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  • Other Viewpoints: Leave Textbooks To The Historians

    OTHER VIEWPOINTS: LEAVE TEXTBOOKS TO THE HISTORIANS

    Columbus Dispatch
    Feb 5 2014

    In California, the Armenian lobby is celebrating passage of a
    resolution in the state's House instructing the education department
    to emphasize the Armenian genocide in its publications. "We did it!"

    the Armenian National Committee of America, Western Region, alerted
    its followers in an e-mail.

    "Just a few hours ago, despite heavy attacks from the Turkish lobby,
    we won a battle for truth and justice that will be passed down to
    future generations."

    The letter then goes on to solicit donations so "we can continue to
    build on today's victory."

    In Virginia, as The Post's Laura Vozzella reported, legislators
    are working on a resolution instructing the education department
    to buy textbooks that challenge the name of the Sea of Japan, which
    many Koreans believe should be called the East Sea. Newly installed
    Democratic Gov. Terry McAuliffe, finds himself in a pickle.

    On the campaign trail he promised to support such a change, but he
    has now discovered that Japan -- whose companies are big investors
    in the commonwealth -- is pretty unhappy about the idea.

    All of this prompts the following suggestion: Maybe state legislatures
    aren't the best place to write high-school history textbooks.

    We understand that public education systems ultimately need to be
    responsive to the taxpayers who pay for them, and the legislators in
    Richmond (and Sacramento) are representing those taxpayers. But the
    history they teach should be based on the best judgment of historians,
    not on such considerations as, to quote Sen. J. Chapman "Chap"
    Petersen, D-Fairfax, the fact that "in Virginia, there are a lot of
    Koreans. There are very few Japanese." Or that Armenian-Americans
    outnumber Turkish-Americans in California.

    We're not doubting the importance of teaching about the Armenian
    genocide that began in 1915.

    We also think Americans can benefit from learning about the history
    of Japanese imperialism in Asia. We'd be fine if the General Assembly
    instructed the education department to embrace such controversial
    subjects and to write curricula that encourage exploration and debate
    on historical issues that continue to reverberate in modern times.

    We doubt, though, that elected officials should be drawing textbook
    maps or writing lesson plans -- whether they are about evolution,
    climate change, Armenia or that body of water between Japan and Korea.

    -- The Washington Post

    http://www.dispatch.com/content/stories/editorials/2014/02/05/leave-textbooks-to-the-historians.html

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