Behind Florida’s slavery curriculum, a bigger question

Florida’s new public school curriculum now mandates instruction on “how slaves developed skills which, in some instances, could be applied for their personal benefit.” The phrase has now pinged across the political landscape, putting Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on the defensive. 

But the controversy in some ways misses the point. Whatever the intent of the Florida curriculum, anti-Black and pro-slavery views have been hiding in plain sight for generations. In the Augusta, Georgia, metro area, commuters drive on the John C. Calhoun Parkway, commemorating a former vice president who once said, “I hold [slavery] to be a good.” Across the Savannah River in Calhoun Park is a monument to a white supremacist killed during a massacre of Black militia members in 1876. 

In political compromises down the generations is the wiggle room that allows for injustice – for a land established in the name of independence and good conscience to undermine its own ideals. Whenever our rebuke of racism is mild, disparities find space to endure.

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Florida’s slavery curriculum has caused controversy for appearing to suggest slavery had benefits. But pro-slavery ideas continue to hide in plain sight, and will continue until the commitment to a common humanity is stronger.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is not backing down. His state’s new public school curriculum on slavery does the seemingly unthinkable, suggesting that slavery held benefits for Black people. One unit mandates instruction on “how slaves developed skills which, in some instances, could be applied for their personal benefit.”  

There’s debate about what this does or doesn’t mean. One analysis in The Bulwark suggests that, in its full context, the unit is about showing how enslaved people showed agency even amid the horrors of slavery.

But Mr. DeSantis’ defense of the curriculum has placed him at odds with members of his own party, including presidential primary opponents and Black Republicans. He commended the curriculum for presumably showing “that some of the folks … eventually parlayed, you know, being a blacksmith into doing things later in life.”

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Florida’s slavery curriculum has caused controversy for appearing to suggest slavery had benefits. But pro-slavery ideas continue to hide in plain sight, and will continue until the commitment to a common humanity is stronger.

Such words, however hurtful and ahistorical, are not unprecedented. They remind me of the words of former Vice President John C. Calhoun. In 1837, he argued that slavery was a “positive good”:

Be it good or bad, [slavery] has grown up with our society and institutions, and is so interwoven with them that to destroy it would be to destroy us as a people. But let me not be understood as admitting, even by implication, that the existing relations between the two races in the slaveholding States is an evil: – far otherwise; I hold it to be a good, as it has thus far proved itself to be to both, and will continue to prove so if not disturbed by the fell spirit of abolition. I appeal to facts. Never before has the black race of Central Africa, from the dawn of history to the present day, attained a condition so civilized and so improved, not only physically, but morally and intellectually.

Neither Florida’s curriculum nor Mr. DeSantis’ comments go nearly that far. Yet for generations, Calhoun’s pro-slavery and anti-Black views have been hidden in plain sight. In North Augusta, South Carolina, there is an obelisk that honors the only white man killed when white supremacists massacred members of a local Black militia in an effort to overthrow civil rights in 1876. It reads: “In life he exemplified the highest ideal of Anglo-Saxon civilization. By his death he assured to the children of his beloved land the supremacy of that ideal.”