African Americans: A Part of America’s History

August 8, 2013
Written by Frazier Moore in
All About Family
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Henry Louis Gates
Renowned African-American studies professor Henry Louis Gates is working to educate more people about the role of African-Americans in American history. To accomplish this, he is producing a miniseries on PBS called The African Americans: Many Rivers to Cross. Photo credit: Harvard University

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) - With tragedies like Trayvon Martin's death still occurring, more people are calling for open conversations about race in this country. Henry Louis Gates, however, believes that the best way to facilitate a conversation that will lead to structural change is through education.

That's what he's hoping will happen with "The African Americans: Many Rivers to Cross," a six-hour PBS documentary series that traces 500 years of black history.

"To tell the whole sweep of African-American history – no one's tried to do that. That was what we were crazy enough to do," Gates said in an interview on Wednesday.

He hopes the series will find its way into the nation's schools as well as its living rooms, and acquaint audiences of all ages – both black and white – with black history, about which he says both races are equally ignorant.

"How can I help with the conversation about race? Schools are tools for the formation of citizenship. My target is the school curriculum: getting an integrated story told," he said.

An author, Harvard scholar, social critic and filmmaker, Gates has produced such past documentary series as "Wonders of the African World" and "Finding Your Roots."

In this latest project, he reaches back to the beginning – which turns out to be about a century earlier than many accounts of black history in the New World.

Ponce de Leon

"The very first African to come to North America was a free man accompanying Ponce de Leon who arrived in Florida in 1513, more than a century before the first 20 Africans arrived in Jamestown in 1620," Gates said. "Nobody was talking about those first 107 years of African-American history."

Gates has also tried to get the inside story that he says has commonly eluded historians.

"I've always been struck by the quality of conversations in a black beauty parlor or a black barber shop, as opposed to what black officials say or what black teachers write in a textbook," Gates said, "because we edit ourselves.

"I wanted to get the subjects in the film to speak to me as we would speak to each other behind closed doors."

Gates said that between 1501 and 1866, 388,000 slaves were brought from Africa to the United States, with 42 million of their descendants alive today.

"We want to tell about the world they created, how they survived, and how they eventually thrived," he said. "This isn't the history of George Washington, it's the history of his slave, Harry Washington. This isn't the story of 'American Bandstand,' it's the story of 'Soul Train.'"

"The African Americans: Many Rivers to Cross" premieres October 22.

Online: PBS


Copyright 2013 The Associated Press.

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