NY Post
 
History Channel plans to remake historically  problematic ‘Roots’
By _Eric  Fettmann_ (http://nypost.com/author/eric-fettmann/)  
November 11, 2013
 
In the wake of successful slavery-themed movies like “12 Years a Slave,” “
The  Butler” and “Lincoln,” the History Channel just announced plans to 
remake  “Roots,” the landmark 1977 mini-series that drew record ratings. How 
will they  handle the hoax problem? 
“Roots” was based on the late Alex Haley’s Pulitzer Prize-winning runaway  
best-seller, which was billed as a factual account (albeit with some 
fictional  embellishments) of his family’s history from Africa through slavery 
in 
the South  to present times. All this was said to be based on generations of 
oral history  corroborated by painstakingly researched outside documents. 
But as I wrote in these pages back in 2002 (when ABC, which aired the  
original series, declined to broadcast a 25th anniversary tribute), historians  
and genealogists now widely agree that “Roots” has been discredited as a  
historical hoax. 
More than a decade later, most people remain totally unaware of the 
troubling  issues behind “Roots” — or simply don’t want to hear that this 
still-acclaimed  work was essentially a fake. 
That view is shared even by such noted African-American historians as  
Harvard’s Henry Louis Gates, a Haley friend who conceded that it’s time to  “
speak candidly” and admit that “it’s highly unlikely that Alex actually found 
 the village from whence his ancestors sprang,” adding that it was not “
strict  historical scholarship.” The late John Henrik Clarke, dean of 
Afrocentrist  scholars, said he “cried real tears when I realized that Haley 
was 
less than  authentic.” 
Genealogists, eager to retrace the historical steps Haley claimed he took 
in  his 12-year search for his family heritage, discovered this early on: 
Documents  didn’t match any information Haley cited; the dates were all wrong 
and so was  the supposed slave lineage. Elizabeth Shown Mills, editor of the 
National  Genealogical Society Quarterly, went so far as to denounce Haley’s 
 “subterfuge.” 
And the first half of the book — Kunta Kinte’s life in Africa — was 
blatantly  plagiarized from an earlier novel by anthropologist Harold 
Courlander, 
who sued  Haley, accepting a $650,000 settlement after the court’s expert 
witness  concluded that the copying in the book and the movie was “clear and 
irrefutable  . . . significant and extensive.” 
That deal was made after the judge hearing the case, alarmed not only by 
the  extent of the copying but also by Haley’s repeated perjury in court, 
pressed the  sides to settle, then sealed the official file from public view. 
The judge later  admitted (in a BBC documentary that has never run on American 
TV) that he  “didn’t want to destroy” Haley and his reputation. 
Perhaps the most damning exposé of Haley’s historical hoax came in a  
devastating 1993 Village Voice cover piece by Philip Nobile, who’d had access 
to  
Haley’s personal papers before they were broken up and auctioned off. There 
he  found compelling evidence that the non-plagiarized section of the book 
had been  primarily written not by Haley but by his longtime editor at 
Playboy magazine,  Murray Fisher. 
Moreover, the BBC located a tape of the famous session in Gambia with the  
griot, or oral historian, who supposedly made the link between Haley’s slave 
 forebears and their African ancestor, Kunta Kinte. It showed the griot’s 
story  being repeatedly corrected by Gambian officials and Haley himself 
specifically  asking for a tale that fit his predetermined narrative. 
“Roots” — both book and history — touched an understandable nerve in 
American  society. As Gates has noted, it “captured everyone’s imagination.” 
And it was a  story that African-Americans and well-meaning whites very much 
wanted to be an  accurate depiction of slavery’s evils. 
But to suggest that an ostensible work of history shouldn’t be held  
accountable for its deceptions merely because its heart is in the right place 
is  
paternalism at its worst. This sentiment explains why there has been so 
little  coverage of this over the years. (Haley himself once compared anyone 
attacking  the historical truth of “Roots” to Holocaust deniers.) 
Yet now the History Channel plans to revive “Roots” for a new generation.  
Asked if the new series will be presented as fact or if the myriad 
inaccuracies  will be addressed, a network spokeswoman replied: “History is 
taking 
everything  into consideration as we move forward through the development 
process.” 
No doubt the new “Roots” will tell a dramatic story and most likely will 
be  compelling viewing. But it may well be short on actual  history.

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