FL Black Churches Counter Restrictions with Black History Lessons - podcast episode cover

FL Black Churches Counter Restrictions with Black History Lessons

Feb 25, 202420 minSeason 23Ep. 704
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Episode description

After a spate of education bans, Florida churches are taking Black history into their own hands

NBC News, By Char Adams, on February 8, 2024

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/nbcblk/florida-churches-teaching-black-history-rcna135724

The Non-Prophets, Episode 23.07.4 featuring Helen Greene, Eli, The Cross Examiner and Kelley Laughlin


Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-non-prophets--3254964/support.

Transcript

Step into the heart of Florida, where communities are coming together not just to defy state imposed educational constraints, but to honor and elevate Black history. From the vibrant streets of Miami to the cultural hubs of Orlando, a groundswell of grassroots activism is reshaping the narrative of education. In the face of legislative hurdles and political maneuvers, Floridians are forging new paths to ensure that the rich tapestry

of Black heritage is not just preserved, but celebrate. Join us as we explore how these diverse communities are turning adversity into opportunity, rewriting the script of education in the Sunshine State. This is a little bit of a nice twist on our last segment from this week, Helen, have anything good to say the time, I'm sorry Cross, We'll start with you. Actually, I'm

sorry. Okay, Yeah, So this story is about how because the Florida has a bunch of bands on teaching black history and all sorts of you know, controversial issues like facts that Florida churches are picking up the slack on teaching black history. Right. So, when I first read this, all I could think of was I am so tired, I am so exhausted, I'm so sick, and I don't know how, but I am still so surprised

by Florida. Forgive me, Helen, of course you live there. I feel embarrassed, quite frankly, prior to Obama being elect for me, do you feel embarrassed for me? For our country? Because prior to Obama being elected, I was so naive. I, like a lot of my friends, felt we were making good progress towards trying to become a post racial society.

And then Obama happened, and then the backlash that is MAGA and the Trump administration happened, and then we get things like DeSantis in Florida, and all this gave Tacit permission to all of the Nazis who had been hiding as our neighbors around the country to start speaking their mind. And developments like this

story are the end result. The Nazis, where they have a majority, have driven our friends and neighbors, whether they be black, or Asian, or gay or trans are different in any way, They've driven them underground. Right, this is like the old underground railroad that ran through churches. They've driven them out of the public square that is public schools, and forced them

to resort to community institutions like churches. So they're getting their basic education on their own history, not from their community, their tax dollars, their schools, but from their churches. We should be ashamed as a nation. This should not be a one off story. This should be a national disgrace, and I do feel like it will be a disgrace generations. Hence people will look back and think, how did they not learn from World War Two?

At least the citizens who supported Hitler were kept ignorant by the fact that there was no Internet. They relied on a national press to feed them the images and the stories that the government wanted. But the Maga crowd had access to every single piece of human knowledge right in their pockets on their phones, and they woke up and chose racism instead of facts. And I think that's what

my grandchildren going to think. They're going to look back at this time and not understand, because I don't even understand it now and I'm living through it. Out of all the stories we covered, this is the one that makes me the saddest. In some respects. It means that at least for now, the Nazis are winning. I don't know, Kelly, is there a way for us to beat the Nazis? I hope it's not by taking it

to the churches, to be honest. That was the first thing that that I thought of when I read this story was this is a freaking problem. We are leaving what should be a secular education. We're pushing it out of the schools, like you said, and literally forcing it to be taught in

religious settings from a religious point of view. And this is happening because these pseudo religious Christian nationalists have been passing laws in Florida that are driving away any point of view, but they're own and just just like you said, it's like it's almost like we were reading each other's notes for this episode Crossing, and I thought it was pretty interesting that both sides of this debate are sheltered again, both sides of the debate are sheltering under a religious umbrella, just

like one of our earlier the first story we did this week. And with all my heart, I want to say good things about these churches. I am so happy that at least somebody stepped up to fill this gap. But at the very least they're teaching something that the laws of Florida, that the Laws of Florida have the schools afraid to teach because of the wording. The wording of the laws again are overly broad. They're confusing. But I just

have trepidations that a secular topic is being taught by a church. And can you imagine if this happened to other topics at school? Did I don't want to go to Sunday School get drust on otherwise God won't be able to teach

you how to find a common denominator. So, like, I did find one particular thing about this particular article, like very touching that the presenter, Levon Bracy, had gone to Africa and collected soil and brought it back to people that were attending her talk and was giving members of the congregation that came to listen to her talk files of soil from you know, from Africa,

which I thought was beautiful. But it is a church, and I hate to say it, and yeah, like I have problems with this because, as you were saying, like, this is this is just education, This is just giving people information about their history, their heritage, which should be taught in a secular organization like a school, weird, but I live in

the stay with meat. While Ron I really love that name name. I'm sorry, like I really do, and he just basically like, well, I like racism and being a bigot is really working for me, So I'm

just going to lean in. And it just gets very frustrating because I because like this is such like reading this article, I had so many mixed feelings because there's this wonderful story about an activist you know, that was passionate about you know, where her people came from, wanting to present that give people that education. But it's still done in a church. And and that's the thing that's so frustrating because even as a white person like I would love to

