Who Was Freedom Really Written For?
- Paul Rushworth-Brown

- قبل يوم واحد
- 4 دقيقة قراءة
By Amanda Smith
Rohn Hein’s The Valet’s Witness Forces Readers Inside America’s Greatest Contradiction
The Revolution Through Different Eyes
History often remembers the American Revolution through the voices of powerful men standing inside candlelit rooms, shaping the future of a nati

But during his appearance on Down Under Interviews, author Rohn Hein asked a far more uncomfortable question:
What about the people standing quietly outside those doors?
Hein’s novel The Valet’s Witness reimagines the drafting of the Declaration of Independence through the perspective of Edward Rutledge, the youngest South Carolina delegate to Congress, and Pompey, his enslaved Black valet.
The result is not simply a historical novel about America’s founding.
It is a novel about power, omission, memory, and the people history preferred not to hear.
Freedom and Liberty Beside Slavery
One of the most striking moments in the interview came when Hein described the central contradiction behind the Declaration itself.
“The delegates brought slaves to Philadelphia,” Hein explained during the conversation. “You do not see that information in the history books.”

That contradiction sits at the heart of The Valet’s Witness.
While Congress debates liberty and independence from England, the enslaved valets quietly observe the discussions unfolding around them. Pompey and the other Black servants hear speeches about freedom while fully understanding that freedom does not include them.
As Hein bluntly summarized:
“These white men have no idea what slavery is about.”
The novel repeatedly forces readers to confront the uneasy reality that many of the men championing liberty also depended economically and politically on slavery itself.
The Silence Inside the Declaration

Throughout the interview, Paul Rushworth-Brown repeatedly returned to one central question:
Why does the Declaration of Independence never mention slavery directly?
Hein’s answer was revealing.
“I think it was expedience,” he said. “They knew there was a contradiction between their words and their actions.”
According to Hein, the delegates understood slavery was politically explosive, yet independence from Britain remained their immediate priority. The issue was pushed aside rather than confronted.
“We’ll deal with this later,” Hein said, describing the attitude many delegates appeared to adopt.
The novel therefore moves deliberately away from a romanticized interpretation of the American founding and instead presents the Revolution as a negotiation over whose freedom mattered most.

Pompey: The Witness History Tried to Ignore
Pompey gradually emerges as the moral center of the novel.
Invisible socially, yet intellectually alert to everything unfolding around him, he represents a hidden layer of historical witnesses whose perspectives rarely survive official narratives.
Hein explained that the valets were present constantly — in committee rooms, taverns, dinner conversations, and private political discussions.
“They compared notes,” Hein explained. “They understood what freedom and liberty really was.”
In The Valet’s Witness, listening itself becomes a form of power.
The people excluded from authority often understand it more clearly than those exercising it.
History, Memory, and National Myth
The interview also moved beyond the eighteenth century into the present day.
Hein openly discussed his background in social justice work and reflected on how modern societies still struggle with difficult historical conversations. Referencing debates surrounding race and public memory in the United States, he argued that nations often protect founding myths emotionally as much as politically.
“We have the founding fathers up on such a high pedestal,” Hein said, “that any critique whatsoever is labeled as unpatriotic.”
Yet Hein does not frame the novel as an attack on America itself.
Instead, The Valet’s Witness asks readers to widen the historical frame and acknowledge the contradictions that existed from the very beginning.
Because history is rarely as simple as the stories nations tell themselves.
A Question That Still Echoes
Toward the close of the interview, Paul Rushworth-Brown posed a final question:
“If Pompey could stand outside Independence Hall today and speak directly to America, what would he say?”
Hein’s answer was simple:
“All men are created equal. Let’s practice that instead of just say it.”
That line lingered long after the conversation ended.
Not simply as commentary on the eighteenth century—but as a reminder that the tension between ideals and reality is never entirely confined to the past.
Some historical fiction recreates history.
The Valet’s Witness interrogates it.
Rohn Hein’s registration and synopsis for The Valet’s Witness were submitted through the official Down Under Interviews author registration process.
Continue Exploring the Human Cost of History
Some stories challenge the way nations remember themselves.
Others force us to confront the voices history tried to leave outside the room.
Watch more long-form author conversations exploring history, memory, power, and the lives often overlooked by official narratives.
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