I have a wide range of friends. It is a blessing and a
curse. Specifically, in trying times when racial tensions are on the rise, I
have a bit of an advantage over some of my academic friends who are more
insular: a steady stream of outraged and outrageous comments from people on the
opposite end of the political spectrum from me comes pouring over my facebook
feed. It’s like reading the comments section of a news article. On the plus
side, you get to know what a lot of people are thinking. On the minus side, you
get to know what a lot of people are thinking.
For example, today I saw that several of my
ultra-conservative friends were passing around a meme saying that tomorrow,
July 15, is the day that Black Lives Matter protesters (“don’t call them
protesters, call them terrorists,” Sarah Palin advises us) across the country
have a coordinated plan to go on a 37-city killing spree. And for every person
sharing that meme, there are at least a dozen comments from scared white people
freaking out. If you try to tell them that BLM is a peaceful movement, they
remind you that BLM has called for a moment of silence for the guy who shot all
those people in Texas last week. Except that is not true, it’s just something
Donald Trump has been saying in his speeches and no one anywhere has been able
to find a shred of evidence to support its veracity. Or they tell you the
stories of all the little children who have died all around the country because
they couldn’t reach the hospital in time, due to the fact BLM protesters had blocked
the interstate. Which is also totally untrue; in fact, there is evidence of the
opposite, protesters expediting emergency vehicles through. Several people have
deeply disappointed me by spreading memes about how funny it would be to run
over protesters with a truck and kill them.
I have unfollowed or blocked a lot of people this
week.
I have to be honest, for over a week now I have been
suffering conflicting feelings. On the one hand, I have felt a sense of duty,
as a historian of race and as an ally and as a human being in general, to speak
out about what’s been going on (the shootings of two black men by police,
caught on video, and the mass shooting of police and bystanders at a protest
rally in Texas.)
But on the other hand, I’m tired. It just keeps
coming, an endless onslaught. And with each new wave, more of my white friends,
relatives and acquaintances that I thought were relatively sane have joined the
cacophony of condemnation for Black Lives Matter- a movement calling for an end
to unprovoked police shootings of unarmed black men. I had just steeled myself
up to address this very familiar topic yet again, for the umpteenth time, when
the mass shooting happened and the meager wind was knocked completely out of my
sails because I knew the flames were now going to be fanned even higher.
At the same time, I realize it is my very own position
of privilege that allows me to choose
whether to engage with this stuff or not –it is not cast upon me against my
will day in and day out, as it is for my friends of color.
But I’ve remained silent long enough. Now I am going
to do my small part to try to bring historical context into the fray. I have already
gone over most of the pertinent information ad
infinitum. I wrote a detailed history of why white America finds male black
bodies threatening HERE two years ago. I wrote a brief history of how all this
started HERE, recently. So today I am going to take a different tack.
Today’s
historical context will be an examination of how white America has
traditionally reacted to calls to end violence against blacks.
I’ll begin with a few examples.
For the quarter-century leading up to the Civil War,
abolitionists (white and black) were calling for an immediate end to slavery,
highlighting the institution’s cruelty and inhumanity to the general public, by
means of newspapers, slave narratives, and works of fiction such as Uncle Tom’s Cabin.
White Southerners, however, insisted that this was a
gross exaggeration. Slaves were taken care of and quite content, until those
northern troublemakers stirred them up. The plantation system was an idyllic
one, with everyone being one big happy family.
As abolitionists continued to undermine that narrative
by publishing the accounts of successful runaway slaves bearing tales of
torture and brutality, white Southerners became resentful. You insult our
honor, O Damn Yankees, by implying that our way of life –that works fine for us
and which everyone is happy with, even the slaves –is immoral, somehow. How
dare you. We are not the immoral ones, you are, for trying to tell us what to
do and implying the federal government could make it legal for you to do so,
thus depriving us of liberty and proving yourselves un-American.
