β
History shows that it does not matter who is in power or what revolutionary forces take over the government, those who have not learned to do for themselves and have to depend solely on others never obtain any more rights or privileges in the end than they had in the beginning.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
If you can control a man's thinking you do not have to worry about his action. When you determine what a man shall think you do not have to concern yourself about what he will do. If you make a man feel that he is inferior, you do not have to compel him to accept an inferior status, for he will seek it himself. If you make a man think that he is justly an outcast, you do not have to order him to the back door. He will go without being told; and if there is no back door, his very nature will demand one.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
No man knows what he can do until he tries.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
As another has well said, to handicap a student by teaching him that his black face is a curse and that his struggle to change his condition is hopeless is the worst sort of lynching.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro (African American))
β
The oppressor has always indoctrinated the weak with his interpretation of the crimes of the strong.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
Philosophers have long conceded, however, that every man has two educators: 'that which is given to him, and the other that which he gives himself. Of the two kinds the latter is by far the more desirable. Indeed all that is most worthy in man he must work out and conquer for himself. It is that which constitutes our real and best nourishment. What we are merely taught seldom nourishes the mind like that which we teach ourselves.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
When you control a man's thinking you do not have to worry about his actions. You do not have to tell him not to stand here or go yonder. He will find his 'proper place' and will stay in it. You do not need to send him to the back door. He will go without being told. In fact, if there is no back door, he will cut one for his special benefit. His education makes it necessary.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
It may be well to repeat here the saying that old men talk of what they have done, young men of what they are doing, and fools of what they expect to do. The Negro race has a rather large share of the last mentioned class.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
When you control a manβs thinking you do not have to worry about his actions. You do not have to tell him not to stand here or go yonder. He will find his βproper placeβ and will stay in it.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
The bondage of the Negro brought captive from Africa is one of the greatest dramas in history, and the writer who merely sees in that ordeal something to approve or condemn fails to understand the evolution of the human race.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
Real education means to inspire people to live more abundantly, to learn to begin with life as they find it and make it better,
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
If you teach the Negro that he has accomplished as much good as any other race he will aspire to equality and justice without regard to race. Such an effort would upset the program of the oppressor in Africa and America. Play up before the Negro, then, his crimes and shortcomings. Let him learn to admire the Hebrew, the Greek, the Latin and the Teuton. Lead the Negro to detest the man of African blood--to hate himself.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
Some of the American whites, moreover, are just as far behind in this respect as are the Negroes who have had less opportunity to learn better.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
THE "educated Negroes" have the attitude of contempt toward their own people because in their own as well as in their mixed schools Negroes are taught to admire the Hebrew, the Greek, the Latin and the Teuton and to despise the African. Of the hundreds of Negro high schools recently examined by an expert in the United States Bureau of Education only eighteen offer a course taking up the history of the Negro,
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
In the schools of business administration Negroes are trained exclusively in the psychology and economics of Wall Street and are, therefore, made to despise the opportunities to run ice wagons, push banana carts, and sell peanuts among their own people. Foreigners, who have not studied economics but have studied Negroes, take up this business and grow rich.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
They are anxious to have everything the white man has even if it is harmful.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
Cooperation implies equality of the participants in the particular task at hand.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
When a white man sees persons of his own race tending downward to a level of disgrace he does not rest until he works out some plan to lift such unfortunates to higher ground; but the Negro forgets the delinquents of his race and goes his way to feather his own nest, as he has done in leaving the masses in the popular churches.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
It has been said that the Negroes do not connect morals with religion. The historian would like to know what race or nation does such a thing. Certainly the whites with whom the Negroes have come into contact have not done so.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
the so-called radical Negroes who have read and misunderstood Karl Marx and his disciples and would solve the political as well as the economic problems of the race by an immediate application of these principles. History shows that although large numbers of people have actually tried to realize such pleasant dreams, they have in the final analysis come back to a social program based on competition.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
By their peculiar βreasoning,β too, theologians have sanctioned most of the ills of the ages. They justified the Inquisition, serfdom, and slavery. Theologians of our time defend segregation and the annihilation of one race by the other. They have drifted away from righteousness into an effort to make wrong seem to be right.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
The education of the Negroes, then, the most important thing in the uplift of the Negroes, is almost entirely in the hands of those who have enslaved them and now segregate them.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
No people can go forward when the majority of those who should know better have chosen to go backward, but this is exactly what most of our misleaders do.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
The differentness of races, moreover, is no evidence of superiority or of inferiority. This merely indicates that each race has certain gifts which the others do not possess. It is by the development of these gifts that every race must justify its right to exist.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
I wept for my children and all black children who have been denied a knowledge of their heritage; I wept for all white children, who, through daily miseducation, are taught that the Negro is an irrelevant entity in American society; I wept for all the white parents and teachers who are forced to overlook the fact that the wealth of cultural and technological progress in America is a result of the commonwealth of inpouring contributions.
