Hidden Brain - The Founding Contradiction
Episode Date: June 30, 2020"We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal." These words, penned by Thomas Jefferson more than 240 years ago, continue to inspire many Americans. And yet they ...were written by a man who owned hundreds of slaves, and fathered six children by an enslaved woman. As we mark Independence Day this week, we return to a 2018 episode with Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Annette Gordon-Reed. We explore the contradictions in Jefferson's life — and how those contradictions might resonate in our own lives.
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Hey there Shankar here. One lesson that 2020 has taught us over and over again is that it's very hard to predict the future.
We don't know what will happen tomorrow, much less what the world will look like in a month or a year from now.
But one thing we can do is to use the past to try to understand the present.
We've been thinking a lot in recent weeks about a conversation I had a while ago
with historian Annette Gordon-Reed. Annette studies the life of Thomas Jefferson and the enslaved
people who lived on his plantation. Thomas Jefferson, of course, is the founding father who wrote the
phrase, all men are created equal in the Declaration of Independence. The gulf between his
professed values and his behavior is rich psychological terrain. It also reveals
something about the gap between our own professed values and our actions today.
Here's the show.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
All nations are built on stories.
The stories about ideals, the values around which people stake their identity.
The values around which a people stake their identity.
The individual fight on the beaches, the individual fight on the landing ground, might
be the might.
That's what it means to be Australian.
The only thing that Germany is saying is that we are not going to be Australian.
Let's build on brains.
God bless Africa.
I thank you.
Often these stories contain contradictions.
Some so profound that most of us simply look the other way.
The United States has its own set of founding myths and its own set of contradictions.
The United States has its own set of founding myths and its own set of contradictions.
One of the most striking unfolded in 1776 at a house on the southwest corner of 7th and Market Streets in Philadelphia.
That summer, 33-year-old Thomas Jefferson rented rooms at this house. While he was there, he wrote the document that would formalize America's split from Britain,
the Declaration of Independence.
It says, we hold these truths to be self-evident,
that all men are created equal.
That they are endowed by their creator
with certain unalienable rights.
That among these are life,
and the pursuit of happiness.
And yet, even as he was writing these inspiring words,
Jefferson was attended on by a slave.
He was a 14-year-old boy named Robert Hemings.
Jefferson, in fact, owned hundreds of slaves.
He fathered six children with an enslaved woman.
Today we take a deep dive into history as a window into psychology.
We look closely at the life and beliefs of a man who shaped the modern United States
and ask how his complexities and contradictions have echoes in our own lives.
How our minds justify our choices this week on Hidden Brain.
Thomas Jefferson is remembered as a founding father of the United States, but historian Annette Gordon Reed looks at his life beyond the writing of the Declaration of Independence.
She and her co-author Peter Onough explore Jefferson's inner life in their book, Most Blessed of the Patriarchs,
Thomas Jefferson, and the Empire of the Imagination.
And that, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Glad to be here. Thank you for asking.
The story of Jefferson and the story of slavery in the United States are deeply intertwined.
I understand that Jefferson's earliest memory involved a slave.
Yes, he told his grandchildren that his earliest memory
was of being handed up on a pillow to an enslaved person.
As his family was making a move from his boyhood home of Shadwell
to Tuckahoe plantation.
And so making this journey with his siblings and his parents
Jefferson was carried by
enslaved person, and so he says that that was his first memory.
And of course slavery continued to play an important part in his life throughout
his childhood. When he turned 21, he inherited 5,000 acres and a number of slaves.
About a decade later following his marriage, he received another two plantations and even more slaves.
What did he do with all this land and human property?
Well, he basically lived the life of a planter.
In slave people planted tobacco at first and then later wheat.
They served in his household. They were the source of his wealth. He was a lawyer by trade, but
being a plantation owner was the sort of basic
understanding of himself, the basic
part of his life.
Even as he became a slave holder, Jefferson also thought of himself as being an educated
and cultured man.
