**FILE** Benjamin F. Chavis Jr., National Newspaper Publishers Association president and CEO (Courtesy of NNPA Newswire)

With the forced resignation of Acting Archivist William Bosanko, President Donald Trump and his allies are moving swiftly to reshape how American history is recorded, preserved, and ultimately remembered. 

Many activists note this power grab, executed under the banner of Project 2025 and backed by figures like Elon Musk, is more than just an attack on government records โ€” it is an existential threat to the preservation of Black history and the truth itself.

History Under Siege

For centuries, African Americans have fought for their place in the national narrative, often relying on the Black Press as the only means to document the realities of systemic racism, discrimination, and resilience. 

From Ida B. Wellsโ€™ fearless reporting on lynching to the Chicago Defenderโ€™s pivotal role in the Great Migration, Black newspapers have long served as the voice of the silenced. With Trumpโ€™s grip tightening over the agency responsible for safeguarding historical records, there are some who note that the need for an independent, unflinching Black press has never been more urgent.

โ€œThe Black Press remains one of the last independent institutions able to challenge these narratives,โ€ National Newspaper Publishers Association (NNPA) President and CEO Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis Jr. has often declared. 

Trumpโ€™s purge at the National Archives follows a pattern of systematic erasure. His administration has already waged war on diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives, gutted affirmative action, and worked to dismantle programs designed to level the playing field for marginalized communities. Now, by taking control of the Archives, he is moving to rewrite the nationโ€™s past to justify the injustices of the present and future.

The forced removal of archivists and the potential installation of loyalists like Hugh Hewitt or John Solomonโ€”far-right operatives with no historical credentialsโ€”signal that the agencyโ€™s purpose is shifting from preservation to propaganda. 

Reports indicate that the Archiveโ€™s leadership under previous political influence had already begun censoring mentions of Indigenous land displacement, removing references to Japanese American internment, and even swapping out images of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. for Richard Nixon and Elvis Presley in museum exhibits.

This power shift is part of a broader authoritarian trend, as seen in the elimination of DEI programs and affirmative action. The rollback of these initiatives disproportionately affects Black Americans and other marginalized communities, making the work of the Black Press more crucial than ever.

โ€œ[The Black Press] must continue reporting on the realities that mainstream media overlooks, challenge disinformation, and preserve the voices of those history seeks to erase,โ€ said self-described New York Amsterdam News loyalist and accountant Jonathan Ebanks.

Many argue that Trump taking control of the National Archives is not just an assault on history; it is an assault on truth. In authoritarian regimes, controlling the historical record is a crucial strategy for maintaining power. 

As historian George Orwell warned, โ€œHe who controls the past controls the future.โ€ 

Trumpโ€™s latest move places America firmly on that trajectory, echoing tactics used by totalitarian states to whitewash history, from Stalinโ€™s Soviet Union to Chinaโ€™s suppression of โ€˜historical nihilism.โ€™

Black Press as a Corrective Force

In a recent episode of the โ€œSeizing Freedomโ€ podcast, journalist Adam Serwer spoke about the historical role of the Black Press in countering misinformation. 

โ€œThere were whole newspapers that said the Klan did not exist,โ€ Serwer explained. โ€œYou had people who were victims of the Klan who were literally testifying in Congress about seeing people be murdered or being attacked or mutilated themselves. And you would have these Democratic-aligned papers and some Republican papers as well saying, โ€˜Oh, you know, the Ku Klux Klan is like a fictional invention of fevered imaginations.โ€™ But it was completely made up, and Black newspapers were saying, โ€˜This is nonsense; itโ€™s made up.โ€

Similarly, Wells was relentless in exposing racial terrorism. 

โ€œShe was one of the people who was primarily responsible for not only countering that propaganda that was justifying that campaign of terrorism,โ€ Serwer noted, โ€œbut for laying down a historical record that historians would use to show that it was, in fact, a propaganda campaign.โ€

A Call to Action

Texas Democratic U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett remains unafraid to speak truth to power, particularly when her Republican colleagues show ignorance of Black history. She recently lit into the GOP loyalists who claimed white men are oppressed in America. 

โ€œThere has been no oppression for the white man in this country,โ€ she declared in a fiery, nearly two-minute speech. โ€œYou tell me which white men were dragged out of their homes. You tell me which one of them was dragged across an ocean and told they were going to work, have their wives stolen, and have their wives raped. That didnโ€™t happen. That is oppression.โ€

Crockett pointed out that Republicans are constantly trying to erase Black history from school textbooks. They want to keep American schoolchildren in the dark, she said, so they โ€œcan then misuse words like oppressionโ€โ€”just like her House colleagues were doing at that moment.

Writing in the Detroit Free Press, Keith Owens asserted: โ€œYou canโ€™t erase Black history for the same reason you canโ€™t erase air; because air simply exists whether you want it to or not. Itโ€™s not multiple-choice. Stop breathing, and you will find out. Itโ€™s science, and itโ€™s also fact.โ€

He emphasized the danger in working to erase African American narratives.

โ€œAny attempt to extricate Black threads from the American tapestry will result in the entire fabric becoming undone,โ€ Owens continued. โ€œJust to make it plain; there is no American history without Black history. Thatโ€™s because there is a strong likelihood that America never would have evolved into the economic powerhouse that it became โ€” and might not have evolved much at all โ€” without Black Americans.โ€

Historians warn that suppressing history is often a precursor to further civil rights rollbacks. They argue that the Black Press must be the frontline against these efforts as it has done for centuries. 

โ€œSilence is complicity in state-sponsored amnesia. The Black Press plays a vital role in resisting this erasure,โ€ Ebanks emphasized. โ€œThe truth will not preserve itself. The Black Press must continue its mission โ€” not just to inform but to resist.โ€

Stacy M. Brown is a senior writer for The Washington Informer and the senior national correspondent for the Black Press of America. Stacy has more than 25 years of journalism experience and has authored...

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1 Comment

  1. You cannot rewrite history to hide the truth about how America was built and the war that occurred for equality.

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