What the Smithsonian actually is

Dean Blundell – “The Smithsonian is not one museum, and it isn’t a partisan project. It’s the world’s largest museum, education, and research complex: 21 museums, the National Zoo, and a network of research centers. Created by Congress in 1846, it receives federal support but is governed independently, with a public mission to collect, conserve, and explain the American story in all its complexity. That mission is supposed to be firewalled from political messaging. Telling the truth about Black history is not an add-on to that mission—it’s central to it. The galleries at the African American museum trace the forced migration of millions of Africans through the Atlantic slave trade, the violence of bondage, the strategies of resistance, the legal machinery of Jim Crow, the triumphs and setbacks of Reconstruction and the civil-rights movement, and the unfinished struggle for equality today. None of this diminishes the United States. It completes it. Unless you’re Trump, it demeans it, and he wants to wash that from America’s memory…” –

See also American Association of Museums [AAM] Statement on the Growing Threats of Censorship Against U.S. Museums – “Today, the American Alliance of Museums, the only organization representing the entire scope of the museum field, issued a statement in response to the growing threats of censorship against U.S. museums: Our country’s 22,000 museums are cornerstones of their communities and are among the most trusted institutions in American life. They tell our nation’s stories from multiple perspectives, welcome people of all ages and backgrounds, contribute billions to the U.S. economy each year, serve communities both rural and urban, and protect the heritage we all share. In recent months, museums have faced increasing external pressures to modify, remove, or limit exhibitions and programs. People trust museums because they rely on independent scholarship and research, uphold high professional standards, and embrace open inquiry. When any directive dictates what should or should not be displayed, it risks narrowing the public’s window into evidence, ideas, and a full range of perspectives. This is not just a concern for select institutions. These pressures can create a chilling effect across the entire museum sector. Freedom of thought and expression are foundational American values, and museums uphold them by creating spaces where people can engage with history, science, art, and culture in ways that are honest, fact-based, and thought-provoking. We stand with the hundreds of thousands of museum professionals in the U.S. who protect our heritage, conserve species, create unforgettable experiences, and serve their communities with integrity. We call on all who value our shared heritage to support the museum field in resisting censorship, so museums can continue to educate, connect, and inspire. America needs museums and the professionals who steward them. They educate, connect, and help us understand one another—something we can’t afford to lose…”

 

 

Posted in: Censorship, Civil Liberties, Congress, Education, Knowledge Management