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The Jefferson-Hemings controversy

In defense of history

By Helen Halyard and Shannon Jones
31 December 1998

Substantial debate and controversy have accompanied the science journal
Nature's release of genetic test results supporting the claim that Thomas
Jefferson fathered children by one of his slaves, Sally Hemings.

Most of what is being written on the issue is both shallow and politically
reactionary. On the grounds that Jefferson had a sexual relationship with
his slave, calls are being made for a reappraisal of his historical role,
and his alleged relationship with Hemings is being used to question the
progressive significance of the American Revolution.

A wide array of historians and commentators, outright right-wingers as well
as ostensibly "left" postmodernists, have for some time maintained that
Jefferson's contribution to the struggle for equality, epitomized in his
writing of the Declaration of Independence, is outweighed if not entirely
negated by the fact that he was a slaveowner. His intimacy with Hemings
only underscores the fact, these critics say, that Jefferson was a
hypocrite, or worse.

In a comment published in the November 9 edition of US News and World
Report, the historian Joseph Ellis, author of American Sphinx: The
Character of Thomas Jefferson, says of the DNA test results, "The net
effect is to reinforce the critical picture of Jefferson as an inherently
elusive and deeply duplicitous character."

Jefferson was a "slave-owning serial flogger, sex maniac and kinsman to ax
murderers," wrote Christopher Hitchens in a piece published in the Internet
magazine Salon . Hitchens is a columnist for the Nation and contributes
regularly to other nominally left-wing journals.

Such an approach contributes nothing to an understanding of Jefferson the
man or the period in which he lived. The attempt to apply in an uncritical
and mechanical manner moral criteria widely accepted today to figures of a
previous historical period is an inherently ahistorical method. It leads to
appraisals that are more subjective than scientific.

Do the critics of Jefferson maintain that there was no difference between
his position and that of the defenders of King George III? Did the struggle
of Jefferson and the American revolutionaries against British tyranny point
to the future, or the past?

Hitchens's moralistic attack on Jefferson is all the more repugnant in that
it supposedly represents a radical and progressive viewpoint. It is nothing
of the sort. It is rather the complacent and cynical standpoint of people
who cannot comprehend the level of revolutionary idealism, passion and
self-sacrifice exhibited by men like Jefferson.

Using the method Hitchens employs, one can debunk all progressive movements
of the past, since one can always find flaws and contradictions in the
character of their leaders. Will Hitchens's next project be an indictment
of Abraham Lincoln, who for a time offered to protect the institution of
slavery in the South if the seceding states would reverse course and remain
within the union?

In this controversy it is necessary for socialists to come to the defense
of Jefferson, above all because the dispute raises basic questions of
historical method and perspective. A conscientious and scientific approach
to the study of history is a prerequisite for the struggle to revolutionize
contemporary society.

A serious--that is to say, objective and materialist--assessment of
Jefferson views his role in the context of broader social processes. As
Engels said in his brilliant pamphlet Ludwig Feuerbach and the End of
Classical German Philosophy: "To ascertain the driving causes which here in
the minds of acting masses and their leaders--the so called great men--are
reflected as conscious motives, clearly or unclearly, directly or in an
ideological, even glorified, form--is the only path which can put us on the
track of the laws holding sway both in history as a whole, and at
particular periods and in particular lands. Everything that sets men in
motion must go through their minds; but what form it will take in the mind
will depend very much on circumstances."

The place of the American Revolution in history


The American Revolution and the struggle against British colonialism marked
the dawn of a new era. Those, like Jefferson, who played a leading role
were deeply influenced by Enlightenment thought and imbued with optimism
about mankind's future. They held that it was possible to understand and
change man's environment, thus enabling him to achieve, as stated in the
Declaration of Independence, "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness."

The revolt of the American colonies posed the first serious challenge to
the slave system internationally. Conducted under the banner of liberty, it
opened an ideological debate on the injustice of slave labor. For a time
the very survival of the slave system was threatened. The revolution
resulted in the abolition of slavery in the North and an increase in the
number of free blacks in the upper South. Congress banned the African slave
trade in 1808.

Peter Kolchin, author of American Slavery 1619-1877 (Hill & Wang 1993)
reviews these points in passages dealing with the American Revolution. He
writes, "Indeed, the Founding Fathers took a series of steps designed to
bring about slavery's gradual demise. As children of the Enlightenment,
they typically abjured hasty or radical measures that would disrupt
society, preferring cautious acts that would induce sustained, long-term
progress; rather than a frontal assault on the peculiar institution, they
favored a strategy of chipping away at it where it was weakest. Still,
there seemed reason to believe--although time would ultimately prove
otherwise--that these acts had contained American slavery and put it on the
road to gradual extinction." (p 77)

For his part, Jefferson opposed slavery and championed basic democratic
rights such as the separation of church and state, a humane criminal code
and the establishment of a system of public education. When the Paris
masses stormed the Bastille in 1789, Jefferson, then US ambassador to
France, defended the uprising against the ancien regime. On his return to
the United States he continued to champion the cause of the French
Revolution in the face of opposition from many of his contemporaries.