He read voraciously, he loved music, he considered himself to be a man of science and reason.
And much of his learning taught him that slavery was a terrible institution, but slavery was
also, as we've discovered, essential to his way of life.
What do Jefferson's early writings tell us about his views about this contradiction?
Well, he thought of himself as I indicated a progressive person.
And I have to remember that a lot of people who would be considered cultured and educated
people were slave owners, but the difference between them and Jefferson is that they never
came to the conclusion that slavery was wrong.
The whole commerce between master and slave is a perpetual exercise of the most boisterous
passions, the most unremitting despotism on the one part and degrading submissions on
the other.
Our children see this and learn to imitate it.
For man is an imitative animal.
The interesting thing about him is that as a young man, he saw himself as a part of or
an adherent to the notion of the Enlightenment.
And being anti-slave trade, anti-slavery was one of the tenets that many people thought
was a part of all of that.
So I think he saw it as something that would gradually, and that's the thing that trips
us up, gradually end, as people became more enlightened and learned more, that they would
realize that slavery was a backwards institution, an institution from ancient times.
I think he thought it was just as we learned new scientific thoughts, just as we learn new ways to make machines that are better,
that the machinery of society would change as well.
And Jefferson was a great believer in progress and things being better in the future than they were in the present.
Absolutely.
And that's part of that's a strength and a weakness.
Some people say the optimism was almost too great,
but he definitely thought that mankind and society
would get better and better.
In her book, Inette writes, Jefferson
was a lifetime participant in an ancient system
that made him the master of hundreds of people
over whom he had near absolute power.
He could buy and sell human beings.
If hostility to tyranny was at the heart of his politics and plan for the United States of America,
that sentiment had no real currency on his mountain.
At the same time, he well understood the basic problem with his way of life
and wrote damning and insightful criticisms of the
institution that made it possible.
I asked an ad whether this made Jefferson a hypocrite.
You could say that, but I think he was hypocritical in the way that many people are hypocritical
and that all of us are hypocritical when we have an intellectual belief about something,
but we don't have the will to act upon those beliefs.
Jefferson did not know what to do about slavery.
Slavery was not just an economic system,
it was a system of social control.
What do you do with black Virginians
when they are emancipated?
How do they fit into society?
I just don't think he could see what a sort of real
plan, a realistic plan for what to do about it. And that's something that we grapple with in
lots of areas, believing one thing, but not having the strength to do something about it,
or to actually make that idea come to fruition if you have the shot.
This ambivalence towards slavery
became even more difficult to navigate
after Jefferson went to Paris in 1784
on behalf of the new US government.
When Jefferson went to Paris, he took a man named James Hemings,
who was a teenager, 18, 19 years old at the time,
and he took James with him to have James trained as a chef, a French chef.
So there was some tension here because France, of course, at the time was, you know,
resounding with the cries of liberty and equality and Jefferson in some ways embraced French revolutionary
fervor. But how did he manage that embrace of the revolution with the slaves he had in his own household?
Well, the way he handled enslaved people in our James Hemings, when he was in France,
had much more to do with French law, which at the time was on the side of the enslaved person.
I mean, people who petitioned for freedom in France, people who had been brought from the colonies and
so forth, or other enslaved people who were brought there from other places, who petitioned
for freedom had those petitions granted routinely.
So when he's there with James Hemings, he knows that it's possible that James might, at
some point, petition for his freedom.
So he handles this, I think, although he doesn't say this,
but this is the time when he begins to pay James Heming's regular wages. James becomes
the chef de cuisine at the Hotel de la Giacca Jefferson's residence. Before he had been
giving James spending money, or gratuities, but once James takes over the role as the chef de cuisine, he begins to pay him.
So I think he handles it by treating James as if he were a regular servant and instead of an enslaved person.
Jefferson's wife had died by the time he got to France. At one point, a young slave was brought over from the United States.
