Combating ignorance: Colombia restores history classes in school

Colombia will restore history classes in school 23 years after they controversially were removed from the curriculum.

Colombians’ knowledge of their own past has been weakened since 1994 when history was integrated in Social Sciences together with geography, democracy and constitutional law.

The drastic and controversial change in the curriculum has left many Colombians largely ignorant of their collective past.


Professor Oscar Almario García

Historical illiteracy

Just before 2017 came to an end, President Juan Manuel Santos signed a bill that obligates schools to restore national history in schools.

The bill was proposed by Senator Viviane Morales (Liberal Party), a former educator and prosecutor general.


Senator Viviane Morales

The country’s most prominent universities supported the initiative to curb young Colombians’ “historical illiteracy,” according to weekly Semana.

Which history to tell?

To restore historical knowledge is not a matter of dusting off the abandoned history books, according to historians who have found major flaws in the traditional curriculum.


Semana

Colombia’s most recent general history book was published in 1989, only five years before the subject virtually disappeared from school.

The general ignorance spurred some to distort national history for their personal convenience.


George Santanaya

Last year, a congresswoman of the powerful hard right Democratic Center party claimed that the 1928 banana massacre in which between hundreds and thousands of workers were killed by the military was “a communist myth.”

Colombia’s new history classes should focus on restoring citizens’ collective past, not to fuel nationalism but promote public understanding and “forge critical thought.”

 

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