An iconic bronze statue of聽Booker T.聽Washington has adorned the main entrance of Tuskegee University since 1922. Known as Lifting the Veil of聽Ignorance, it captures the black civil rights leader proudly unveiling a newly freed, education-driven man.
Ralph Ellison later critiqued the fictional veil lifter in聽his award-winning novel, Invisible Man. Ellison鈥檚 nameless protagonist gazes, 鈥渦nable to聽decide whether the veil is聽being lifted or聽lowered more firmly into place鈥. He聽wonders whether he聽is 鈥渨itnessing a聽revelation or a聽more efficient blinding鈥.
For nearly 250 years, a veil has fluttered over American democracy鈥檚 full actualisation. Only occasionally throughout US聽history has the veil been lifted like a knee removed from the neck of progress.
So how do we definitively unveil the fully democratised America Langston Hughes imagined as 鈥溾, and Martin Luther King envisioned as 鈥溾? Can we finally actualise the world that they, and so many other historically black college and university [HBCU] graduates, compassionately envisioned?
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While the task will undoubtedly require the cooperation of multiple stakeholders, American higher education must play a pivotal role.
Think about it.
Have you ever wondered why America鈥檚 civil rights movement took so long to emerge? Why wasn鈥檛 it led by Ivy League students and alumni, as encouraged by their faculty and presidents? After all, for its first two-plus centuries, the primary harvest of US higher education was a 鈥渓earned鈥 ministry and a 鈥淐hristian鈥 mindset.
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Yet instead of the refined moral consciences of these pastoral presidents compelling them to end human enslavement, the earliest leaders and influencers of Ivy League institutions also . And Princeton University once held a on campus.
The record is clear. Rather than advance democracy, most of America鈥檚 campus leaders have resembled bystanders, largely reticent about the world鈥檚 injustices. Few of them have chosen to disturb the 鈥減eace鈥 without first considering how their declarations might also disturb the wealthy. A contrasting shortlist of distinctive 鈥渦pstander鈥 college presidents includes Alexander Meiklejohn, Mary McLeod Bethune, Father Theodore Hesburgh and Benjamin Elijah Mays.
But what characterises an upstander presidency today? Campus leaders must make at least two basic shifts to bolster their effectiveness as agents of positive change.
First, today鈥檚 college presidents should shift from a 鈥渃ontractor mindset鈥 to that of an architect. The higher education historian Laurence Veysey examined undergraduate and graduate formation patterns and confidently affirmed the durability of the structures and innovations in place by 1910. In his view, that era鈥檚 architectural designs were so unassailable that all future campus leaders needed to function as mere 鈥渃ontractors鈥, presiding in thematically similar ways.
Veysey鈥檚 conclusion, made in 1965, was prescient. Since then, most presidencies have sadly attracted 鈥渃ontractor-types鈥, capable of managing the largely routinised toil. Most presidents feel pressured to keep their institution alive, never mind positioning the campus to truly thrive. And in our increasingly vocation-driven ecosystem, they are forced to privilege skill set development over mindset enrichment or civic engagement. Leaders today are left with little bandwidth for considering the most significant challenges facing the larger society.
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Thus, presidential expectations and outcomes have steadily accrued a dull uniformity. And, despite their best intentions, as their daily grind progressively taxes their contractor-like execution proficiencies, most presidents unwittingly morph into silent bystanders in an increasingly volatile and fragile world.
If our newest leaders can reinvigorate an architect鈥檚 mindset, they can operate on an entirely new, democracy-friendly wavelength.
Second, those awakened architectural sensibilities should prompt today鈥檚 campus leaders to heed the design advice of two of America鈥檚 greatest public intellectuals. W.鈥塃.鈥塀. Du聽Bois and John Dewey thought similarly about education鈥檚 duty to measurably advance the common good. Informed by HBCU-style, servant-leadership imperatives, Du Bois insisted that what happens in the classroom should improve the world and 鈥渞aise the level of civilization鈥. Dewey proclaimed, 鈥渄emocracy has to be born anew every generation and education is its midwife.鈥 No pressure, huh?
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No, pressure. Look at us.
Rampant extends well beyond the subversion of . Excesses now include spikes in toxic rhetoric and , , reversals of , and fascistic . Worse yet, this volatility, including the political and racial disharmony, are not confined to America鈥檚 borders. Many nations are now wobbly as they contend with an uncertain future.
Thus, democracy鈥檚 general brokenness, and the mindset advice from Du Bois and Dewey, combine to compel a re-architecture of the norms, nature, rhythm, goals and outcomes of today鈥檚 campus life and presidency, worldwide.
Fortunately, a blueprint already exists. HBCUs authored America鈥檚 only college experience that expressly targeted a just, multiracial world, pursuant to the themes of America鈥檚 founding documents. By refining a student-centric pedagogy and a mission-driven culture, key HBCUs produced the generals and foot soldiers of an unprecedented civil rights movement. In the process, they transformed our understanding of how we might finally become our best selves. Since that mid-century feat, no other campus-based initiative has measurably advanced us towards a perfected union. Only by updating, scaling and echoing the best of that tradition鈥檚 still relevant design innovations will we finally be able to unveil a fully actualised American democracy.
Perhaps the fluttering veil at Tuskegee鈥檚 entrance is a warning. Pursuant to making the world safe for true democracy, it makes sense to imagine a veil fluttering not only at Tuskegee鈥檚 entrance, but at that of every nation in the world, but especially at America鈥檚 entrance鈥ver the Statue of Liberty. And whether those more consequential veils are lifting or lowering is up to us.
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John Silvanus Wilson聽Jr was executive director of the White House Initiative on Historically Black Colleges and Universities during Barack Obama鈥檚 first presidential term, a former president of Morehouse College, and is now director of the Millennium Leadership Initiative at the American Association of State Colleges and Universities. His book was published by Harvard Education Press last month.
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