She's actually the sister of Robert Hemings, who was by his side as he drafted the Declaration
of Independence.
Who was she and what did she become to Jefferson?
Well, Sally Hemings, Sarah, nicknamed Sally, was sister to Robert and James.
She had been something of a companion to Jefferson's daughter.
So she went along and she was 14.
And Sally Hemings crossed the ocean. And while is there we don't know when she became Jefferson's
and their son says cocky-bind is the term that he uses and she became pregnant
by Jefferson and she wanted to stay in France. By the time Jefferson thinks that
he wants to come home, she wanted to stay.
And actually, all of the young people in the hotel in Long-Yahk wanted to stay in France.
Nobody wanted to go home. But Jefferson promised her that if she came back with him, she would
have a good life at Monticello, and their children would be freed when they were 21 years old.
So she agreed to that, she was 16 years old at the time,
and she came back to Virginia with Jefferson.
So for us at least with the advantage of history,
this seems almost incomprehensible as a decision.
Why would you give up essentially freedom in France
to come back and be a slave in Virginia?
I thought about that quite a bit.
When I wrote my first book,
that was sort of a point of mystery for me about Sally Hemings.
But when I started writing the Hemings
as a Monticello and working on that,
and I realized how important family was or I began to think
about how important family would have been to someone like that.
A 16-year-old female raised to believe that she had some special connection to family
in a way, to think about family, think about your mother is back in Virginia, her sisters
and brothers were there. So that would be an impetus. I mean that was sort of a dilemma that many enslaved people faced
Do you run away and have freedom by yourself or do you
Stay and stick it out with your family the other thing to consider is that Jefferson treated Sally Hemings and her sisters and brothers very differently than he did
the other slaves on the mountain
She had seen him let her brothers sort of wander and go off and
hire their own time work for themselves make keep their own money
The enslaved women on the plantation all but the Hemings has had to go to the fields at harvest time. The Hemings' sisters did not do that. They were constructed in a different way.
And so I might have a different view of Jefferson. I have a particular view of Jefferson
from this particular time and
seeing him as, for lack of a better term, an enemy
of these people, but it's not clear to me
that she would have seen it in exactly
the same way that I did.
And that's one of the things you have to do when you're writing history is whatever you
would want people to do, they may not think about things in the same way.
So family and her history with Jefferson, not just the two of them, but his relations
with her mother and her brothers and all of these people,
likely colored the way she considered making this decision.
And of course, she was, she was still a child.
Yes, well, she was, by our light, she was a child.
She was 16, the age of consent in Virginia at the time was 10,
and they raised it to 12 in the 1820s,
and it was that way through the
19th century and most of the state to the union.
So a 16 year old person to us is like a baby, but a 16 year old person at that time would
not have been thought of as a child.
When you talk about this familial ties that basically potentially brought Sally back
to Virginia, it's also worth pointing out that Sally Hemings and Thomas Jefferson in some ways were already
related even before they got together in Paris.
Can you talk a little bit about that?
Oh yes.
Well, the Hemings children, Robert and James and Sally Hemings and three other siblings
were the children of a woman named Elizabeth Hemings and a man named John Wales.
And John Wales, from whom Jefferson inherited the 135 slaves and including the Hemings family,
was the father of these six children. So Jefferson's wife and Sally Hemings were half sisters.
So this connection between the Hemings and Jefferson's really gets going through Jefferson's
wife.
It's interestingly enough when John Wales dies and Jefferson and his wife inherit the enslaved
people, including the Hemings'.
They bring the Hemings' two Monticello and they are
installed as sort of the favored servants of Jefferson and his wife, which is interesting
because in many situations where a white plantation mistress had a father or a son or a husband
who had children with an enslaved woman, they pressured them to sell the children
or to move them to some other distant place.
But I find it fascinating that Martha didn't take that route.