It is not widely known that Jefferson's first draft of the Declaration of
Independence contained a denunciation of the African slave trade. In the
interests of maintaining the unity of the colonies against Britain, this
section was deleted after Southern delegates strongly objected.

Such compromises on the slavery issue were to have the unintended effect of
strengthening and perpetuating the slave system. But this very fact points
to powerful objective factors working in favor of slavery in Jefferson's
time. Many things would have to change before American society could come
to historical terms with slavery in the South, changes which in their
totality marked the emergence of social forces powerful enough to overturn
the institution. It was only with the rise of the Northern class of
industrialists and wage workers, backed by the small farmers of the upper
Midwest, that slavery began to be seriously challenged. In the end, it took
a bloody civil war to bring about its eradication.

The fact that Jefferson freed only a handful of his slaves during the
period when slave labor flourished internationally does not necessarily
prove him to be a hypocrite. As his writings indicate, he did not believe
an immediate and total abolition of slavery was desirable or possible.
Further, he questioned whether whites and former slaves could live together
peacefully, given the prejudices of the former and the bitterness of the
latter.

Jefferson's views on the question of race are frequently presented in a
one-sided fashion, equating his speculations at one point about black
inferiority with the rantings of modern white supremacists. Jefferson's
views on this question evolved, and he evinced a generally enlightened and
compassionate attitude toward the victims of slavery.

Writing to the accomplished black mathematician Benjamin Banneker in 1791,
he said, "Nobody wishes more than I do to see ... proofs that nature has
given to our black brethren talents equal to those of the other colors of
men, and that the appearance of a want of them is owing merely to the
degraded condition of their existence both in Africa and America. I can add
with truth that nobody wishes more ardently to see a good system commenced
for raising the condition both of their body and mind to what it ought to
be as fast as the imbecility of their present existence, and other
circumstances which cannot be neglected, will admit."

The American Revolution and Civil War were progressive and revolutionary
events. However, they created a new set of contradictions. While the end of
slavery produced significant change for the black population of the South,
it led to the consolidation of a new form of exploitation, capitalist
wage-slavery. The Northern industrialists and the remnants of the Southern
slavocracy found it in their interest, once the United States emerged as a
world power, to use racial prejudice as a means of dividing the working
class. Segregation and other forms of racial discrimination became
institutionalized as a weapon of capital against the movement of white and
black workers.

The resurgence of ethnic tensions, racism and bigotry in contemporary
America is not the legacy of Jefferson's alleged failings. It is, rather,
part of an international phenomenon, rooted in conditions of mounting
social inequality under capitalism. The obsession of so many so-called
radical intellectuals with race, the notion that race is the great question
in the United States, helps obscure the more fundamental conflict of social
classes, and, in the end, serves to strengthen racial divisions.

The Jefferson DNA study has had at least one positive consequence. It has
demonstrated the superficiality of the terms "white" and "black" as they
are used in America. It highlights the fact that the concept of race is a
social construct. Contrary to the argument that the US is a society divided
by race, the Jefferson DNA study indicates that a much larger proportion of
the American population than is commonly assumed shares European and
African ancestry.

Intellectual decline


The superficial approach taken to complex historical questions, and the
obsession of much of academia and the media with sex and race, point to a
central feature of contemporary American society--a general decline in the
level of cultural and intellectual life. The controversy over Jefferson
coincides with a growing attack on Enlightenment ideas, including the very
concept of historical progress. Today one hears little talk about a better
future. Instead there has been a revival of various forms of religion and
irrationalism. The evils of contemporary society are proclaimed to be a
product of human nature, and not subject to eradication.

The predominance of such pessimistic and unscientific views has definite
historic roots. Over the past several decades the working class has
suffered a series of defeats culminating in the collapse of the Soviet
Union, the first workers state. These setbacks, for which the betrayals of
the Stalinist and Social Democratic leaderships of the working class are
primarily responsible, have undermined the confidence of broad masses of
people in the viability of a socialist alternative to capitalism.

Despite the impasse reached by contemporary society, the broad mass of
workers, not to mention their potential allies among intellectuals,
students and other middle-class layers, do not as yet see a way forward.
Underlying this disorientation is the persistence of the great lie of the
twentieth century--the false identification of socialism with the Stalinist
regime in the former Soviet Union. Flowing from this mistaken view--which
is doggedly promoted by the ideologists and defenders of capitalism--the
very legitimacy of social reform, let alone revolutionary change, has been
called into question.

There are many signs that this period of political confusion and triumphant
reaction is giving way to a resurgent period of critical thought and
anti-capitalist struggle. However, those guided by a superficial and
ahistorical method are highly susceptible to pessimistic moods. They become
fixiated on the apparent strength of reaction, and fail to note the growth
of economic and social antagonisms beneath the surface of society that are
driving the working class into battle.

The revival of the socialist workers movement requires strenuous opposition
to all attempts at historical distortion and falsification. This includes
attempts to deny the progressive significance of the American Revolution
and leaders like Jefferson. A byword of the socialist movement retains its
full force today: unless the working class defends the past conquests of
humanity, it can never achieve new ones.

See Also:
Equality, the Rights of Man and the Birth of Socialism
A lecture by David North

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Copyright 1998
World Socialist Web Site
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