Saturday, December 27, 2008

North Carolina May Pay Reparations for Eugenics Program That Lasted Until 1975

Posted by AlterNet Staff, AlterNet at 2:22 AM on December 26, 2008.


A state House panel recommended the state give $20,000 to victims of the eugenics program

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Associated Press:

North Carolina lawmakers pushed Thursday to offer reparations to thousands of victims of a forced sterilization program now recognized as a shameful part of U.S. history.

A state House panel recommended the state give $20,000 to victims of the eugenics program, which sterilized about 7,600 people between 1929 and 1975 who were considered to be mentally handicapped or genetically inferior. Though North Carolina and several other states have apologized for such programs, none have offered reparations.

"Yes, it is ugly. It's not something that we're proud of," said state Rep. Larry Womble, D-Forsyth, who has been working on the issue for several years. "But I'm glad that North Carolina has done more than any other state to step forward and not run away from it."

Lawmakers in the full General Assembly will have to approve the idea. They convene next month.

Illinois was the first state to offer a eugenics program in 1907 as social reformers advocated for a way to cleanse society of the mentally handicapped and mentally ill. Many states curtailed their sterilizations after World War II, recognizing it was similar to the actions taken by Adolf Hitler in Nazi Germany.

North Carolina, however, moved ahead aggressively after the war, conducting about 80 percent of procedures after 1945 and growing the program to be the third largest in the nation, behind only California and Virginia.

Most of those sterilized in the 1960s were poor black women.

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Tagged as: north carolina, eugenics, forced sterilization

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