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Erasing History: When the Past Disappears and Memory Becomes Survival 

February 25, 2026

Historian and genealogist Dr. Carolyn Carter reflects on how historical silence and erasure have obscured the stories of enslaved and free Black Americans, whose lives were documented merely as property or omitted entirely from official records. She argues that recent restrictions on teaching histories of enslavement and racial violence amount to deliberate erasure rather than avoiding division, as these histories represent actual genealogy and lived experiences for Black families. Carter emphasizes that Black communities have preserved their own memories through alternative archives like family Bibles and oral traditions when excluded from official documentation.

Who is affected

  • Enslaved ancestors and their descendants whose lives were recorded only as property or erased from records
  • Black families and communities whose histories are dismissed or undercounted in official archives
  • Free Black families who were mischaracterized or omitted from documentation
  • Students who receive incomplete historical education when struggle is removed from curriculum
  • Black communities whose neighborhoods were destroyed by highway construction
  • Indigenous peoples subject to forced removal

What action is being taken

  • Books are being challenged
  • Lessons are being restricted
  • Public markers are being removed
  • The word "divisive" is being attached to histories of enslavement, racial violence, Indigenous removal, and structural inequality

Why it matters

  • These histories are not abstract political debates but represent actual genealogy, family memory, economic reality, health disparities, land loss, and deferred opportunities for Black families. Erasing history eliminates accountability for past harms rather than eliminating the harms themselves. When struggle is removed from education, students learn outcomes without understanding causes, making enslavement appear as merely a chapter rather than an economic engine and making democracy seem permanent rather than fragile. Memory represents dignity, resistance, and survival for communities that have been systematically excluded from official archives.

What's next

  • No explicit next steps stated in the article

Read full article from source: Michigan Chronicle

Erasing History: When the Past Disappears and Memory Becomes Survival