She actually brought these people, and I'm sure she's doing this through her husband,
to Monticello, and she wanted them in her life, which we don't know very much about Martha
Jefferson. and she wanted them in her life, which we don't know very much about Martha Jefferson,
but this is sort of an interesting point about her personality, I think,
that rather than hide away the children of her father,
she actually brings them into her household.
So once they're back in Monte Chaleau, the estate in Virginia, which was Jefferson's home,
he went on to father six children with Sally Hemings, but at the same time he also had a white family that was also a part of
his life. How did he navigate having these two separate families under the same roof?
Well, because he was the patriarch of Monticello, and in those days it was much more than
father knows best, what he said would go because he was the head of the household.
I think it's also important to remember that Jefferson had two surviving daughters with his wife,
you know, who died in 1782.
So I think he handled it by being the boss boss and it was the kind of thing that people would
not question.
So he had basically the freedom to impose a kind of order on this place that everybody
would along with.
Plus, you have to remember, I think we have to remember that he wasn't married. And the idea that a man would have a mistress or a companion
or that he would have a setup like this
was normal in Virginia.
It was not considered crazy.
One of Jefferson's friends said that it was a common practice
for widowed or bachelor slave owners
to take an enslaved woman as, and he he uses the phrase a substitute for a wife.
Obviously she couldn't be a wife because they couldn't marry.
Black people and white people could not get married.
Well, until 1967 in Virginia.
So that was out of the question.
But this was something that happened in slavery.
It's hard for us to wrap our minds around just as it might be hard for us
to wrap our minds around about slavery in general.
But mixed children, these kinds of connections from rape to sort of long-term liaisons,
however you want to call them, were a part of slave societies.
And they have been in every slave society that has ever existed.
It's interesting, isn't it? Because I think when most of us at least lay people think about
the institution of slavery you think about it in economic terms or political terms you
don't really think about it in terms of these family relationships which may have been
every bit as important in keeping the system intact as the economic and political advantages
that slavery conferred on some people.
Yes, but it also shows in some ways the deep horror of the institution,
because you think of family relations as biological connections, we could say, as something that
would foster a sense of, well, a sense of connection, and there is a sense of connection among some people, at least it was for the Hemmings and for Jefferson, but it warps everything.
Because how can you have a true relationship? How can you have the kind of connection that we typically associate with family under these circumstances. But they people did. As I said, most people,
this was they didn't care about the family connection at all. They sold children, they, you know,
gave them away. But this was a very strange attempt to create something or to maintain something
that is just very difficult for us to understand.
When we come back, did Jefferson see the contradictions in his own life?
Stay with us. And at Thomas Jefferson saw himself as one of the fathers of the nation, but also as
the patriarch of his own patch of paradise, this estate of Monticello in Virginia.
How did Jefferson's sense of his obligations to his slaves shaped the way he felt about
them?
This notion of being a patriarch, which is kind of problematic for us these days, for
Jefferson, it was not simply about the power he exercised over people.
It would be about his sense of responsibility.
And that, of course, grates with us because he's talking about responsibility over grown
men and women.
You know, and you think, hey, they could be responsible for themselves, but his experiences in France with the Hemmings' with James and Sally Hemmings, they were the
face of slavery for him. And he saw himself acting as a slaveholder through his relationships ships with them and he is treating them differently. He sees himself buying clothes for James, paying
James a full salary in France and continuing to do so when they come back to the United States,
treating them in a different sort of way. He sees himself as a good, quote unquote, good and benevolent master.
Now, we bought at that and rightfully so, but he saw himself as doing slavery in the right
way, if it had to be done.
And once you start to acquiesce or think of yourself as a good slave owner, I think the urgency
about ending slavery
dissipates. I have my house to build my fields to form and to watch for the happiness of those who
labor for mine. Can you talk a moment about how Jefferson related to the slaves that he owned in
terms of the violence that he
and his overseer's perpetrator on them?