And then came Nat Turner. There had been other
abortive slave revolt plots in the nineteenth century, but this one had teeth
and a lot of white people were killed before the rebels were caught and
executed. Paranoid white slave-owners around the South killed slaves they
thought were “acting funny.” Slave patrols were increased and laws made
stricter. Black men out alone on the roads without their papers were surely up
to no good, and plotting to murder white folks.
And then the violence got worse. More murders of
slaves, then Bleeding Kansas, then a Civil War (and if you think that conflict
was not about slavery, I address that HERE).
Let’s jump ahead half-a-century, to the end of
Reconstruction and the dawning of the Jim Crow era… the period of time that
African American historians call The Nadir, because it was the low point of
African American history. By the turn of the century, lynching black men had
practically become a national pastime. Whole families flocked to watch the
spectacle, with snacks and postcard mementos on sale.
Brave black leaders like Ida Wells worked tirelessly
to get the general public to condemn this behavior, and to get the federal
government to do something about it. Race riots had also become increasingly
common –and in the 19th and early 20th century, “race
riot” meant a mob of white people going on a murderous rampage against
minorities. In the midst of all this, a historical novel (I use both terms
lightly) called The Clansman was
adapted into a film by D.W. Griffith- the first blockbuster, Birth of a Nation. It not only made a
fortune, it spurred the rebirth of the Ku Klux Klan, which by the mid-1920s was
huge all around the country (by some estimates one out of every seven white men
in the country were members.) The movie depicted brutish ex-slaves and their
Yankee manipulators as ruining the South and wantonly raping Southern white
women, with the valiant KKK arising to stop the injustice. This fed into real
life, as the year after the end of WWI (in which many blacks served in France
and saw a desegregated society, returning home with a military bearing and less
patience for racial bullying) saw the “Red Summer” of 1919, in which black
communities were attacked all around the U.S. with countless lives lost.
Half-a-century after that we have the Black Freedom
Era (Civil Rights followed by Black Power). Same patterns: segregationists
denied there was a problem, everybody’s perfectly happy down here until you
liberals and communists start stirring them up. The segregationists got
resentful. Then there was fear of social upheaval if the status quo was
disrupted, especially when younger blacks like Stokely Carmichael moved from
nonviolent resistance to calls for black self-defense. Then the violence
escalated.
This, then, is the pattern:
1. Blacks
and their white allies accuse some whites, and especially the structured status
quo, of being violent against blacks (or being in favor of same).
2. Racist
whites –usually not thinking of themselves as racist at all –deny that there is
a problem. Or if there is, it is being caused by the agitations of blacks and
their allies.
3. Racist
whites start to get defensive, insulted at the accusation they could be
engaging in wrong behavior.
4. Those
defensive whites become increasingly paranoid and fearful, specifically that
those uncontrollable blacks are going to come after them.
5. Violence
–especially violence against blacks by whites –gets much worse.
6. Much
like the aftermath of the Salem Witch trials, the mob starts to get a little
embarrassed about the excesses they have gone to (though few would admit it),
and it peters out. Some are apologetic. Then everything is back to normal, with
the status quo continuing as always. The people who were so paranoid,
resentful, and enraged have calmed down and take the new calm as evidence the
problems have all been solved and now everything is great again. Let’s not
bring it up anymore, it will only cause more trouble.
Note how much this sounds like an abusive marriage.
Note how much this sounds like events of the past four years.
The only way to ever break this cycle is for the
majority of white people to step back and actually SEE what has been going on,
see and acknowledge, instead of being defensive and fragile. To see what the
momentum of the great American race machine has repeatedly led us into, and
resolve to really do something about it. But it starts with acknowledgment, a
step most white Americans somehow seem incapable of doing.
And those of us who are in that position of privilege
and power who have figured it out? It is our duty to keep trying to make
everyone else see, and to lend our utmost support to our brothers and sisters
of color. That is not “white guilt”; that is white responsibility, the responsibility
to use our very privilege in the system that intrinsically benefits us to work
against that system and help dismantle it (to help do so, using our position, not to muscle our way into the role
of telling our partners of color how to experience their own oppression or
present ourselves as “white saviors.”)
No comments:
Post a Comment