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<text id=91TT1493>
<title>
July 08, 1991: The Cult of Ethnicity, Good and Bad
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
July 08, 1991 Who Are We?
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NATION, Page 21
COVER STORIES
The Cult of Ethnicity, Good and Bad
</hdr><body>
<p>A historian argues that multiculturalism threatens the ideal that
binds America
</p>
<p>By Arthur Schlesinger Jr.
</p>
<p>[Professor Schlesinger is the author of 14 books, including
The Age of Jackson and The Disuniting of America.]
</p>
<p> The history of the world has been in great part the
history of the mixing of peoples. Modern communication and
transport accelerate mass migrations from one continent to
another. Ethnic and racial diversity is more than ever a salient
fact of the age.
</p>
<p> But what happens when people of different origins,
speaking different languages and professing different religions,
inhabit the same locality and live under the same political
sovereignty? Ethnic and racial conflict--far more than
ideological conflict--is the explosive problem of our times.
</p>
<p> On every side today ethnicity is breaking up nations. The
Soviet Union, India, Yugoslavia, Ethiopia, are all in crisis.
Ethnic tensions disturb and divide Sri Lanka, Burma, Indonesia,
Iraq, Cyprus, Nigeria, Angola, Lebanon, Guyana, Trinidad--you
name it. Even nations as stable and civilized as Britain and
France, Belgium and Spain, face growing ethnic troubles. Is
there any large multiethnic state that can be made to work?
</p>
<p> The answer to that question has been, until recently, the
United States. "No other nation," Margaret Thatcher has said,
"has so successfully combined people of different races and
nations within a single culture." How have Americans succeeded
in pulling off this almost unprecedented trick?
</p>
<p> We have always been a multiethnic country. Hector St. John
de Crevecoeur, who came from France in the 18th century,
marveled at the astonishing diversity of the settlers--"a
mixture of English, Scotch, Irish, French, Dutch, Germans and
Swedes...this promiscuous breed." He propounded a famous
question: "What then is the American, this new man?" And he gave
a famous answer: "Here individuals of all nations are melted
into a new race of men." E pluribus unum.
</p>
<p> The U.S. escaped the divisiveness of a multiethnic society
by a brilliant solution: the creation of a brand-new national
identity. The point of America was not to preserve old cultures
but to forge a new, American culture. "By an intermixture with
our people," President George Washington told Vice President
John Adams, immigrants will "get assimilated to our customs,
measures and laws: in a word, soon become one people." This was
the ideal that a century later Israel Zangwill crystallized in
the title of his popular 1908 play The Melting Pot. And no
institution was more potent in molding Crevecoeur's "promiscuous
breed" into Washington's "one people" than the American public
school.
</p>
<p> The new American nationality was inescapably English in
language, ideas and institutions. The pot did not melt
everybody, not even all the white immigrants; deeply bred racism
put black Americans, yellow Americans, red Americans and brown
Americans well outside the pale. Still, the infusion of other
stocks, even of nonwhite stocks, and the experience of the New
World reconfigured the British legacy and made the U.S., as we
all know, a very different country from Britain.
</p>
<p> In the 20th century, new immigration laws altered the
composition of the American people, and a cult of ethnicity
erupted both among non-Anglo whites and among nonwhite
minorities. This had many healthy consequences. The American
culture at last began to give shamefully overdue recognition to
the achievements of groups subordinated and spurned during the
high noon of Anglo dominance, and it began to acknowledge the
great swirling world beyond Europe. Americans acquired a more
complex and invigorating sense of their world--and of
themselves.
</p>
<p> But, pressed too far, the cult of ethnicity has unhealthy
consequences. It gives rise, for example, to the conception of
the U.S. as a nation composed not of individuals making their
own choices but of inviolable ethnic and racial groups. It
rejects the historic American goals of assimilation and
integration. And, in an excess of zeal, well-intentioned people
seek to transform our system of education from a means of
creating "one people" into a means of promoting, celebrating and
perpetuating separate ethnic origins and identities. The balance
is shifting from unum to pluribus.
</p>
<p> That is the issue that lies behind the hullabaloo over
"multiculturalism" and "political correctness," the attack on
the "Eurocentric" curriculum and the rise of the notion that
history and literature should be taught not as disciplines but
as therapies whose function is to raise minority self-esteem.
Group separatism crystallizes the differences, magnifies
tensions, intensifies hostilities. Europe--the unique source
of the liberating ideas of democracy, civil liberties and human
rights--is portrayed as the root of all evil, and non-European
cultures, their own many crimes deleted, are presented as the
means of redemption.
</p>
<p> I don't want to sound apocalyptic about these
developments. Education is always in ferment, and a good thing
too. The situation in our universities, I am confident, will
soon right itself. But the impact of separatist pressures on our
public schools is more troubling. If a Kleagle of the Ku Klux
Klan wanted to use the schools to disable and handicap black
Americans, he could hardly come up with anything more effective
than the "Afrocentric" curriculum. And if separatist tendencies
go unchecked, the result can only be the fragmentation,
resegregation and tribalization of American life.
</p>
<p> I remain optimistic. My impression is that the historic
forces driving toward "one people" have not lost their power.
The eruption of ethnicity is, I believe, a rather superficial
enthusiasm stirred by romantic ideologues on the one hand and
by unscrupulous con men on the other: self-appointed spokesmen
whose claim to represent their minority groups is carelessly
accepted by the media. Most American-born members of minority
groups, white or nonwhite, see themselves primarily as Americans
rather than primarily as members of one or another ethnic group.
A notable indicator today is the rate of intermarriage across
ethnic lines, across religious lines, even (increasingly) across
racial lines. "We Americans," said Theodore Roosevelt, "are
children of the crucible."
</p>
<p> The growing diversity of the American population makes the
quest for unifying ideals and a common culture all the more
urgent. In a world savagely rent by ethnic and racial
antagonisms, the U.S. must continue as an example of how a
highly differentiated society holds itself together.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>