I'm surprised. You put together a pretty well-structured post after a thread title that I was almost sure would end up just being the "I'm not racist but..." precursor to a decidedly racist post.Amos the famous said:I've never really enjoyed Black History Month. Being half african and raised by my single parent black mother, I was always encouraged to get involved with the culture. But for some reason every Black History Month a good majority of africans I know will use the sentence:
"I/We (or any other group terms) went through the slave trade."
It just really infuriates me how a 15 year old boy thinks that just because he great great grandfather went though frankly barbaric events he also went through them too.
It also annoys me that their aren't any history lessons based around any other cultures apart from black history month. (that i know of.) Yes, all cultures get celebrated in one way or another but most are done collectively. An entire month is given to Black people.
Although I do see that they deserve this month, don't you think it would be a good idea to let other cultures who have gone through slavery or even been wiped out completely have their few minutes of fame a year?
Yes it was racist, Yes it was terrible, Yes this is probably whites making up for what they did.
But just think... Samurais had their way of life destroyed after guns were legalized in Japan. Now they live on in the occasional crappy film. I think they deserve at least their own day if not a month or Norse Pagans... they got their religion condemned by Christianity and are no longer classed as a religion in the UK or Europe excluding their countries of origin (norway, denmark)
I know haters will hate but please do. I want to see your point of view.
To answer your question, I think it's because slavery was really the big black mark on American history (and world history, too, but mostly America for the purposes of black history month). The samurai are all but extinct, yes, but we don't hold a day in honor of traditional knights because their livelihoods were destroyed by William the Black (creator of the longbow, if memory serves), and the Norse have that whole 'looting and pillaging' culture rather entwined with the religion, so it's tough to cut them slack for it (even if it was a totally awesome religion).
Other groups were heavily discriminated against, yes, but for blacks, it was on another level entirely. We had actual laws that classified slaves as less than human. We had 'No Irish Need Apply,' certainly, but that was just racism on an individual level, and it's safe to say that the Irish have done pretty well for themselves since then.
So yeah. It's white guilt, but to a fair degree, it's justified. However, the guilt is over how blacks were treated. It's not a gift certificate for special treatment to anyone with the right skin color in contemporary society.