β
β
Martin Luther King Jr. (Where Do We Go from Here: Chaos or Community? (King Legacy Book 2))
β
The same educational process which inspires and stimulates the oppressor with the thought that he is everything and has accomplished everything worth while, depresses
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
Why not exploit, enslave, or exterminate a class that everybody is taught to regard as inferior?
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
The mere imparting of information is not education. Above all things, the effort must result in making a man think and do for himself just as the Jews have done in spite of universal persecution.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
Negro church is such a free field and it is controlled largely by the Negroes themselves, it seems that practically all the incompetents and undesirables who have been barred from other walks of life by race prejudice and economic difficulties have rushed into the ministry for the exploitation of the people.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
black face is a curse and that his struggle to change his condition is hopeless is the worst sort of lynching. It kills oneβs aspirations and dooms him to vagabondage and crime.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
The Mis-Education of the Negro, in which Carter G. Woodson explains that in the American education system, the entirety of Black peopleβs existence βis studied only as a problem or dismissed as of little consequence.
β
β
Michael Harriot (Black AF History: The Un-Whitewashed Story of America)
β
The problem of holding the Negro down, therefore, is easily solved. When you control a man's thinking you do not have to worry about his actions. You do not have to tell him not to stand here or go yonder. He will find his "proper place" and will stay in it. You do not need to send him to the back door. He will go without being told. In fact, if there is no back door, he will cut one for his special benefit. His education makes it necessary.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
HISTORY shows, then, that as a result of these unusual forces in the education of the Negro he easily learns to follow the line of least resistance rather than battle against odds for what real history has shown to be the right course.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
Of the hundreds of Negro high schools recently examined by an expert in the United States Bureau of Education only eighteen offer a course taking up the history of the Negro, and in most of the Negro colleges and universities where the Negro is thought of, the race is studied only as a problem or dismissed as of little consequence. For example, an officer of a Negro university, thinking that an additional course on the Negro should be given there, called upon a Negro Doctor of Philosophy of the faculty to offer such work. He promptly informed the officer that he knew nothing about the Negro. He did not go to school to waste his time that way. He went to be educated in a system which dismisses the Negro as a nonentity.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
From literature the African was excluded altogether. He was not supposed to have expressed any thought worth knowing. The philosophy in the African proverbs and in the rich folklore of that continent was ignored to give preference to that developed on the distant shores of the Mediterranean.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
This was especially true of the law schools, closed during the wave of legislation against the Negro, at the very time the largest possible number of Negroes needed to know the law for the protection of their civil and political rights. In other words, the thing which the patient needed most to pass the crisis was taken from him that he might more easily die.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
Our most widely known scholars have been trained in universities outside of the South. Northern and Western institutions, however, have had no time to deal with matters which concern the Negro especially. They must direct their attention to the problems of the majority of their constituents, and too often they have stimulated their prejudices by referring to the Negro as unworthy of consideration.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
The problem of holding the Negro down, therefore, is easily solved. When you control a manβs thinking you do not have to worry about his actions. You do not have to tell him not to stand here or go yonder. He will find his βproper placeβ and will stay in it. You do not need to send him to the back door. He will go without being told. In fact, if there is no back door, he will cut one for his special benefit. His education makes it necessary.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
If you can control a manβs thinking you do not have to worry about his action. βWhen you determine what a man shall think you do not have to concern yourself about what he will do. If you make a man feel that he is inferior, you do not have to compel him to accept an inferior status, for he will seek it himself. If you make a man think that he is justly an outcast, you do not have to order him to the back door. He will go without being told; and if there is no back door, his very nature will demand one.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
to handicap a student by teaching him that his black face is a curse and that his struggle to change his condition is hopeless is the worst sort of lynching.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
This crusade is much more important than the anti-lynching movement, because there would be no lynching if it did not start in the schoolroom. Why not exploit, enslave, or exterminate a class that everybody is taught to regard as inferior?