like hear someone's experience. I love learning about something that about people that are not me, you know, are outside of myself. And that's that's how you break down. Stop people from being bigoti, stop people from being assholes, is to hear other people's experiences, their journeys, to connect with them as human beings. And because Ron is like pushing everybody you know into the churches, those conversations can't are not happening as much you know, and it's

not just you know, it's not just happening here. This is happening in podcast throughout the country of people being forced back into their churches to even get a basic education of their own culture. And it's just I have a lot of mixed feelings like great, okay, like this is a really beautiful story but also kind of shitty. So it's Florida secass Week. Everybody this week and they're non profits. Everybody yay for me? Well I limited it to

one week. Yeah, yeah, there's going to be more Florida sex stories because that's what we do on the show. It would go ahead, you like, I'm basically we're all on the same page. It seems like I couldn't have said what I'm going to say better than any of you said it.

But I the idea of churches being involved in education was that was like my first sort of like oh, hold on, and then you start realizing, okay, no, like the state of Florida is actually making it really difficult for schools to do this appropriately properly, and not just the state of but like I like your nickname there, this meatball ron bandis is really making it difficult for people to do things the way that they ought to done.

I clicked on a couple of the other articles linked in this article, and it talked about how like he's already like he has already made it clear that he's not on board with teaching anything except basically white heteronormativity in Florida schools.

He even went so far as to push new teaching standards. I think they said this was from twenty twenty two new teaching standards that suggested that enslaved Africans benefited from the America like the slave trade in the United States, And that is the thing that he suggested, or that the teaching standards that he wanted to implement, And I just can't help but think what an absolute piece of trash. And I going beyond that, I did start to think, like,

okay, we know how like faith based charity works. Right, where people receiving this charity, receiving this service from the church, they are more often than not required to hear a religious message or be proselytized too in order to receive that service. And I would hate to know that that is also

true for these black history lessons. So I did actually find the faith in Florida toolkit that was linked in the article, and I went to look at it and I didn't see anything there was, like, other than the name of the organization Faith in Florida, there is no proselytizing, there's no scripture, there's no you know, I was really concerned that these messages they were going to teach were going to be more focused on the religious journey of these

you know, particular individuals, these significant individuals in American history, more focused on their religious journey than their actual signific can contributions to society and the world. And it just doesn't seem to be the case. So that for me, I felt like a little bit of a silver lining, But it is,

I I gotta agree with a cross examinar. It just really when you start to think like, oh, okay, now we have to like hide in the churches, so to speak to to learn not just it's it's not only back history, it's American history as well, And that just doesn't sit right. That feels little just kind of Jim Crowry, Yeah, Jim Crowe, Yeah, I agree. I you know, being a student of history to some degree, I know that this pendulum will swing swing at some point

in our country it will inevitably swing to an enlightened country. It just takes time. But it's time that I may not see to live or I don't know about my kids, Probably they'll see it. So while I do have hope, I'm just sad that I won't have that. I have to walk the earth when the Nazis feel comfortable in their racism and entitle in their bigotry. Really is what I'm I'm and I did have that side point that everybody

else had. I didn't. I didn't get to it first, But I do want to follow up where everybody was sort of like being taught in a church. I had the same exact reaction as everybody. It's I get it. I understand that churches are community centers in much of our country. While I don't really want to harp on that aspect, I do feel compelled to

mention you know things like you guys do. It worries me that if not in this particular case, ELI did the research to say what's being taught here, then in the next case right that where where we have to revert because our schools are not meeting our community's needs, because our politicians are not legislating for their entire constituency, only the people who agree with them. The people who are in the minority, are left to go to their churches for these

solutions because that's the only community that they have left. I worry that it might the history might be taught through a mystical lens. I worry that God might get mentioned and mixed up along with the facts, so the kids can't distinguish between the God and the facts. And I worry that the church will potentially whitewash the role of Christianity in slavery. Right right, christ watch very

good. Now. I'm a middle aged white atheist cis male, so I get nervous opining on, hey, how should black people to learn their own history? But I will quote Chris Rock who said, quote a black Christian is a black person with no fucking memory. And I think that that's one of the deepest things that he has said that can really do a lot to help that community or any other community that was sort of subjugated by Christianity.

Why is Christianity so popular around the world. As the Catholics usually like to quote, it was done by the edge of a sword, just like slavery. So in the end, I want to say I'm sad. I want to say I'm glad that they're doing it, but yeah, it's it's going to take time to to defeat the forces. Yeah it is. I agree, it's complicated, and that's the thing that's so frustrating about this. Yeah, I agree. That was what I feared the most too, was history

being taught through a mystical lens. You know. I could see something like, you know, God enlightened George Washington Carver to go to the peanut that the Lord had provided to him. You know, yeah, I could see something like that being taught, and that's bullshit. I mean, we're taking something that's historical and potentially turning it into religion, and that that's definitely a problem I think. Yeah, I was turning around and looking for my textbook.