Well, there's no record of Jefferson ever beating anybody, but overseers at Monticello
and his other plantations did use the whip.
The whip was ubiquitous part of control on plantations, but Jefferson developed the idea that using incentives would be a better way to get people to do things than to whip them.
It would destroy their value in my estimation to degrade them in their own eyes by the whip.
This, therefore, must not be resorted to, but in extremities. And while he was thinking about this,
he read a number of books about changes in prison.
It's the way that people dealt with prisoners
and penitentiaries, and the idea was incentives
worked better than after the fact punishments.
So in the 1790s, when he sets up a nail factory
run by boys, typically, and older teenagers,
he institutes a regime of incentives that they
would get extra rations for food, they would get extra clothes, sometimes they would get
money, they were paid gratuities.
So this notion of incentives versus punishment or whipping was something that became a part
of his way of making himself a quote
unquote better slaveholder and that's the thing he tried to foster which made him more
comfortable in his role as a master.
In many ways I think it's hard to read your book without at least reading into it the
possibility that Jefferson had at least in his own mind something approaching an intimate
relationship with Sally Hemings that it was not just Master and Slave. Of course a lot
of people have criticized you for this. She was a slave, she could not have given consent. How have you come to understand
the relationship between Jefferson and Sally Hemings?
You know, I go back and forth on this. I don't believe that every relationship between
a enslaved woman and a master was exactly the same. I think there were different types of connections. And Jefferson, to me,
shows signs of having been attached to Sally Hemings. I have no problem saying that because
there are no stories about him with any other woman when he comes back from France, you know,
ever, but her. We don't know about her because once she gets back here, she is totally under his power.
But if you look at the kinds of male, female relationships, they would have known at that time,
a wife, a white wife would have been under the control of her husband too. She could not refuse
consent to sex any more than a slave woman could. He could not sell his wife, but that would be about the only thing that he couldn't do.
So we look at this and there's this sharp difference between male-female relationships.
We see the difference between obviously a white woman has more power than an enslaved
woman.
But those people, Sally Hemings, would not have thought that as a woman she
would have freedom to do whatever she wanted.
So it's complicated.
We may not know how Sally Hemings felt, but we do know what Jefferson's critics had to
say at the time.
And that says Jefferson was rebuked by people who told him he had no
business falling in love with a woman who wasn't white. The newspaper reports
in you know when Jefferson is president were saying we're
castigating him for saying you know why have you not found I'm kind of paraphrasing
here but why have you not found a worthy woman of your own color? So people with people's objective to was not that he had a child with her, but it's
that it seemed to be a continuing thing, and that put it too much like marriage, and that
put it too much like the kinds of connections that white men had with white women.
And so back at his time, that was the real objection.
I understand that at the end of his life, Jefferson, in effect, freed Sally Hemings, but didn't do
it in a way that just simply said, you know, you are now free. He did it in a more complicated
fashion. Can you talk about what he did? Well, Sally Hemings was never formally freed. She left Monticello with her sons who were formally freed, the
two youngest ones. The two eldest children went to live as white people and
did not want freedom papers because that would indicate that they were enslaved
in meaning that they were part black. So she is not formally freed. She's given
her time and that's the phrase that they used. And. So she is not formally freed. She's given her time and that's the
phrase that they used. And a possible reason for this, possible reasons, is that in order
to free her, he would have had to put her name in his will and request that the legislature
allow her to remain in Virginia. An 1806 law said that if you were freed, you had to leave the state within a year,
unless you had permission from the government to stay.
So, he probably would not have wanted to do that.
Second, she was over 45, and you could not free an enslaved person below 21 or over 45,
unless you explained how you were going to provide for their care for the rest of their lives.
And so he would have had to, in addition to putting her name in the will to ask for permission,
he would have had to say, and here's the money that I'm going to give to support Sally
Hemmings.
And that would have been an admission, and he was not going to do that.
