of dissent."
- </p>
- <p> These melanist notions and other extremes of Afrocentrism are
- discomforting to many black educators. John Warfield, who until
- recently headed the African-American Studies Center at the University
- of Texas at Austin, calls the melanist theory "a difficult concept
- to support scientifically" and feels that Afrocentrism is "a
- romanticizing of Africa that should give everyone pause." But
- he urges understanding of a form of black nationalism that "waxes
- and wanes" with the sense of discontent among U.S. blacks. He
- calls it "a response reflective of some of the destitution in
- the black community."
- </p>
- <p> While acknowledging the bad science in Afrocentrism, Manning
- Marable, director of African-American studies at Columbia University,
- attributes it to a handful of crackpots engaged in what he calls
- "vulgar Afrocentrism based purely on speculation and racial
- divisiveness." It developed as "an attempt to speak to a crying
- need for identity, purpose and human development within the
- context of the black underclass." Much of Afrocentrism, he says,
- is based on solid scholarship.
- </p>
- <p> But Marable and some other responsible black educators may be
- underestimating the appeal of "vulgar" Afrocentrism. Barry Mehler,
- a white Ferris State professor who specializes in investigating
- white racism, only recently became aware of the melanist advocates
- and was shocked by the wide acceptance of their views. "They
- do not represent a majority of black opinion," he says, "but
- they represent a significant minority." In a society that has
- treated blacks as inferiors because of the color of their skin,
- it is hardly surprising that many of them now embrace melanist
- doctrine. But in doing so, they are indulging in what they have
- long decried: racism.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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