Arizona Bans Ethnic Studies, Reason and Justice—Jan Brewer Wannabes Have Taken Over the State
While much condemnation has rightly been expressed toward Arizona’s anti-immigrant law, SB 1070, a less-reported and potentially more sinister measure is set to take effect on January 1, 2011. This new law, which was passed by the conservative state legislature at the behest of then-School Superintendent (and now Attorney General-elect) Tom Horne, is designated HB 2281 and is colloquially referred to as a measure to ban ethnic studies programs in the state. As with SB 1070, the implications of this law are problematic, wide-ranging and decidedly hate-filled.
By Randall Amster J.D., Ph.D., in t r u t h o u t
Whereas SB 1070 focused primarily on the ostensible control of bodies, HB 2281 is predominantly about controlling minds. In this sense, it is the software counterpart of Arizona’s race-based politicking, paired with the hardware embodied in SB 1070′s “show us your papers” logic of “attrition through enforcement,” which has already resulted in tens of thousands of people leaving the state. With HB 2281, the intention is not so much to expel or harass as it is to inculcate a deep-seated, second-class status by denying people the right to explore their own histories and cultures. It is, in effect, about the eradication of ethnic identity among young people in the state’s already-floundering school system, which now ranks near the bottom in the nation.
There’s a word for what Arizona is attempting to do here: ethnocide. It is similar to genocide in its scope, but it reflects the notion that it is an ethnic and/or cultural identity under assault more so than physical bodies themselves. By imposing a curriculum that forbids the exploration of divergent cultures while propping up the dominant one, there’s another process at work here, what we might call ethnonormativity. This takes the teachings of one culture – the colonizer’s – and makes it the standard version of history while literally banning other accounts, turning the master narrative into the “normal” one, and further denigrating marginalized perspectives. America’s racialized past abounds with such examples of oppressed people being denied their languages, histories and cultures, including through enforced indoctrination in school systems.
As if to add insult to injury, HB 2281 barely makes a pretense to hide any of this in its language and intended scope. A close reading of the law lays bare some of the more stark and sinister aspects of its potential application in a state where Hispanic students fill nearly half the seats in the public schools (the domain to which HB 2281 will apply). In particular, there are three primary aspects of the law that merit further investigation as contributing factors to the ongoing erasure of ethnic identities and the further marginalization of people of color in Arizona.
First, there is the perverse Declaration of Policy preamble, in which the legislature expresses its intention that pupils “should be taught to treat and value each other as individuals,” and likewise, “not be taught to resent or hate other races or classes of people.” The irony here is palpable, since SB 1070 precisely singles out “races or classes of people” in its coded language, requiring police to demand legal papers from anyone who is deemed “reasonably suspicious” of being undocumented – which, in the Southwest, obviously correlates with skin color and ethnic origin. Moreover, HB 2281 itself was aimed specifically at abolishing the Raza studies program in Tucson (as well as all ethnic studies programs statewide), which translates literally to “race” as noted in the working definition adopted by the program at San Francisco State University:
“The term Raza literally means race or colloquially, the people. The term figuratively has reference to the Spanish conquest of the indigenous Indians of Mexico and the resulting mestizaje or the mixed racial and ethnic identity of indigenous, European and African heritage unique to the Americas. In practical usage, the term Raza refers to mestizos or mixed peoples; we have the blood of the conquered and conqueror, indigenous, (i.e., Aztec, Mayan, Olmec, Yaqui, Zapotec and numerous other Native Americans), European, African and Asian. The term Raza was popularized by Mexican educator, Jose Vasconcellos who wrote about La Raza Cosmica to inclusively refer to a new ‘race’ of people born out of the neo-Columbian New World.”
In this sense, we come to perceive the aim of banning ethnic studies as an attempt to single out the histories and cultures of certain people based expressly on race and class. While the Arizona legislature states its intention to prevent resentment and hatred of others, the new law fosters precisely that and, in denying people their histories, further encourages self-hatred as well. Indeed, people kept from knowing where they come from have a difficult time knowing where they are going, creating a self-fulfilling downward spiral that is common where people are categorized and labeled as “other” and/or “lesser” vis-à-vis the dominant norm. As such, we see that HB 2281 actually violates its own provisions by promoting that which it claims to eliminate.
The second critical aspect concerns the law’s main prohibitions against any education programs that (1) “promote the overthrow of the United States government,” (2) “promote resentment toward a race or class of people,” (3) “are designed primarily for pupils of a particular ethnic group” and (4) “advocate ethnic solidarity instead of the treatment of pupils as individuals.” The problems here are manifest, starting with the reflexively implicit link to terrorism contained in the first provision – as if to say that ethnic solidarity is somehow akin to attempting to overthrow the government. The third provision is even more problematic in its potential implications, since a plausible argument can be made that the entire mainstream public education curriculum is precisely designed for pupils of a particular ethnic group – namely the dominant, white, Eurocentric group that defines its history and worldview as the “normal” or “standard” ones against which subaltern perspectives are to be judged as deviant and, under HB 2281, banned.