So the community takes this notion that she is free and treat her as a free person, which
I think talks a little bit about law and how law exists on the books and how you're supposed to formally do things, but if the community decides that you're a free person, she was treated as a free person.
When we come back, the enduring legacy of Thomas Jefferson's contradictions and what his story tells us about the contradictions in our own lives.
In 1824, Thomas Jefferson welcomed an old friend to his home at Monte Chalau.
The friend was escorted by a crowd, a procession of cavalrymen and ordinary citizens.
His approach was announced by a bugle.
The name of Jefferson's friend was Marie Joseph Paul E. Vroge Gilbert du Montier.
His street remembers him as the Marquis de Lafayette.
My dear Marquis, Monsieur le président, I am very glad to see you my friend.
Lafayette was a French aristocrat who was inspired by the American Revolution.
He fought with the Americans and convinced France to provide crucial support to the American
cause.
Decades after the Revolution, Lafayette returned to the United States in 1824 for a now
famous tour of the nation, including a visit to Thomas Jefferson's home in Virginia.
35 years of separation is too long indeed.
I trust that your journey has not proved too tiring.
Not at all. To the contrary.
The two men had a lot to talk about on their visit.
And Edgorton Reed says we know about the details of their conversation
because of an enslaved man named Israel Gillette Jefferson,
who was their carriage driver.
He overhears this conversation.
The conversation turned upon the condition of the colored people,
the slaves.
Lafayette always encouraged Jefferson, sort of needled Jefferson about this issue of slavery and emancipation.
I feel I must express my continued concerns about the issue of Negro slavery.
Lafayette remarked that no man could rightfully hold ownership in his brother-man, that
instead of all being free, a portion were held in bondage, would seem to grieve his noble
heart.
I feel I must continue to press upon you how much I desire to see this plague cured before
my death.
Mr. Jefferson replied that he thought the time would come when the slaves would be free.
In my dear Lafayette, you know where I stand on this issue.
But he did not indicate when, or in what manner, they would get their freedom.
I am not apt to despair, yet I see not how our generation is to disengage itself from
this deplorable entanglement. He seemed to think that the time
had not then arrived. There's something deeply ironic about this, isn't it? I mean, you have
these two people who are speaking about high ideals and about the importance
of equality, and they're being driven around by somebody who's a slave, and you look at
this and you say, how can you not see what is happening?
Well, you do.
We do.
Definitely do that.
And I imagine, and this is not to minimize, as I would never do, the depredations of the
institution of slavery, but I imagine a hundred years from now, people are going to look back
at certain things that we do and say, why didn't people understand?
You know, why didn't people do something?
And there are a lot of times, human beings don't act according to what they know is the
right thing to do. a lot of things, a lot of times human beings don't act according to what they know is the right
thing to do. Monticello was Jefferson's place. This was his way of life. It's what he knew. And he
felt that he helped to found a country. He helped the United States come into existence,
breaking with Great Britain, setting up a government.
That was a pretty big deal, and that the next generation of people had something to do
as well, and that was to make the progress on the issue of slavery that he thought could
be made.
Now, we're not satisfied with that, because we say you had the talent to do this thing.
Why didn't you use the talent to do the other thing?
But that's not what he thought he was here to do.
The American Revolution was the most important thing in his life.
And the tragedy is he couldn't see that after the unionist form,
that the thing that would split it apart would be the institution of slavery. So, you know, it's a tragic story in a lot of ways, but I think it's not surprising, given human nature.
We don't always do what we think or we know is the right thing to do.
You know, it's so fascinating when you read Jefferson's story.
I mean, it's an extraordinary story. I mean, he helped to overthrow monarchy. He helped to change, you know, archaic property rules.
He changed the way we thought about the role of religion in politics. But when it came
to slavery, you know, he didn't make as much progress as he could. And what's frustrating
is not just that he had the power, but he also had the insight that slavery as an institution
was not a good institution.
