The Council of Heads of the National Council for the General Helenik (NPHC), an organization that represents nine of the Greek Black Settings, issued a joint statement on Tuesday, condemning efforts to oversight or nullify the National Museum of US -African History (NMAAHC), and contacted such measures with threats to narrate the nation.
Speaking on behalf of more than 2.5 million members worldwide, NPHC criticized attempts to “monitor, distort or dismantle America’s full and comprehensive history. The statement stressed the importance of continuous financing of institutions within the Smithsonian complex, especially NMAAHC, which the group described as a “vital and east educational resource” of national memory.
“From slavery to civil rights to cultural innovations that continue to form the world, the museum guarantees that these stories are unforgettable, denying or politicized.”
The statement also included praise for the secretary Loni J. The Council praised a Panch’s commitment to access, fairness and education, noting that its leadership “raised the mission of Smithsonian and expanded its importance to all Americans.”
NPHC, founded at the University of Howard in 1930, enhances collective work among its member organizations to address “mutual interest issues”. The Council indicated that the leadership of the Panch Secretary reflects its own mission to “enhance cooperative actions” and enhance democratic values through education and empowerment.
The council said: “We must support the institutions that honor our collective past and protect our common future.” “The National Museum of American -African History and Culture plays a vital role in that task, and we will continue to defend its preservation and progress.”
The statement concluded by calling for policy makers, teachers and citizens to reject the efforts made to divide the country into wrong information, and urge them to support the institutions committed to truth and unity.
Read the full statement that was published to NPHC official social media The channels below.
