Monday, December 15, 2025
35.0°F

Diverse ethnic groups can still all get along

LEONARD BRANT/Guest opinion | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 9 years, 11 months AGO
by LEONARD BRANT/Guest opinion
| January 13, 2016 8:00 PM

Providence has brought varied ethnic groups together to form America as it is today. There has always been change and resistance to change. In the process, we have let history stand as written; that is, until recently. The city council of New Orleans just voted to remove the statues of General Robert E. Lee from all of their public buildings.

Lee was one of the more organized, dedicated generals in the history of the United States. He was the son of Henry Lee, who distinguished himself in the Revolutionary War as a brilliant commander of one of George Washington’s cavalry units that cleared the way for Washington to enter New York. Young Lee had a profound respect for George Washington and the war that lifted America from the grip of English rule. Both the Union and Confederacy recruited him to serve their cause. He was torn emotionally as to which side he should serve as a leader. After a long deliberation, he determined he could not fight against his Virginia countrymen.

His private life was equally stellar. Long before the Civil War, he freed the few slaves he inherited. He was not for the secession of Virginia. He believed that slavery was not good for the slaves or their owners. We should all have his characteristics.

Slavery was one issue of the Civil War but not the catalyst for unrest. The New England area had far more representatives in Congress than the South, and southerners believed that their needs for roads and infrastructure were not being addressed. Additionally, shipments of European merchandise were directed to ports in New York where agents added their fees before reloading and forwarding shipments to Charleston and other southern ports. Most southern cotton was marketed by New York brokers, who established the market value.

Slavery, in the Western Hemisphere, began in the late 1500s by Spaniards supplying the need for workers in their Cuban and Caribbean sugar fields. The European traffickers found a ready supply in Africa, where unemployment was extremely high. Afrikaners preyed on their own people, tricking many into believing they were to be employed abroad. From the 1500s to 1868, 12 million slaves were rounded up and purchased by the traffickers. Two million died in the holds of the ships during transit. About 60,000 of the survivors were sold in United States markets.

Colonial laws allowed the slaves to marry, raise children, seek relief from cruel owners and, in infrequent instances, buy their own freedom. Slaves were housed, clothed, and fed, or assigned plots to grow their produce. Whole families worked long hot hours in the cotton fields. Many women served as maids, servants and overseers of owner’s children. Even so, many slaves were better off than some of the poor white neighbors.

Slavery was a terrible practice and thankfully is behind us. The black community should also put it behind them and realize that in most instances, their slave ancestors were far better off than the Afrikaners left behind. That may sound insensitive, but the fact remains that many other minorities have managed to do so, e.g., native American Indians. Let’s all live together in harmony.

Leonard Brant is a Post Falls resident.

ARTICLES BY LEONARD BRANT/GUEST OPINION

January 13, 2016 8 p.m.

Diverse ethnic groups can still all get along

Providence has brought varied ethnic groups together to form America as it is today. There has always been change and resistance to change. In the process, we have let history stand as written; that is, until recently. The city council of New Orleans just voted to remove the statues of General Robert E. Lee from all of their public buildings.

June 3, 2015 9 p.m.

With ISIS threat looming, we must stand against evil

It is always refreshing and uplifting to watch the National Memorial Day program on television each year. Patriotism and the spirit of God are at their best. It does, however, point to America's need to conduct a reality check on modern warfare. We are facing entirely different aggressors than we confronted during World War I and II. During those wars, the rules of warfare, outlined during the Geneva Convention of 1864, served as a guide for treatment of prisoners. Today we are facing a faction of radical Islam that wants to impose its belief and laws on middle eastern countries as well as western democracies. There is an urgent need for the President and Congress to set aside political differences and outline a bipartisan plan for addressing the following questions:

November 26, 2015 8 p.m.

What environmentalists miss in forest health debate

The recent “My Turn,” authored by Janet Torline and captioned “Forests threatened by federal proposal,” would have been more accurately captioned “Forests threatened by Kootenai Environmental Alliance.” I lost most of my respect for their organization when they began appealing all thinning and burn recovery projects. Many of their members seem to be paranoid. Our forestlands have far too many trees per acre to remain healthy. The climate is warming, bark beetle populations have skyrocketed and root-rot is a major problem in some areas.