I would be careful with the whole "shying away" statement as it seems to imply that is the motivation of those who are looking to put less emphasis on slavery when telling the multitude of black stories that exist.
I used that
exact phrase deliberately because of my own family’s history- some published in books, some only passed by word of mouth.
Individuals in my family can trace our heritage to at least 4-5 continents. Some of our ancestors came here freely, but not all. There’s pretty good evidence some of my family’s American ancestors owned some of our other ancestors. In some cases, that’s led to reunification. In others, barriers were strengthened.
And this knowledge is passed along as thoroughly as possible. We don’t “shy away” from it because
there’s danger in not knowing. Putting aside the fact branches of our family that would love to see a return America to pre-1860s dynamics, there’s
modern evils to address.
In the 1990s, there was a
serious rekindling of antisemitism in the black community, and two of my (then teenaged) male cousins were headed down that path. Since their jackass dad didn’t care, it fell to me to tell them about themselves.
Nobody had ever told them our mutual grandmother was a convert to Christianity. Our great-grandmother was Jewish. She could almost pass, but her mixed race still got her ostracized from parts of the family. Her skills as a modiste (and remaining family contacts), however, gave her enough power to occasionally say “No.” to certain requests made by whites.
That truth helped short-circuited my cousins’ overt flirtations with at least THAT form of bigotry…though the younger occasionally still shows spasms of it.
As someone said its not known for sure whether Yasuke was a slave or not but its easily accepted by most because of how prominent slavery has been tied to black identity.
As
I said in that context, I don’t know the truth of it either way, and I hope whichever proves false gets done away with.