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
While serving his country he must serve within a special group. While being a good American, he must above all things be a βgood Negroβ; and to perform this definite function he must learn to stay in a βNegroβs place.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
Facing this undesirable result, the highly educated Negro often grows sour. He becomes too pessimistic to be a constructive force and usually develops into a chronic fault-finder or a complainant at the bar of public opinion. Often when he sees that the fault lies at the door of the white oppressor whom he is afraid to attack, he turns upon the pioneering Negro who is at work doing the best he can to extricate himself from an uncomfortable predicament.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
These βhighly educatedβ Negroes, however, fail to see that it is not the Negro who takes this position. The white man forces him to it, and to extricate himself therefrom the Negro leader must so deal with the situation as to develop in the segregated group the power with which they can elevate themselves. The differentness of races, moreover, is no evidence of superiority or of inferiority. This merely indicates that each race has certain gifts which the others do not possess. It is by the development of these gifts that every race must justify its right to exist.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
How we have arrived at the present state of affairs can be understood only by studying the forces effective in the development of Negro education since it was systematically undertaken immediately after Emancipation. To point out merely the defects as they appear today will be of little benefit to the present and future generations. These things must be viewed in their historic setting. The conditions of today have been determined by what has taken place in the past, and in a careful study of this history we may see more clearly the great theatre of events in which the Negro has played a part. We may understand better what his rΓ΄le has been and how well he has functioned in it.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
may be well to repeat here the saying that old men talk of what they have done, young men of what they are doing, and fools of what they expect to do. The Negro race has a rather large share of the last mentioned class.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
Thus the thoughtless drift backward toward slavery.
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
The so-called education of Negro college graduates leads them to throw away opportunities which they have and to go in quest of those which they do not find.
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
The Negro church, however, although not a shadow of what it ought to be, is the great asset of the race.
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
Furthermore, if, after three generations the Negro colleges have not produced men qualified to administer their affairs, such an admission is an eloquent argument that they have failed ingloriously and should be immediately closed.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
It was well understood that if by the teaching of history the white man could be further assured of his superiority and the Negro could be made to feel that he had always been a failure and that the subjection of his will to some other race is necessary the freedman, then, would still be a slave. If you can control a manβs thinking you do not have to worry about his action. βWhen you determine what a man shall think you do not have to concern yourself about what he will do. If you make a man feel that he is inferior, you do not have to compel him to accept an inferior status, for he will seek it himself.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro: The Original 1933 Unabridged And Complete Edition (Carter G. Woodson Classics))
β
While being a good American, he must above all things be a "good Negro"; and to perform this definite function he must learn to stay in a "Negro's place.
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
We do not show the Negro how to overcome segregation, but we teach him how to accept it as final and just.
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro: The Original 1933 Unabridged And Complete Edition (Carter G. Woodson Classics))
β
exploitation of the Negro through economic restriction and segregation the present system is sound and will doubtless continue until this gives place to the saner policy of actual interracial cooperation--not the present farce of racial manipulation in which the Negro is a figurehead.
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
The only question which concerns us here is whether these "educated" persons are actually equipped to face the ordeal before them or unconsciously contribute to their own undoing by perpetuating the regime of the oppressor.
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
It is a common on occurrence to see a Negro well situated as a minister or teacher aspiring to a political appointment which temporarily pays little more than what he is receiving and offers no distinction except that of being earmarked as a Jim Crow job set aside for some Negro who has served well the purposes of the bosses as a wardheeler in a campaign.
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
and crushes at the same time the spark of genius in the Negro by making him feel that his race does not amount to much and never will measure up to the standards of other peoples. The Negro thus educated is a hopeless liability of the race.