The fourth provision does double duty in prioritizing individualism over group-centric processes, reflecting another deeply-rooted cultural bias and projecting it back as the norm. The libertarian and individualistic foundations of Western culture are viewed as iconic in Arizona, and it is no coincidence that the more communitarian impulses of Raza peoples are denigrated as politically dangerous and pedagogically bereft. Again, the worldview of the oppressor is normalized in its rugged individualism and attempts to break down any movement toward solidarity and unified action among people of the disfavored class. This also expresses contemptuous judgment toward solidarity-based movements grown in the Western world, including the rise of union organizing, anti-globalization and antiwar activism and the mobilizations of people against totalitarianism in the Eastern bloc nations. What the Arizona legislature completely fails to grasp is that individual identity arises out of cultural consciousness – in other words, that it is ethnic solidarity in itself that provides people with the grounding necessary to know who they are as individuals.
Finally, HB 2281 contains an exemption for teaching students about episodes such as the Holocaust; genocides; and “the historical oppression of a particular group of people based on ethnicity, race, or class.” In essence, combined with the provisions noted above, this means that students of a particular group can be taught about their history of subjugation, but not about their spirit of solidarity; they can focus on their decimation, but not their emancipation. This sinister portion of the bill strives to reinforce pain at the expense of pride, encouraging young people to internalize the oppression delivered by the dominant culture and make it part of their self-consciousness as “other” in a world whose norms are built on the inherent superiority of the master class. Thus, the law seeks not only to prevent the teaching of histories and values that might empower marginalized people, but further endorses the transmission of destructive episodes and ideologies that can only serve to increase the group’s collective disempowerment.
In all of these ways, HB 2281 is a potent example of legislative bigotry and open persecution of people based on factors such as race and class. As with SB 1070, HB 2281 is also self-violating in that it promotes precisely what it claims to prohibit, namely, ethnic chauvinism and “resentment toward a race or class of people.” Both of these laws – as well as similar ones in the offing being considered by the Arizona legislature – are entirely counterproductive and manifestly unjust. Confronting similar patterns of legislated intolerance and the widespread attempt to reduce a category of people to second-class status based primarily on ethnic origin, Martin Luther King Jr. famously wrote in his landmark essay “Letter from a Birmingham Jail,” following the teachings of St. Augustine, that “an unjust law is no law at all.” King further reminds us, “injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere,” calling upon us to recognize the interlinked nature of destinies and, indeed, the inherent solidarity of our struggles, and further counsels that in this effort “one has a moral responsibility to disobey unjust laws.”
Carrying the logic further, King articulates a framework for resistance that applies as much in Arizona today as it did in the South during the Jim Crow era:
“Any law that degrades human personality is unjust. All segregation statutes are unjust because segregation distorts the soul and damages the personality. It gives the segregator a false sense of superiority and the segregated a false sense of inferiority. Segregation, to use the terminology of the Jewish philosopher Martin Buber, substitutes an ‘I it’ relationship for an ‘I thou’ relationship and ends up relegating persons to the status of things. Hence segregation is not only politically, economically and sociologically unsound, it is morally wrong and sinful…. An unjust law is a code that a numerical or power majority group compels a minority group to obey, but does not make binding on itself. This is difference made legal…. A law is unjust if it is inflicted on a minority that … had no part in enacting or devising the law…. We should never forget that everything Adolf Hitler did in Germany was ‘legal’ and everything the Hungarian freedom fighters did in Hungary was ‘illegal.’”
By denying marginalized peoples their own stories and understandings, HB 2281 likewise denies the “conquerors” the capacity to come to terms with the full implications of history, thus, literally enabling the perpetuation of a state of “denial” that inhibits the development of necessary processes of atonement, accountability and reconciliation. As with laws associated with segregationist and tyrannical regimes throughout history, HB 2281 and SB 1070 are inherently unjust and, hence, are “no laws at all.” They must be disobeyed, not out of spite or hatred, but more so to uplift the oppressors and the oppressed alike, as Paulo Freire has suggested. In this sense, solidarity transcends its narrow bounds and the struggle itself is our finest education.
Short URL: http://www.veteranstoday.com/?p=69713
Posted by Yanira Farray on Dec 28 2010, With 0 Reads, Filed under Causes, Living, Of Interest. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
COMMENTS
To post, we ask that you login using Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, or Hotmail in the box below.Don't have a social network account? Register and Login direct with VT and post.
