A Georgia mom is outraged over an interactive lesson taught during her daughter’s field trip to the historic Mable House plantation in the city of Mableton, where third-graders were asked to simulate a slave auction by holding up signs containing dollar amounts equal to the prices of cars – except, in this instance, numbers indicated the value of humans.
“They lined the kids up. They had them to pick cars they wanted to be. So it was like $1,300, $2,000, $2,500, $3,000, and it ranged from like Honda, Acura, Lamborghini, Ferrari. Each kid chose a car, and basically she [the instructor] began to explain to them that they’re being sold. Each one of them had a real bill of sale in front of them, and she was explaining to them the cost analogy of them being sold then as a slave child today would be the equivalent of whatever car they were,” Gladese Cleaves told Fox News Digital on Monday.
Cleaves said her 9-year-old daughter came home and told her about the field trip by referring to one her friends as a Lamborghini and then referring to herself as a Ferrari. The comments caught her attention, so she called her oldest daughter, who chaperoned the event, to ask what happened.
She then contacted her younger daughter’s teacher at W.C. Abney Elementary School via email and spoke with her over the phone.
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“What was crazy is that the teacher, when I called… her response was, ‘I explained to the children that these were nice slave owners,'” Cleaves recalled. “This is exactly what she said to me. She said, ‘I explained to the children that these were nice slave owners because they treated the slave like family.’ I said, ‘Don’t say it again, Mrs. Westmoreland.’ There’s no way you could put nice and slave owner in the same sentence. There’s no way.”
She met with the principal, who, according to FOX 5 Atlanta, told parents the following in a letter:
“The lesson had never been part of the Mable House’s…
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