I have one I was going to pull off my shelf from a Christian school. It was a science textbook for elementary kids. And the very first chapter is the Moon and the first thing. The first sentence in this science book is God gave us the moon and blah blah blah blah blah blah. You know, that's what I'm worried about Oh yes, right, exactly right. Personally, I think we should pass a lot to make every Floridian plant two trees a year to make up for all the oxygen in that that status

as a resident of Floridian. I do apologize for all the air all the options sucking that has happened. Helen. I guess I kind of understand. I'm getting old too, And I know you and Todd arm You want to stay in the largest retirement home in the United States, want to move out money everywhere. You should think about moving away though, and joining us, Like listen, if if, if, if, if anyone wants to give

me all the atheist money to move out of Florida, I'll go. But there's something I do want to point out about we did, like the last last time was on the show, we did a we did it on atheist

churches and that they're sprouting up throughout the country. And I would love like if we're okay, like okay, but like we're going to take you back to the churches, okay, whatever, Like if we're going to do these educational sort of talking points, can we do it in like the secular part of like you know, churches that are propping up, like, let's not do it in like a Christian church, Let's do it with like there's someone

that's actual historian that knows facts like presentation. I would love that. Do you think Floridians would have a problem with Black History Month being taught at the Satanic Church? I think they just don't like us, like and there's it's just going on with the TST right now. So that's that. That could be another conversation on the nonprofits. But but it would be a problem because we're not we're considered we're still considered less than because we don't believe in the

true God. You know, we are atheists and we're and we're you know, liberal and you know, and we're trying to brainwash everybody. That's the goal at this whole show. Everybody's to brainwash you and to be a free singer. So silly. Really, the problem is that we have one extreme side of our political spectrum that that's creating a government that's not serving the benefits of all of the country or in this case, the state's citizens strictly because

of extreme political or religious, or or even historical reasons. Then when it's doing that that government isn't serving the people, it's only serving some of the people. And I really find it entirely ironic that the very people who are pushing this kind of thing are also the same people screaming about upholding the constitution. Yeah, constitution though. That's why I'm always like, have you read have you read that document? Have you? Cause the way you're talking about

it tells me you haven't read this. I I like most of it. I'm going to say that I do. I mean, we had problems, problems with some of its outdated, but for the most part, I think it was a pretty good, pretty good thing. I think it should be a little bit easier to change it. But other than that, Okay, I've been feeling around that for Eli because we're very viny people like I want I want to get more of Eli's thoughts because we are we're very like talking

talkie. Yeah. Well, no, I just I thought that my closing thought was just that I there's no reason Florida residences shouldn't be allowed to learn blackest and we've covered that earlier this week as well. My aversion to church based education aside, I'm actually on board with with this particular instance, and I think Cross was right to specify this time. It seems like it's being done appropriately, at least based on the toolkit online. Who knows what's going

on in the actual buildings. If it was just the church's volunteering their buildings to be used to conduct seminars or presentations, that's one thing entirely. Like I said, there's no reason Florida residents shouldn't be allowed to learn about black history. And if Meat Baldasantis is going to do his level best to prevent that, then I'm glad someone is picking up the baverbial torch. And I'm glad to see religious institutions actually fighting a good fight for once across you see

that. I agree with you. I do agree, I just want I did find my my let's say, Science for Christian Schools textbook that I bought on eBay and was written by the Bob Jones University if you're familiar with them. Very first page is history of the Moon, and it starts any God and God made two great lights, the greater light to rule to day and the lesser light to rule the night. He made the stars. Also Genesis

one sixteen. That's the start of a Christian science class book, and it goes on to say science can be defined as information gained using our senses. Faith means holding beliefs without seeing, hearing, tasting, blah blah, blah blah. When the moon came into being, were there any people there to get the facts through their senses? And then it goes on to talk about

science is faith. It's the classic Young Earth creationist bullshit that says you weren't there to see evolution, You weren't there to see the moon how it was created, which is important to them because when you date the moon and how it's been receding from the Earth, you come up with a universe or an earth it's four billion years and they don't like that. So right off the bat, this quote unquote science book is teaching the religious kids that science is

faith. They're sort of dragging science down to their level to say, oh, well, if it's all faith, then you should go with us. And that's my concern when you say the community has to turn to churches, then even if it's in small ways, it could be it could be history history, history, history, and oh, by the way, don't let gays get married, or history history, history, abortion should be illegal, like all of these things that get sort of plugged into class, which a

trained public school teacher knows to avoid. Right. That's the other question is at the churches, what sort of training they have on educating kids and handling disruptive kids and all that sort of stuff. So that's my rant Kelly foul thoughts opinions. I think I've pretty much said everything I have to say. Again, I really think we got to be careful about I think it's really

great somebody's stepping up to teach this. I just think we have to be careful about who we're letting teach it and make sure that they're teaching it in the correct way and not with religious overtones. That's but we live. But we live in a country where they're allowed to do this, and that's the opposite of what the conservatives want, right. They want this to be the rule and nobody else can do it, where we're like, well, I hope they're not, but they're allowed to because it's their life.

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