And I can't help but wonder, in all of those other cases, Jefferson really didn't stand
anything to lose.
I mean, he didn't stand to lose from overthrowing monarchy.
He stood to gain from it.
Oh, if they had lost, he would have lost his life.
I mean, that was treason against the king to sign
on to that project and they won only because the French helped them if the
French hadn't done that. He could have been hanged. So he had something to lose
there but I see what you're saying. I think that that's true in the sense that
he didn't have as much to gain from fighting slavery. He had a lot to lose, however,
because I think Jefferson was probably the most talented politician of his time.
And he forged a party that lasted from his election through Jackson. Jackson considered himself to be a Jeffersonian.
Nobody's ever done that. Had that kind of political influence over that long a period of time.
And he didn't do that by making bad political calculations.
And we like to think, oh sure, if you had just tried hard enough, you could have convinced
Virginians and Southerners to vote slavery out of existence.
I think he looked at that and he knew
that that was not going to happen. And I think from the distance of history, we can say this could
have happened and that could have happened. But I don't think realistically that could have happened.
Slavery was going to end the way it ended. No one has given me a convincing scenario how in the United States
people could have just voted slavery out without a real, real fight. Sure, he could
have worked for that, but if he'd given his life to that, we would not be sitting
here talking about him. I don't believe. I think if he'd come back from France and
said, you know, I'm gonna work to end slavery. I don't think he would have been vice president.
I don't think he would have been president.
So I think for him politically, that was the choice to make, to do the things that he
could realistically have a success with.
And the things that he quite frankly cared more about than ending slavery.
And he was not, I don't believe in the right moment to do that.
There are people who argue that judging historical figures
to the lens of modern values and morals,
that it just doesn't work.
That in some ways our modern notions about racism
simply cannot be overlaid onto people living
in the 18th and 19th century.
In fact, President Trump weighed in on this,
in the context of a 19th century. In fact, President Trump weighed in on this, in the context of controversy over Confederate statues.
Take a listen.
This week it's Robert E. Lee.
I noticed that Stonewall Jackson's coming down.
I wonder, is it George Washington next week
and is that Thomas Jefferson the week after?
What do you make of this, Annette?
I hear what you're saying in terms of the difficulty
of superimposing our current values on the past. But at the same time, that hear what you're saying in terms of the difficulty of superimposing our current
values on the past.
But at the same time, that's what we have.
We have our current values.
And if we don't superimpose them on the past, then the past continues to live amongst
us.
Well, you know, I don't adhere to the idea that you don't make moral judgments.
I think history is a moral profession.
We don't just look back and say, oh, and here's how they slaughter the innocence and go move on.
I mean, we do, of course, bring our lens to all of this.
And we also have to think, to remember
that there were people at the time,
who had some of the same values that we do.
So I don't think it's enough to just say,
we can't judge people in the past
because I,
judge may be too strong a word.
You can certainly comment on, you can certainly point out the contradictions, you can point
out the differences, the vast, you know, distance between what people in the past thought
and what we think.
As for, you know, Washington and Jefferson and Monuments, I've talked about this before,
I would draw a clear line between the Confederates and the Confederacy and members of the founding
generation.
I think there's every difference between people who help to create the United States versus
people who try to destroy the United States.
I don't think that just because they're both in the past,
that we have to think of them as the same, because they're not the same.
They don't bear the same relation to us.
I mean, Jefferson has ideals.
Not all of Jefferson's ideals do we adhere to, but Jefferson through the declaration
and other of his writings, other of his actions, created a set of ideals that we still adhere to,
that still have meaning for us.
I don't know what the Confederacy means to us.
So I draw a distinction between those people, the people,
Stonewall Jackson and those people,
and people like Washington and Jefferson.
As a child and at you were the first African-American to integrate your school and in some ways you
have personally experienced our nation's struggle to discuss the legacy of slavery.
