GET INVOLVED FOR YOUR CHILDREN AND GRAND CHILDREN'S SAKE
Performing a Historectomy on America
David C. Stolinsky
Monday, Jan. 14, 2002
First, let me make
clear that I am not referring to a hysterectomy, or removal of the uterus, but a
historectomy, or removal of our history.
Next, let me explain
why this is especially critical for America. To do so, let me contrast America
with France. The area we now call France was settled by Celtic peoples called
Gauls in prehistoric times, hundreds or perhaps thousands of years B.C. The
Romans under Caesar invaded and spread Roman customs and law and the Latin
language, on which French is based. The last major addition was the invasion of
the Franks, a Germanic tribe that settled northwestern France and gave the
nation its name. This occurred roughly 1,500 years ago. That is, for a
millennium and a half, approximately the same people have occupied roughly the
same area. When we talk about France and the French, we know very well what and
whom we mean. Despite all the wars and other changes of the last 1,500 years,
France remains France. But what of America?
Europeans settled a
small strip of the Atlantic coast in the late 1500s and early 1600s. A large
chunk of the central continent was added with the Louisiana Purchase in 1803,
and the Southwest was added in 1848 after the Mexican War. These huge areas were
peopled by successive waves of immigrants from many lands, who largely displaced
the Native Americans.
When we talk about
America and Americans, we must specify what time we refer to, and which segment
of the population we mean. Unlike older nations, America is a relatively recent
invention. Its population shifted over time, and is still shifting because of
continued immigration. Unlike France and many other nations, America is an idea.
To define America, one
cannot merely refer to an ancient land with a predominantly stable population.
No, to define America one must refer to the ideas and ideals on which it is
based. But are we trying to preserve these ideas and hand them down to the next
generation? Or are we doing our best to eradicate these ideas from our
collective memory? Are we attempting to induce national amnesia? Are we, in
fact, performing a historectomy? That is, are we removing the basis of our
nation?
When I went to grammar
school a half-century ago, we saluted the flag every morning. We were taught
patriotic songs for national holidays. And we enjoyed Christmas and Easter
vacations, not winter and spring breaks. After all, the vast majority of
Americans, and all of the founders, identified themselves as Christians. In
junior high, I was required to memorize the Gettysburg Address, the Preamble to
the Constitution, and the first and fourth verses of "The Star-Spangled Banner."
If you want to learn how a house is constructed, first study the foundation.
In high school, I was
required to take American History and Civics, not merely "social studies." We
learned about the great people and great events of our history, and (to a much
lesser degree) some of the unhappy events. We learned how a bill becomes law,
and what powers the president and the Supreme Court have.
But more than that, I
loved movies. I saw "The Story of Alexander Graham Bell," inventor of the
telephone. I saw "Sergeant York," the true story of how a pacifist farmer was
convinced that violent evildoers had to be opposed by force, then went on to win
the Medal of Honor. I saw "They Died With Their Boots On," a highly
fictionalized account of General Custer, but at least I learned that he played a
key role in the Civil War, which is more than today's kids know.
Later I saw "Boys'
Town," the story of Father Flanagan's orphanage. And of course there was "The
Fighting Sixty-Ninth," depicting Father Duffy's role in this New York unit's
World War I exploits. So when I passed his statue in Times Square, I may have
been the only one on the tour bus who knew who he was - not bad for a Jewish kid
who grew up in San Francisco.
But, you see, I was
brought up to be an American.
Then there were the
John Ford films of the West, where the U.S. Army was depicted in a sympathetic
(some might say overly sympathetic) light. I saw depictions of Abe Lincoln and
Woodrow Wilson. I was being entertained at the movies, but I was also being
exposed to my country's past.
Contrast my upbringing
with what today's kids are exposed to:
Ø Today's kids read
history books and hear lectures that describe America's past as questionable at
best, and evil or downright genocidal at worst.
Ø Today's kids mumble
a few of the words to the first verse of the National Anthem at sports events.
Forget about the fourth verse, the one that mentions (gasp!) God.
Ø Today's kids are
taught that the founders were deists, not really Christians - that is, if
religion is allowed to be mentioned at all.
Ø Today's kids are
lucky to place the Revolution or the Civil War in the right century, much less
the right decade.
Ø Today's kids
identify Grant as the man on the $50 bill, not the man who led the Union to
victory and thereby ended slavery.
Ø Today's kids will
not find Admiral Ernest King, our chief of naval operations in World War II, in
the Encyclopedia Britannica. They will find jazz guitarist B. B. King. One
doesn't need an encyclopedia for living musicians; one needs it to learn about
heroes of the past who bequeathed us our freedom. But Admiral King has been
excised, along with uncounted other significant figures of our past.
Ø Today's kids see
movies depicting our leaders as scheming warmongers or even assassins (remember
Oliver Stone's "JFK"?) and our military as sadistic morons and oppressors.
Ø Today's kids see
clergy depicted as idiots or molesters, if they see them at all, and religion
shown as an oppressive and destructive force, if it is referred to in any way.
Ø Today's kids, and
even law students, are taught that the Constitution is a "living document." (Do
you give it mouth-to-page respiration if it stops breathing?) That is, it has no
fixed meaning, and means whatever a judge says it means today. In effect, kids
are taught that we have no Constitution.
In short, the last
generation of Americans has been taught little of the foundations of their
country. And what they were taught was often negative. What they saw in movies
only served to strengthen this negative impression.
No wonder they view
America with ambivalence at best, and with open hostility at worst. Is John
Walker an aberration, or just the tip of the iceberg? Only time will tell.
If you want to destroy a house, undermine the foundation. If you want to destroy a nation, do the same. If you want to debase people who are defined by ideas, destroy the ideas. If you want to bring down a society that is sustained by its history, perform a historectomy. But be aware that this can be a dangerous operation from which the patient may not recover.