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
It is strange, then, that the friends of truth and the promoters of freedom have not risen up against the present propaganda in the schools and crushed it.
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
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Pecuniary embarrassment, he thought, was the cause of all evil to the blacks, "for poverty kept them ignorant and their lack of enlightenment kept them degraded.
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Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
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From the teaching of science the Negro was likewise eliminated. The beginnings of science in various parts of the Orient were mentioned, but the Africansβ early advancement in this field was omitted.
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Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
It is an injustice to the Negro, however, to mis-educate him and suffer his manners to be corrupted from infancy unto old age and then blame him for making the mistakes which such guidance necessitates.
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
Practically all of the successful Negroes in this country are of the uneducated type or of that of Negroes who have had no formal education at all. The large majority of the Negroes who have put on the finishing touches of our best colleges are all but worthless in the development of their people.
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
You would never thereby learn that Africans first domesticated the sheep, goat, and cow, developed the idea of trial by jury, produced the first stringed instruments, and gave the world its greatest boon in the discovery of iron. You would never know that prior to the Mohammedan invasion about 1000 A.D. these natives in the heart of Africa had developed powerful kingdoms which were later organized as the Songhay Empire on the order of that of the Romans and boasting of similar grandeur.
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
At a Negro summer school two years ago, a white instructor gave a course on the Negro, using for his text a work which teaches that whites are superior to the blacks. When asked by one of the students why he used such a textbook the instructor replied that he wanted them to get that point of view. Even schools for Negroes, then, are places where they must be convinced of their inferiority. The thought of the inferiority of the Negro is drilled into him in almost every class he enters and in almost every book he studies. If he happens to leave school after he masters the fundamentals, before he finishes high school or reaches college, he will naturally escape some of this bias and may recover in time to be of service
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
Practically all of the successful Negroes in this country are of the uneducated type or of that of Negroes who have had no formal education at all. The large majority of the Negroes who have put on the finishing touches of our best colleges are all but worthless in the development of their people. If after leaving school they have the opportunity to give out to Negroes what traducers of the race would like to have it learn such persons may thereby earn a living at teaching or preaching what they have been taught but they never become a constructive force in the development of the race. The so-called school, then, becomes a questionable factor in the life of this despised people. As another has well said, to handicap a student by teaching him that his black face is a curse and that his struggle to change his condition is hopeless is the worst sort of lynching. It kills one's aspirations and dooms him to
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
They do not like to hear such expressions as "Negro literature," "Negro poetry," "African art," or "thinking black"; and, roughly speaking, we must concede that such things do not exist. These things did not figure in the courses which they pursued in school, and why should they? "Aren't we all Americans? Then, whatever is American is as much the heritage of the Negro as of any other group in
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
Some one recently inquired as to why the religious schools do not teach the people how to tolerate differences of opinion and to cooperate for the common good. This, however, is the thing which these institutions have refused to do.
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Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
The idea of educating the Negroes after the Civil War was largely a prompting of philanthropy. Their white neighbors failed to assume this responsibility. These black people had been liberated as a result of a sectional conflict out of which their former owners had emerged as victims. From this class, then, the freedmen could not expect much sympathy or cooperation in the effort to prepare themselves to figure as citizens of a modern republic.
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
The education of any people should begin with the people themselves, but Negroes thus trained have been dreaming about the ancients of Europe and about those who have tried to imitate them.
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Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
Too many Negroes go into medicine and dentistry merely for selfish purposes, hoping thereby to increase their income and spend it in joyous living. They have the ambition to own fine automobiles, to dress handsomely, and to figure conspicuously in society. The practice of these professions among poor Negroes yields these results.
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
We say, hold on to the real facts of history as they are, but complete such knowledge by studying also the history of races and nations which have been purposely ignored.
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
The impatient, "highly educated" Negroes, therefore, say that since under the present system of capitalism the Negro has no chance to toil upward in the economic sphere, the only hope for bettering his condition in this respect is through socialism, the overthrow of the present economic rΓ©gime, and the inauguration of popular control of resources and agencies which are now being operated for personal gain. This thought is gaining ground among Negroes in this country, and it is rapidly sweeping them into the ranks of what are commonly known as "Communists.
