Posted on 12/20/2008 5:52:49 PM PST by Davy Buck
I see that the Curator of African-American & Community History for the North Carolina Museum of History, Mr. Earl Ijames, is back in the news. Mr. Ijames was recently the keynote speaker at a new Confederate monument dedication in North Carolina.
A news story quotes Mr. Ijames as saying:
"We need to present a more balanced history," he said, adding that the black Confederate soldier has been lost to history. "They never got recognized, but we are starting to change that," Ijames said.
For too long history has been chained to propaganda. The real story needs to be told even if it contradicts the PC views of the present era. One story is the support given to the Confederacy by the Native Americans. I hope a monument to black heroes who fought for the south will be placed in every Confederate State. The stars and bars is their flag too. Had the south won—slavery would have died in just a few years.
I understood as much. It just struck me as a coincidence that would give the PC Cult the vapors.
There was a “Different World” episode, a black comedy, that introduced me to this concept. The flighty upper class black woman had her genealogy traced because it was a fad, and found out that her black ancestors owned black slaves. She called up a modern day descendant, said it was from geneology, then when asked how they were related, she said, “My family ... uh, um, owned your family, and that might be how we’re related.”
he sure is a class act isn’t he?
great public speaker too!
He makes history come alive and really gets the blood flowing
Company C and D of the first California Volunteer Cavalry was all Latinos. The first bilingual unit in the US Army. It had the lowest desertion rate in the Civil War. They mostly fought Pro-Confederate Indians in the west suffering more arrow wounds than bullets.
He was here in Abbeville a couple of weeks ago for the "Old Abbeville Christmas" celebration. My parents brought my young niece down to see all of the town folks walking around the square in period clothing (hoop dresses for the ladies, and old fashioned suits with top hats or Confederate uniforms for the men.
The parade featured, guess who? That's right... H.K.! After the parade, he took an immediate liking to my family, and particularly my niece, Jennifer. He seemed intent upon teaching her the importance of her Southern Heritage, and spent a lot of time talking directly to her about the garbage she has been taught in school.
At one point, while standing on the square after the parade he held up a flag that had the Christian Cross of St. Andrew on half of it, and a picture of Obama with the word "Hope" on the other half. It was hilarious. H.K. has NO use for the "President Elect". In fact, he says that HIS last President was Jeff Davis.
Later in the afternoon, H.K. gave a great speech on the steps of the Burt-Stark House (where President Davis stayed once after leaving Richmond). In his speech, he stressed that the most discriminated against group of people in modern America are the white, Southern, Christian men. At one point, he called Jennifer up on the steps with him, stood with his arm around her and told his audience that it is our duty to see that "my babies, my precious Southern babies are taught the TRUTH!"
Something about the sight of this black gentleman wearing a battered Confederate Corporal's uniform, holding the Battle Flag in one hand and with the other around a young white child while claiming a common heritage with her... well, it was pretty special. I'll never forget it.
I'm really glad that I got the opportunity to meet and spend a little time with this fine gentleman. But more importantly, I'm thrilled that my young niece received THIS lesson in diversity that she will NEVER get in school. (She attends a private school, but even THEY cannot compete with H.K. when it comes to teaching history. LOL)
God Bless You And Keep You, H.K., wherever you are today. You are a CLASS ACT.
I wish all historians were passionate for the truth, whatever it is.
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