I'm not proud of this. I mean, I'm not a smart aleck. I tell auditorium classrooms full of students that I don't hate myself or my skin or anybody else or their skin either, but White superiority is a lie and White supremacy is fascist bullshit. With or without anything I say or write.
Every once in a while, though, I know I'm about to take most White folks and even some African-Americans to the next level, if I can. And that's what I'm doing today.
Last Wednesday night about 7:30 p.m., two young Black men alledgedly robbed a McDonald's fast food store about thirty miles south of where I live. Not a remarkable occurrance given the fact that young African-American males have been summarily shut out of the job market and not just recently, either. The young Black man who tipped me to the story I'm writing about here the morning after it unfolded, while initially coming across as out of place at the university, adeptly quoted statistics about the odds for him and his brothers as soon as he decided it wouldn't piss me off. They know how it works. And growing up with this knowledge must really take a toll over time.
When I stand up in front of a classroom where a third of the students are young people of color and I say, "According to the U.S. Department of Justice, African-American males born in 2001 have a 1 in 3 likelihood of going to prison," I wince inside. I say it like I'm just rolling off some piece of theoretical information, but I can feel the recoil inside me as I say it, like a pistol shooting into the soft flesh of ethereal bodies arrayed before me. And I hate my job at that moment because I choose to tell the truth no matter what the consequences.
How must it feel to be a young Black man and know that all the odds are stacked against you? You might survive. You might get lucky. You might be one of the two-thirds that doesn't go to prison. You might get a college degree and a good job and a hot car and a beautiful wife. And then you might have sons who make it, too. But...
It's always out there. The Boogey Man of White Supremacy. He rocks Black male babies to sleep at night and slips them the milk of internalized oppression, undermining their faith in life and their belief in themselves and their hope for any future -- no matter how hard their guardians try to protect them. And they grow weaker and more depressed and sometimes more belligerent on that milk. And if Henry Louis Gates can get busted, then what protection is there for a poverty-stricken young Black man in the inner city (or for any young Black man anywhere in the U.S., for that matter)?
When I think about the long, dark road that life in this country has been for people of color and most particularly African-Americans, I stand before the Universe ashamed that I haven't done more than I have. And when I hear that Ronald Darensburg, a young man just barely turned twenty, who was a student at my school until last Wednesday night stuck up a fast food joint at gunpoint and then died in a car wreck trying to flee the police, my heart breaks.
Yes, he could have made different choices. After all, lots of people suffer all over the world without ever robbing anyone. But why is it that we demand as a society that no matter how attacked their psyches are on a daily basis from birth, young Black men must never demonstrate any response to it? While we're busy wanting to hold them responsible for their decisions, when are we going to consider -- at the very least -- the responsibility, as well, of people in a society that hangs these young men out to dry, no matter how hard their families try to come between them and the pain they drown in?
I've been thinking this week that maybe I should have some small cards printed to hand out when I run into White people who ignore what they secretly know and sanctimoniously judge African-Americans, while preening in what they perceive as their White superiority. You know the type. Like the ones commenting on the article about the robbery and the subsequent deaths of two young men and the nightmare of mothers and families who will grieve every Christmas for the rest of their lives. The cards will read simply: "May you be born Black next time."
are those statistics for right now? do they change? as days go by? what are the statistics for women? and where do you find this out?
ReplyDeleteBeen wanting to mail myself to another planet lately...
sigh
The statistics for women are not nearly as bad, Sorrow. African-American women carry a different kind of burden. They have to contend with both racism and sexism (a double whammy), but they're not imprisoned at the same rate. If you go to the different links in the post, you find the sources. Princeton, Harvard, the Department of Justice -- all the biggies do the research over and over. Like they expect it to get better (it keeps getting worse) or like they want to rub it in or something. Let me know before you take off. I might join you.
ReplyDeleteThe cards are a good idea.
ReplyDeleteCondolences.
Also, there's a scholarly journal, _Race Traitor_, http://racetraitor.org/ -- pretty good, I was going to say send them some writings but I see they seem to be on some kind of hiatus, perhaps one should investigate.
Thanks for the tip, Profacero. I need to look into it a bit more, but the mission statement is veeeeery interesting.
ReplyDeleteFalling in love with a black man in this society is a risky thing. Knowing all the facts mentioned in this blog and knowing the state of the Black pyshce at this point in time, one must be fully prepared for anything, at any given time if one is to survive and perhaps, go on to thrive. After being in a relationship with a black man in this society for about three years I recieved a phone call at 4:15 AM one morning saying that my "love" had been shot and was on the way to the hospital..This night was a wake up call to me that oppression is not a topic to discuss on blogs or read about on the pages of scholarly journals, it lives with me. I coexist with it. To be black in America is a burden, to love black in America is a shroud of sorrow....
ReplyDeleteThe cards are also an amazing idea, can I have a few?
ReplyDeleteYour words on loving Black are very moving, @rijino1. And that is one of Black women's burdens I mentioned above to Sorrow. I have loved Black, but it's not the same because society doesn't hold me in the same fires. Did you ever read The Beautiful Struggle by Ta-Nehisi Coates? It's very poetic and very powerful. I think you'd like it. The library should have it. If they don't, suggest they buy it.
ReplyDeleteAnd I'd absolutely share my cards with you, sister.
you all will never kno wut is and wut is not to and supposed to happen until you put yourself in a postistion to do wut sumbody smart ass says will happen and geting involved wit it and seeing wut can happen...
ReplyDeleteilycuz,,,,
Anonymous, I invite you to write me at changeseeker@gmail.com to help me better understand. If you don't teach me, how will I know?
ReplyDeleteAnonymous, I may not know what it is like first hand to experience the things you have or will ever experience. But I do love a man who has and I have shared in his struggles, trials, downfalls, and rebounds... rehabilitation from the heartaches so often caused by woes within the black community and also the many influences without. We all internalize some things, but it is most beneficial to teach others about your struggle. Share the lessons you have learned and hopefully you can begin to reap the harvests you plant. Peace and blessings ♥
ReplyDelete