Before you post, read our Comment Policy - Feedback
FACEBOOK
TWITTER
























Why don’t we see if we as westerners can legally (or in most cases as in AZ illegally) migrate to any other countries on earth and then set up classes and groups exalting our culture above the country we chose to move to. These groups denigrate and criticize the very countries and peoples they chose to migrate into. This would never happen anywhere else except in the western world, where the planned usurpation and ultimate genocide of the traditional norms and people is in full effect. No where else on earth can anyone migrate into nations and decide to belittle and mock the laws, traditions, and language of the country, while calling the people that make up the majority who founded these countries “oppressors” and “racists”. Why don’t you read some of the other saner and stricter immigration laws of everywhere else in the world including Mexico, and see if any Americans you know could live there and set up a white supremacy group called “the Race”?.
It is interesting that in America we allow migrants to enter our country (both legal and illegal) only to flout our laws, disrespect our culture, and shun our very reasonable expectations such as learning the native language. Only in the Occidental world would one find this kind of thing happening on a regular epidemic basis. No where else in the world would tolerate this total lack of regard and respect for the native populace. I dare any American to cross into any Latin American country, attend their public schools (paid for by tax payers)and start a whites only group called, “the race”. For the infraction of crossing into their country to reside illegally you would face minimum jail time and deportation. Yet in the Occidental world we are expected to allow everyone but our own people into our countries, then pay for the pleasure of living here while they call us racists and oppressors.
Arizona, the new idiot state!
Your missing the one key point that they were actually here first and now have to be immigrants bacxk where they came from, so their histiry is part of ours too but it is being denied to them in school. Also the program in az has a 97% graduate rate whitch is much higher than the rest of the state, so it is helping young people go to college and get jobs and avoid jail, or maybe thats what the az leaders dont want?
Why do you keep zipping legitimate thought provoking comments? No other contributor on this site does. One more time… Would it be okay if white Americans decided to go to Mexico attend their tax payer funded schools and start a group that specializes in denigrating and mocking the Mexican people? A group known as “the Race”? Would it be okay in Mexico if millions of white Americans streamed across the border to collect whatever benefits are available in that country? Why is it only the Occidental World that is expected to dismantle itself through “diversity sensitivity” and other nonsense, giving preference to foreigners who have no desire to assimilate or carry on the traditions of the country(s)or even speak the native language? Why would you dare advocate the destruction of your country and your people?
dddd
I’ve heard no one denigrate this country or criticize the country they’ve moved to. That is the same kind of deluded thinking that has pitted “us against them” since the world began. Until white Eurocentric Americans can finally acknowledge history – everyone’s history – there will always be problems in this country. Most white Americans have absolutely no knowledge at all about the culture of the non-white people in this country. They always assume the way they think is the way the country thinks. Non-whites know more about white people than you know about us. Know why? Everything in this country is geared towards your culture, your prejudices, your outlook on what’s good and bad. You can’t escape knowing about white people (except for the whites who aren’t in the English/Irish/whatever group). You should be trying to learn as much as possible about all cultures, about both sexes, about all the ages and how they exist, think, react and go about their lives. That knowledge is what’s going to save this country.
B.A. Gilmore, you seem to wish that only “white folk types” study the history of everyone else, yes? That would be study the history of every other culture on the planet, right?
I mean, I’ve heard or read that there is not a culture or race of folks that can’t be found somewhere in the United States of America.
So you want “white folk types” to study the history of everyone else.
But how about we take this idea one step further, if you don’t mind.
I wonder how many folks from the Latin American nations are knowledgeable in the history of China? Or Japan? Or India?
Let’s reverse that — how many folks from India are knowledgeable about the folks from Peru? From Bolivia?
What your post strikes me as, B.A. Gilmore, is not someone who is trying to be open-minded and helpful. Nope, your post reads as if you have some racist views yourself. Racist views against white folks. You do realize that racism works both ways, right? White folks holding racist views of non-white folks. Non-white folks holding racist views of white folks. Nobody is immune and you certainly read like your anti-racism inoculation needs updating!
I would also like to point out to you that if you had any experience actually living in other nations on this planet you would very soon learn that the United States of America is a heck of a lot more accomodating towards its immigrant population than a heck of a lot of other nations on this planet. Let’s just take China for example, as it is the rising star of nations right now. How far do you think you could get in that country trying to enroll your children in a public school in that nation if the children don’t first prove they have a really could command of the local Chinese dialect? Heh, let’s ask the same question of Japan? Korea?
Nope, B.A. Gilmore, you write of “knowledge” but I’m afraid yours needs a bit of updating along with that anti-racism booster shot you need to take.