Black History Month makes its mark

As we wrap up February, it’s worth taking a look at the 28 days that made up Black History Month in 2021, for which the theme was “Black Family: Representation, Identity and Diversity,” which explored “the African diaspora and the spread of Black families across the United States,” according to www.history.com. It’s not only people of color who should contemplate such topics, but those of all races, for it is only by understanding each other that we will come to accept and embrace people everywhere, the world over.

We realize it might have been challenging for our school districts in the Harlem Valley to teach about Black History Month this year, especially during the coronavirus pandemic. It had to be difficult to talk about such important yet sensitive issues while dealing with students bouncing back and forth between their living rooms and their classrooms. 

We do hope, however, that teachers were able to touch upon such an important part of American history, including how its early settlers treated those first 19 Africans brought to the colonies as slaves in 1619, to its Jim Crow South, to segregation and the fight for Civil Rights led by Martin Luther King Jr., all the way to the brutal beating of Rodney King in L.A. in March of 1991 and the riots that ensued, to where we find ourselves today with the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement that has echoed around the world.

It’s been difficult for the Black community in the U.S., this land of opportunity, truly the most wonderful, democratic and free country in the world. Without exception, there is no greater nation across the globe, with one of our key strengths being our ability to flex and grow, to improve and better ourselves through time.

This country, though, is not perfect. Throughout our history, Black Americans have faced brutality, discrimination and bigotry. The Black community has long been economically and socially disadvantaged; it has faced educational gaps and been provided with far fewer opportunities in life than others. It isn’t fair — we agree.

Yet the Black community has a rich cultural life, history and familial bond that few may realize, unless exposed to concepts like Black History Month. That’s why we are so pleased organizations like Millerton’s North East Community Center (NECC) and the NorthEast-Millerton Library have supported programs tied to Black History Month throughout February (for more, go to this week’s front page and read reporter Kaitlin Lyle’s article on NECC’s Teen Team honoring Black History Month through restorative circles). The two even joined together and began the Stamped Book Club, which according to the library’s website “shared [the] reading of ‘Stamped: Racism, Anti-racism and You’ by Jason Reynolds and Ibram X. Kendi [in] an effort to generate a brave space for open and honest discussion about where we have been as a society, [where] we are today and where we want to go…” throughout October 2020. (For more on the Stamped Book Club, go to www.tricornernews.com.)

It’s been heartening to see such community groups reach out, especially to our youth, and engage with them — encourage them — to learn more about themselves and those living among them. 

We should be trying to understand each other. We should be working to learn about our differences — and our likenesses — we may be surprised by what we discover. The end result could be a more peaceful, more unified society. Now that would really be something for the history books.

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