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
Tarikh Es-Soudan.
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
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One of the strong arguments for slavery was that it brought the Negro into the light of salvation. And yet the Negro today is all but lost.
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
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When you control a manβs thinking you do not have to worry about his actions.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
Negro teacher instructing Negro children is in many respects a white teacher thus engaged, for the program in each case is about the same.
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
The present system under the control of the whites trains the Negro to be white and at the same time convinces him of the impropriety or the impossibility of his becoming white.
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
Cooperation implies equality of the participants in the particular task at hand. On the contrary, however, the usual way now is for the whites to work out their plans behind closed doors, have them approved by a few Negroes serving nominally on a board, and then employ a white or mixed staff to carry out their program.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
Of the hundreds of Negro high schools recently examined by an expert in the United States Bureau of Education only eighteen offer a course taking up the history of the Negro, and in most of the Negro colleges and universities where the Negro is thought of, the race is studied only as a problem or dismissed as of little consequence.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
Practically all of the successful Negroes in this country are of the uneducated type or of that of Negroes who have had no formal education at all.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
Often the Negro business man lacks common sense. The Negro in business, for example, too easily becomes a social βlion.β He sometimes plunges into the leadership in local matters. He becomes popular in restricted circles, and men of less magnetism grow jealous of his inroads. He learns how richer men of other races waste money. He builds a finer home than anybody else in the community, and in his social program he does not provide for much contact with the very people upon whom he must depend for patronage. He has the finest car, the most expensive dress, the best summer home, and so far outdistances his competitors in society that they often set to work in child-like fashion to bring him down to their level.
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
When you control a manβs thinking you do not have to worry about his actions. You do not have to tell him not to stand here or go yonder. He will find his βproper placeβ and will stay in it. You do not need to send him to the back door. He will go without being told. In fact, if there is no back door, he will cut one for his special benefit. His education makes it necessary.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
No thought was given to the history of Africa except so far as it had been a field of exploitation for the Caucasian. You might study the history as it was offered in our system from the elementary school throughout the university, and you would never hear Africa mentioned except in the negative.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
Behind closed doors these βfriendsβ say you need to be careful in advancing Negroes to commanding positions unless it can be determined beforehand that they will do what they are told to do. You can never tell when some Negroes will break out and embarrass their βfriends.β After being advanced to positions of influence some of them have been known to run amuck and advocate social equality or demand for their race the privileges of democracy
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
At that time men went off to school to prepare themselves for the uplift of a downtrodden people. In our time too many Negroes go to school to memorize certain facts to pass examinations for jobs. After they obtain these positions they pay little attention to humanity. This attitude of the βeducated Negroβ toward the masses results partly from the general trend of all persons toward selfishness,
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
Negro educators of today may have more sympathy and interest in the race than the whites now exploiting Negro institutions as educators, but the former have no more vision than their competitors.
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
When you hear a man talking, then, always inquire as to what he is doing or what he has done for humanity. Oratory and resolutions do not avail much. If they did, the Negro race would be in a paradise on earth.
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
Highly educatedβ Negroes denounce persons who advocate for the Negro a sort of education different in some respects from that now given the white man.
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
If the βeducated Negroβ could go off and be white he might be happy, but only a mulatto now and then can do this. The large majority of this class, then, must go through life denouncing white people because they are trying to run away from the blacks and decrying the blacks because they are not white.
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
ANOTHER factor the Negro needs is a new figure in politics, one who will not concern himself so much with what others can do for him as with what he can do for himself. He will know sufficient about the system
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
The lack of confidence of the Negro in himself and in his possibilities is what has kept him down. His mis-education has been a perfect success in this respect.
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
It may be well to repeat here the saying that old men talk of what they have done, young men of what they are doing,
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β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)
β
It was well understood that
if by the teaching of history the white man could be further assured of his superiority and the Negro could be made to feel
that he had always been a failure and that the subjection of his will to some other race is necessary the freedman, then, would still be a slave.
β
β
Carter G. Woodson (The Mis-Education of the Negro)