Now, I'm wondering, in studying the life of Thomas Jefferson, do you see echoes in the
contradictions that he had in the present day to some of the contradictions that he struggled
with, and perhaps ignore or rationalize?
Are they still alive with us today?
I think they're very much alive.
The fascinating thing about Jefferson is that in some ways he embodies the country.
I mean, the struggles that were within him, and that's when you go to Monticello, you
get to see the best in the worst of America.
And they're embodied in this person who was idealistic, but in some areas did not live
up to that.
And certainly, the idea of citizenship, first class citizenship for African American people
is not, has not come to pass.
I don't believe there are still issues there.
But yet we hold ourselves out as a melting pot.
So yes, a lot of Jefferson's contradictions are alive in us.
I don't think there's anybody in the founding generation who embodies that
so well or shows this so well. And that's what makes him a subject that we can't really
I think do it out and we can't push to the side because it's too much of a window into
us to who we are as Americans. I'm wondering do you ever think about Jefferson's
life and the contradictions he embodies and think about your own life and perhaps get on my plane every week to fly
back and forth between New York City and Cambridge, what am I doing to stop trafficking
in people, sex trafficking in people that I know is something that's a problem. I'm a
lawyer.
Why am I doing more about that?
There are just lots of things.
Now nothing is on the grand scale of Jefferson, as you mentioned before, but I'm not living
on the scale.
He was living.
I'm not the president.
I'm not in a bad...
I don't have that kind of power.
But yeah, yeah.
I think in all of us, there are things that we know are wrong.
And because of our other preoccupations, we say, well, that thing will take care of itself.
Somebody else will figure that out.
That's for someone else to deal with.
Even though we know that it...
No, we couldn't make a contribution.
So yeah, looking at him makes you think about yourself as well.
looking at him makes you think about yourself as well. And I'd go and read is a historian and law professor at Harvard University. We've
been talking today about her book co-authored with Peter O'Nuff, most
blessed of the patriarchs, Thomas Jefferson, and the Empire of the Imagination.
And thank you for joining us today on Hidden Brain.
Oh, thank you for asking me.
This week's show was produced and edited by Tara Boyle,
Parth Shah and Kimela Vargas Restrepo.
Our team includes Jenny Schmidt, Raina Cohen,
Thomas Liu, Laura Quarell, and Kat Shuknecht.
Today's show included performances by Sean Casey as Thomas Jefferson, Didier Davenque
as the Marquis de Lafayette and Jason Fuller as Israel-Jolette Jefferson.
Special thanks to Latissia Brock and Brian Dunn.
Our rants and heroes today are our NPR colleagues Heider Zaman, Dietria Heiz, Adiz Mune, Suraj Patel,
and Calvin No.
They have helped a hidden brain team with essential IT support in recent weeks.
We literally could not have put out the show without their hard work and skill.
Thank you Heider, Dietria, Adice, Suraj and Calvin.
One last thing, we are working on an episode about the power and perils of knowledge.
It's often said that when it comes to dealing with prejudice, it's best to know how the
world works.
If you are a person of color, it helps to know how racism works to be on guard for it.
Knowledge can protect you.
But there are times when ignorance might be helpful too.
If you knew people thought poorly of you,
this can be an impediment.
Not knowing might help you.
If you have a personal story you're willing to share
with Hidden Brain's audience,
that reveals both sides of this equation,
the power of knowledge, the perils of knowledge,
we'd love to hear about it from you.
We're particularly interested in questions related
to race or gender, but we'll be happy to hear
about other topics too.
Please find a quiet spot and record a voice memo
on your phone two or three minutes is plenty
and tell us your story.
We'll follow
up if we need more. Email your voice memo to HiddenBrain at NPR.org and use the subject
line Knowledge. Again, record a voice memo in a quiet spot and email it to us at Hidden
Brain at NPR.org using the subject line knowledge. Please include a phone number.
Thanks so much. I'm Shankar Vedantam and this is NPR.