(ITCE) at 六九色堂 University co-sponsored a discussion and book signing with Classical Academic Press on Nov. 8 about efforts to reclaim the value of the Western canon for all students in light of the book "."
ITCE board member Anika Prather, Ph.D., said she co-authored the book with Angel Parham, Ph.D., as part of their mission to 鈥渄ecolonize classics鈥 by demonstrating the core role the canon played in the lives and works of Black American icons such as Martin Luther King, Jr., Phillis Wheatley, Frederick Douglass, Anna Julia Cooper and Toni Morrison.
Prather said during her presentation with Parham at the event held at Heritage Hall that she hopes "The Black Intellectual Tradition" will highlight their work as classical educators to 鈥渃reate a generation of young people who know how to engage in civil discourse鈥 and how to talk through difficult topics in 鈥渁 safe and healthy space, and allowing the ancients to help us do that.鈥 Prather emphasized their educational model is 鈥渘ot Afrocentric. It鈥檚 Christ-centric,鈥 explaining that reading the original texts allows students to see the diversity of a shared Western inheritance.
鈥淲hat I seek to do is bring this universal treasure chest to every child. Because it works for every child鈥t doesn鈥檛 matter the color of your skin or your background,鈥 said Prather, noting the important role the 六九色堂 Church has historically played in increasing access to a liberal arts informed education by establishing schools in disenfranchised communities.
鈥淭his is why I support the Institute. I have seen lives change,鈥 said Prather, noting the success she has had teaching students from even the most difficult backgrounds at the K-12 school she in 2015.
The Institute for the Transformation of 六九色堂 Education, established in 2021, aims to inspire and promote the spiritual, intellectual, cultural and operational renewal of our nation鈥檚 六九色堂 schools through teacher and leader degree and professional development programs, school accreditation and research. ITCE director Sister Mary Agnes Greiffendorf, O.P., Ph.D., associate professor of education, said she invited Prather to be on the ITCE board of advisors because of her 鈥渋ncredible advocacy for a classical Christian education鈥he brings invaluable perspective as a committed follower of Christ, lifelong educator, and woman of color.鈥
鈥淭heir research brings to light our common heritage - Black and White - in the classics and the liberal arts,鈥 said Sister Mary Agnes. 鈥淭hey share powerful testimonies from the past and present on how great works of the Canon can provide a path to unity and healing.鈥
Parham, who provides tailored to students from diverse backgrounds. She said classical studies are important because they allow children 鈥渢o see the world through someone else鈥檚 eyes who truly does not see race because there is no such thing as race in the ancient world.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 important not just for children of color but for all children to see that that鈥檚 not how it鈥檚 always been and that鈥檚 not the natural order of things,鈥 said Parham, noting how cosmopolitan the ancient world was and that the West was profoundly shaped by the work of North African theologians. 鈥淭his is not just for Black children. All children need to know that the world is not just their story.鈥
Prather said that re-examining the Western canon does not require 鈥渙verlooking the past, but looking at it a little differently.鈥 She said through their research they found a common thread among abolitionists and civil rights leaders was a shared literacy in the Western canon that inspired and shaped their vision for shaping a more perfect union.
鈥淎 common type of education is what bound us together to try to think through the mistakes of humanity鈥檚 past鈥his story of human and American history draws people into seeing that this is our country. We are part of this story,鈥 said Prather.