Harvard pledges $100m to redress its ties to slavery
Harvard University has pledged $100 million to make reparations for the "extensive entanglements" that slavery has played in the institution's history, its president said on Tuesday.
"I believe we bear a moral responsibility to do what we can to address the persistent corrosive effects of those historical practices," Lawrence Bacow wrote in a letter addressed to the community at the university.
The money would be used to fund implementations recommended by a 134-page report, which Harvard released along with the announcement. It includes offering educational support for marginalized young people, partnering with historically black colleges and universities, honoring enslaved people through memorials, research and curricula and improving educational opportunities for descendants of enslaved individuals who worked on Harvard's campus.
The report's authors also acknowledged the enslavement of Native Americans and recommended the university recruit more students from tribal communities. It called for the formation of an endowed Legacy of Slavery Fund to support the university's reparative works. The report stops short of recommending direct financial reparations, however.
According to Bacow, some of the $100 million will be immediately available; the rest will be held in an endowment to support the work over time.
The report built on previous research by scholars from Harvard and other universities. It outlined the extensive relationship that Harvard has had with slavery and its legacies.
Slavery was "integral to Harvard", the report noted. Harvard presidents, faculty and staff enslaved more than 70 individuals, some of whom worked on campus from the university's founding in 1636 until slavery became outlawed in Massachusetts in 1783, according to the report.
Investments traced
The university and its donors also benefited from the slave trade in the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries. The university itself invested in sugar plantations and rum industries in the Caribbean, as well as the cotton and railroad industries in the US.
From the mid-19th century and well into the 20th century, the school's leaders and professors engaged in research to enhance the theory of racial superiority. Those theories and practices would go on to produce "devastating consequences in the 19th and 20th centuries", the report found.
"As the committee's report powerfully documents, Harvard's history includes extensive entanglements with slavery. The report makes plain that slavery in America was by no means confined to the South," Bacow said.
He noted that Harvard has made progress in recent decades to counteract discrimination, but its works shouldn't "obscure the reality of our past", Bacow said, adding that "Harvard benefited from and in some ways perpetuated practices that were profoundly immoral".
With the announcement, Harvard joined a consortium of 80 other US higher education institutions, including the University of Virginia, Brown University, Georgetown University, Columbia University and Johns Hopkins University, which seek to evaluate their connection to slavery.
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