Thursday,
March 17, 2016
"To
support the famine relief effort, British tax policy required landlords to pay
the local taxes of their poorest tenant farmers, leading many landlords to
forcibly evict struggling farmers and destroy their cottages in order to save
money. (Sketch: The Irish Famine: Interior of a Peasants
Hut)
“Wear
green on St. Patrick’s Day or get pinched.” That pretty much sums up the
Irish-American “curriculum” that I learned when I was in school. Yes, I recall a
nod to the so-called Potato Famine, but it was mentioned only in
passing.
Sadly,
today’s high school textbooks continue to largely ignore the famine, despite the
fact that it was responsible for unimaginable suffering and the deaths of more
than a million Irish peasants, and that it triggered the greatest wave of Irish
immigration in U.S. history. Nor do textbooks make any attempt to help students
link famines past and present.
Yet
there is no shortage of material that can bring these dramatic events to life in
the classroom. In my own high school social studies classes, I begin with Sinead
O’Connor’s haunting rendition of “Skibbereen,” which includes the
verse:
…
Oh it’s well I do remember, that bleak
December day,
The landlord and the sheriff came, to drive
Us all away
They set my roof on fire, with their cursed
English spleen
And that’s another reason why I left old
Skibbereen.
December day,
The landlord and the sheriff came, to drive
Us all away
They set my roof on fire, with their cursed
English spleen
And that’s another reason why I left old
Skibbereen.
By
contrast, Holt McDougal’s U.S. history textbook The Americans, devotes a
flat two sentences to “The Great Potato Famine.” Prentice Hall’s America:
Pathways to the Present fails to offer a single quote from the time. The
text calls the famine a “horrible disaster,” as if it were a natural calamity
like an earthquake. And in an awful single paragraph, Houghton Mifflin’s The
Enduring Vision: A History of the American People blames the “ravages of
famine” simply on “a blight,” and the only contemporaneous quote comes,
inappropriately, from a landlord, who describes the surviving tenants as
“famished and ghastly skeletons.” Uniformly, social studies textbooks fail to
allow the Irish to speak for themselves, to narrate their own
horror.
These
timid slivers of knowledge not only deprive students of rich lessons in
Irish-American history, they exemplify much of what is wrong with today’s
curricular reliance on corporate-produced textbooks.
First,
does anyone really think that students will remember anything from the books’
dull and lifeless paragraphs? Today’s textbooks contain no stories of actual
people. We meet no one, learn nothing of anyone’s life, encounter no injustice,
no resistance. This is a curriculum bound for boredom. As someone who spent
almost 30 years teaching high school social studies, I can testify that students
will be unlikely to seek to learn more about events so emptied of drama,
emotion, and humanity.
Nor
do these texts raise any critical questions for students to consider. For
example, it’s important for students to learn that the crop failure in Ireland
affected only the potato—during the worst famine years, other food production
was robust. Michael Pollan notes in The Botany of Desire, “Ireland’s was
surely the biggest experiment in monoculture ever attempted and surely the most
convincing proof of its folly.” But if only this one variety of potato, the
Lumper, failed, and other crops thrived, why did people
starve?
Thomas
Gallagher points out in Paddy’s Lament, that during the first winter of
famine, 1846-47, as perhaps 400,000 Irish peasants starved, landlords exported
17 million pounds sterling worth of grain, cattle, pigs, flour, eggs, and
poultry—food that could have prevented those deaths. Throughout the famine, as
Gallagher notes, there was an abundance of food produced in Ireland, yet the
landlords exported it to markets abroad.
The
school curriculum could and should ask students to reflect on the contradiction
of starvation amidst plenty, on the ethics of food exports amidst famine. And it
should ask why these patterns persist into our own time.
More
than a century and a half after the “Great Famine,” we live with similar,
perhaps even more glaring contradictions. Raj Patel opens his book, Stuffed
and Starved: Markets, Power and the Hidden Battle for the World’s Food
System: “Today, when we produce more food than ever before, more than one in
ten people on Earth are hungry. The hunger of 800 million happens at the same
time as another historical first: that they are outnumbered by the one billion
people on this planet who are overweight.”
Patel’s
book sets out to account for “the rot at the core of the modern food system.”
This is a curricular journey that our students should also be on — reflecting on
patterns of poverty, power, and inequality that stretch from 19th century
Ireland to 21st century Africa, India, Appalachia, and Oakland; that explore
what happens when food and land are regarded purely as commodities in a global
system of profit.
But
today’s corporate textbook-producers are no more interested in feeding student
curiosity about this inequality than were British landlords interested in
feeding Irish peasants. Take Pearson, the global publishing giant. At its
website, the corporation announces (redundantly) that “we measure our progress
against three key measures: earnings, cash and return on invested capital.” The
Pearson empire had 2011 worldwide sales of more than $9 billion—that’s nine
thousand million dollars, as I might tell my students. Multinationals like
Pearson have no interest in promoting critical thinking about an economic system
whose profit-first premises they embrace with gusto.
As
mentioned, there is no absence of teaching materials on the Irish famine that
can touch head and heart. In a role play, “Hunger on Trial,” that I wrote and
taught to my own students in Portland, Oregon—included at the Zinn Education
Project website— students investigate who or what was responsible for the
famine. The British landlords, who demanded rent from the starving poor and
exported other food crops? The British government, which allowed these food
exports and offered scant aid to Irish peasants? The Anglican Church, which
failed to denounce selfish landlords or to act on behalf of the poor? A system
of distribution, which sacrificed Irish peasants to the logic of colonialism and
the capitalist market?
These
are rich and troubling ethical questions. They are exactly the kind of issues
that fire students to life and allow them to see that history is not simply a
chronology of dead facts stretching through time.
So
go ahead: Have a Guinness, wear a bit of green, and put on the Chieftains. But
let’s honor the Irish with our curiosity. Let’s make sure that our schools show
some respect, by studying the social forces that starved and uprooted over a
million Irish—and that are starving and uprooting people
today."
©
2015 Zinn Education Project
Donations can be sent to
the Baltimore Nonviolence Center, 325 E. 25th St., Baltimore, MD 21218. Ph:
410-323-1607; Email: mobuszewski [at] verizon.net. Go to http://baltimorenonviolencecenter.blogspot.com/
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