Kevin Young reading at the Library of Congress (Photo provided by Wikimedia Commons)

By Stacy M. Brown
BlackPressUSA.com Senior National Correspondent

Kevin Young, the director of the National Museum of African American History and Culture (NMAAHC), is currently on personal leave and not leading the museum, according to Smithsonian officials. The leave began on March 14 and will continue for an โ€œundetermined period,โ€ according to Kevin Gover, the Smithsonianโ€™s under-secretary for museums and culture. Shanita Brackett, the museumโ€™s associate director of operations, has stepped in as acting director. Young has served as director since January 2021, succeeding Lonnie G. Bunch III after Bunch became Secretary of the Smithsonian. Under Youngโ€™s leadership, the museum launched a digital โ€œSearchable Museumโ€ in the fall of 2021 and kicked off its $350 million โ€œLiving Historyโ€ campaign the following year.

His unexpected leave comes as President Donald Trump escalates efforts to reshape national cultural narratives. A recent executive order issued by Trump directs Vice President J.D. Vance to work with the Smithsonian Board of Regents on content oversight. That directive has alarmed museum officials, historians, and members of the Black community, who see it as a direct attempt to influence how history is presented, particularly Black history. The order has cast a spotlight on the NMAAHC, which opened in 2016 under Bunchโ€™s leadership. Once praised for unearthing Americaโ€™s untold Black stories, the museum is now facing political scrutiny for content Trump labeled as divisive and anti-patriotic. Bunch addressed the situation in a memo to Smithsonian staff, writing that the institution โ€œwill continue to showcase world-class exhibits, collections, and objects, rooted in expertise and accuracy.โ€ He wrote that the Smithsonian โ€œremains steadfast in our mission to bring history, science, education, research, and the arts to all Americans.โ€

Youngโ€™s museum career began in 2005 at Emory University, where he taught English and creative writing and served as a curator at the universityโ€™s rare books library. In 2016, he became director of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture at the New York Public Library, one of the oldest Black cultural institutions in the United States. During his five-year tenure, he raised $10 million in funding, launched a literary festival, boosted attendance by 40 percent, and acquired archives from cultural icons, including Harry Belafonte, Sonny Rollins, and James Baldwin. An author of 16 books of poetry and nonfiction, Young also serves as poetry editor forย The New Yorker. The executive order follows Trumpโ€™s earlier efforts to dismantle racial equity initiatives, including his 2020 directive banning diversity training in federal agencies. Historians say those efforts have evolved into a larger campaign targeting how race, power, and history are discussed nationwide. Dr. Jerry W. Washington, an education expert who has written extensively about the cultural and political battles over historical memory, described the Trump-led effort as part of โ€œthe fight over American memory.โ€ In an article forย The Medium, Washington wrote, โ€œIt highlights a fundamental divergence not just in policy preference, but in how we interpret history, power, and truth itself.โ€

He pointed to the national backlash against critical race theory as evidence of a strategy designed to eliminate discussion of systemic racism and white privilege. โ€œCRT became a catch-all termโ€”a manufactured villain used to silence any acknowledgment of systemic racism, white privilege, or the real struggles of marginalized communities,โ€ Washington wrote. โ€œIt was never about theory. It was about control.โ€ Since Trumpโ€™s 2020 directive, more than 30 states have introduced or passed laws banning certain classroom discussions of race and history. Diversity, equity, and inclusion programs have been dismantled across school districts, colleges, and public agencies. The Smithsonian, which is considered the nationโ€™s most visible repository of historical scholarship, is now being pulled into that campaign. Bunch told staff that the Smithsonian would continue to work with its Board of Regents, which includes the Chief Justice, the Vice President, and members of Congress. He noted the boardโ€™s role in guiding the institution and its understanding of โ€œthe importance of scholarship, expertise, and service to the American public.โ€ Washington warned that whatโ€™s at stake is much deeper than a shift in policy. โ€œThis is about more than exhibits,โ€ he wrote. โ€œItโ€™s about erasing the truths that make America whole.โ€