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Harvard Fights Its Past and Faces Fallout: Researcher Fired Over Too Many Slaves

✍️ Harvard Uncovers Deep Roots in Slavery – Then Fires the Researcher Who Found Them

Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1913. Photograph: Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images

Hey everyone,
Today I want to talk about something that honestly shocked me—and probably will surprise you too.

While doing my usual reading, I came across this story about Harvard University’s connection to slavery, and I couldn’t believe what I found. The university had launched a project to explore its historical ties to slavery… but when the researcher found more than 900 enslaved people linked to Harvard, and 500 living descendants, they fired him.

Yep, fired. Why? Because the numbers were “too high.”
It made me pause and think: how far are some institutions really willing to go when it comes to confronting their past?

The Researcher Who Dug Too Deep

The man behind the findings, Richard Cellini, was leading Harvard’s “Legacy of Slavery” initiative. His job was to uncover and document the university’s ties to slavery. But when his team’s work revealed a lot more than expected, things took a turn. According to reports, Harvard’s administration started applying pressure—not to keep digging—but to stop. And eventually, they cut him and his entire team loose.

That part really stings. Isn’t the whole point of research to uncover the truth, no matter how uncomfortable?

Photographs of enslaved people in the US, possibly the oldest known in the country, were discovered in the basement of a Harvard University museum in 1977. Photograph: Bettmann Archive Take from theguardian.com/

So… What Happens Now?

The project has now been outsourced to another organization. But from what I read, the work isn’t being done with the same transparency.
I think it’s important that universities don’t just acknowledge history when it’s convenient. These findings matter, especially for the descendants of the people who were enslaved.

Why This Matters to All of Us

This isn’t just about Harvard. A lot of prestigious institutions—around the world—have similar histories. And this shows us the tension between truth and reputation. If even a world-class university struggles with being honest about its past, what does that say about accountability elsewhere?

For me, it’s a reminder that education isn’t just about the future—it’s also about owning the past.

Let me know what you think. Should universities do more to recognize and support the descendants of those affected by their history?

Stay informed,
– BrightmindAI

Gallery of the report:

The grave of Cicely, a 15-year-old ‘Negro servant’ of the Rev William Brattle, a treasurer at Harvard College, at the Old Burying Ground just outside Harvard Yard on 27 April 2022, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Photograph: Charles Krupa/AP

Original reporting by The Guardian.

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