The battle over school textbook content continued this week in Brookline, Massachusetts. A fifth-grade history book which allegedly downplays the horrors of slavery in America, has been removed from local schools there following widespread criticism.
The 2003 edition of “Harcourt Horizons: United States History” contains this line: “Slaves were treated well or cruelly, depending on their owners. Some planters took pride in being fair and kind to their slaves.”
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“What bothers me about this book is the way we’re teaching about racism,” lawyer and activist Brooke Ames said at a Nov. 13 meeting over the book, according to The Boston Globe. “Slavery was a racist system. It was a cruel system. It was an evil system. And when you start talking about good slave owners and bad slave owners and happy slaves and slaves that weren’t so happy you’re completely missing the point. And the fact that this textbook was in our schools for 10 years is a system failure.”
Superintendent Bill Lupini confirmed that the textbooks were being pulled from all the area’s public schools just days after the meeting. “Materials are still being provided to teachers from other parts of the book, for now,” Lupini said.
Jennifer Berlin, a spokeswoman for Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, the textbook’s publisher, has defended their product, pointing out that the 2003 edition was out of date. “We appreciate the concerns expressed by parents about the language in the edition of ‘US History’ used by the Brookline public schools. That language was changed in later editions to reflect more strongly the overall suffering slaves experienced,” Berlin told the Globe.









