Earlier this month, I explored the state of healthcare in the United States and how numbers alone cannot capture the deeper moral and civic questions beneath the surface. In April, I will turn to another topic where facts, memory, and meaning collide: the struggle over history itself.
Across the political spectrum, people accuse one another of
rewriting or erasing the past. Confederate monuments come down. Military bases
are renamed—sometimes more than once. Textbooks and school curricula are
revised. Museums rethink their exhibits. Even state flags are redesigned. Each
of these actions is framed by some as an assault on heritage and by others as
an act of moral repair.
The central question of my upcoming lecture is simple but
demanding: When do these actions erase history, and when do they represent an
attempt to care for the nation’s soul?
The Soul of a Nation
The idea of a national soul is ancient. Around 375 BCE,
Plato explored the soul of a city-state in The Republic, describing how
a community’s character, justice, and shared ideals shape its political life.
That idea has echoed across centuries of political thought: nations, like
individuals, have an inner life.
A national soul can be understood as:
- The
deep, animating collective spirit of a people
- The
core identity that binds a nation together
- A
shared set of ideals, values, and principles
- A
collection of enduring, aspirational commitments
- The
moral conscience that guides political, social, and economic life
- A
living inheritance that grows out of a shared remembered past
A nation’s history—its triumphs and its traumas—forms the
narrative through which people understand who they are, how they relate to one
another, and what is good and important. That narrative is never static. It is
shaped, revised, and sometimes contested as new generations reinterpret the
past.
When Does Change Become Erasure?
The tension arises because caring for the national soul
requires two things that can feel contradictory:
- Honoring
the past—even when it is painful, complicated, or uncomfortable.
- Refusing
to enshrine falsehoods—especially when they distort who we have been or
who we aspire to be.
Removing a monument, renaming a base, or revising a textbook
can be an act of erasure if it attempts to hide or sanitize history. But it can
also be an act of moral clarity if it helps a nation confront the truth more
honestly.
The difference lies in intention and outcome:
- Does
the action obscure the past, or does it illuminate it?
- Does
it narrow our understanding, or deepen it?
- Does
it silence part of the story, or make room for voices long ignored?
A healthy national soul requires the courage to face both
the good and the bad without flinching. It requires the discipline to
distinguish fact from fiction, memory from myth, and heritage from nostalgia.
Caring for the National Soul
Caring for the national soul is not a passive act. It
demands ongoing engagement with history—its achievements, its failures, and its
unresolved tensions. It asks us to hold complexity rather than retreat into
simplicity. It challenges us to build a shared narrative that is honest enough
to heal and hopeful enough to inspire.
The debate over “erasing history” is really a debate about
who we are and who we want to become. It is a struggle over memory, identity,
and the moral responsibilities of citizenship.
As April approaches, I am looking forward to exploring this
question: not to settle the debate, but to help us see it more clearly.
Erasing History—or Caring for our National Soul?
Tuesday, 4/21; 9:30 – 11:30 AM Pacific
Time
Osher Lifelong Learning Institute
California State University, East Bay
Register here
(Must be a member to register)


