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If Einstein is correct and "insanity"
is doing the same experiment again and again and
expecting different results, then America is truly
delusional in its approach to education and racial
integration. Fifty years after Brown v. Board, the
landmark Supreme Court decision that invalidated the
doctrine of "separate but equal," America's schools are
as segregated as ever—with often abysmal educational and
psychological outcomes for black children.
To stop the madness, both Ogletree
and Bell argue that what America must stop doing again
and again is attempting to provide integrated education
for its children.
The notion of retreating from
integration is blasphemous, unthinkable, inherently
racist. Yet, it rings true, even as one sputters in
protest at the heresy. Fifty years of culture wars
notwithstanding, integration is still more rhetoric than
reality, and it is the ever-neglected minority children
who pay the price for our continued focus on this
seemingly unattainable goal. Perhaps it's time America
cried "Uncle." Racism won.
Mournful books both, Bell's best
captures the significance of Brown at the time of its
pronouncement and of African Americans'
then-unconquerable optimism about the country's ultimate
goodness. Mustered out after the Korean War, Bell was in
law school in 1954; Brown, he was convinced, "marked the
beginning of the end of Jim Crow oppression in all its
myriad forms.
For black Americans long burdened by
our subordinate status, there was, to paraphrase the
spiritual, 'a great day a-coming.'" He describes meeting
with William H. Hastie, the first black federal judge,
shortly before Bell graduated in 1957. "Son," Hastie
told him, "I am afraid that you were born 15 years too
late to have a career in civil rights."
Forty-seven years later, civil-rights
advocates are still trying to integrate America's
schools, wistfully invoking Brown like the abandoned
child stationed at the window waiting for parents who
are never coming back for her. But not Ogletree and
Bell; two of the nation's premier civil-rights scholars
and attorneys, they've surrendered the dream of
integration and now demand that separate schools
actually be made equal.
While Plessy-style segregation might
have been psychologically harmful, even more so has been
the fruitless, enervating quest to force, trick, or
cajole whites into sharing their neighborhoods and
classrooms. An elderly teacher from one of the Jim Crow
era's highest achieving black schools-Dunbar in
Washington, D.C.-remarks sadly, "Integration, with all
the good it brought, was also the beginning of the end
of Dunbar and Negro education as I'd known it. I
wouldn't want it to go out that I'm not for
integration-I am. I'm not for what it did to Dunbar and
to students." One woman adds, "We got what we fought
for, but we lost what we had." Even that was too
optimistic; except for the rhetorical victory of Brown,
blacks did not get what they fought for.
Whatever its promise, the reality of
desegregation has been grim, as a peek inside America's
still segregated and still substandard black classrooms
quickly reveals. White students, Bell notes, attend
schools that are 80 percent white. Today's residential
and educational segregation rates equal that of de jure
Jim Crow to within two-tenths of a percent in some
neighborhoods, resulting in a "social and economic
apartheid."
Educational outcomes have been
equally stark: On standardized reading-achievement
tests, black nine-year-olds have scored an average of 10
points lower than white ones, and black students are
still twice as likely to drop out of high school as
whites. Functional illiteracy is as high as 40 percent
among minority youths.
"With fifty years of hindsight,"
Ogletree writes, "the tragic lesson" of Brown is that it
"actually defined—the power of racism as a barrier to
true racial progress." The Brown directive to proceed
"with all deliberate speed," rather than with specific
goals and timetables, he argues, opened the door to
"massive resistance" at every level of society.
"It began from the day the decision
was issued...through to the Boston busing crisis of
1975—and, most telling, to the resegregation of our
schools and our communities in the twenty-first
century."
Somewhat ruefully, these two legal
stars, both of whom committed substantial portions of
their careers to Brown-style advocacy, admit that the
black community was ambivalent about integration. "Too
often, integration is presented as an unalloyed benefit
for African-Americans," notes Ogletree:
For many in the African-American
community, however, integration was viewed with
suspicion or something worse. Many communities at the
center of the battle would have welcomed something less
than the full integration demanded by the civil rights
lawyers. These teachers, school principals, and janitors
would rather have kept their schools, their jobs, and
their positions of power and influence than see their
charges bused to white schools run by white principals
where white educators often made the children all too
grimly aware of their distaste for the new state of
affairs.
Indeed, the NAACP was known to oust
local leaders who opposed integration and to file court
briefs attacking the plans of blacks who fought to
improve, rather than integrate, black schools. These two
books apologize for that—for an elite forcing its vision
on a wiser, more practical community. They function as
eulogies for the dying dreams of integration, for years
spent in fruitless jousts with white intransigence, for
two generations of black children used as pawns and
tossed aside, uneducated.
And they offer a hero's funeral for
Brown with a promise to keep fresh flowers on its grave,
that resting place for what might have been.
Plan B—the actual education and
nurturing of minority, segregated children—will now have
to suffice. Whites will argue that it is not racism that
causes white flight and dismal minority educational
outcomes. But Eisenhower, president during Brown, was
unguarded enough to tell the truth: "[Southern whites]
are not bad people. All they are concerned about is to
see that their sweet little girls are not required to
sit in school alongside some big overgrown Negroes."
Fifty years later, that determination remains.
So be it, because Eisenhower was also
correct in noting that "it is difficult through law and
through force to change a man's heart." Impossible,
perhaps—or so advocates for minority education should
believe.
Regardless, 50 years is a long enough
experiment, and it's time we accepted the obvious, as
did W.E.B. Du Bois in 1935: "Negro children needed
neither segregated schools nor mixed schools. What they
need is education." Insane as it seems, perhaps
embracing segregation—ensuring that separate truly is
equal—will make all the difference.
Debra J. Dickerson is the author of
An American Story and the recently published
The End of Blackness
Source:
MotherJones.com / posted 16 April 2006
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update 22 July 2008 |