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Mainstream, VOL LVIII No 34, New Delhi, August 8, 2020

Everyone’s an Antiracist. Now What? Recognizing that Black people deserve dignity isn’t progress | Erin Aubry Kaplan

Friday 7 August 2020

#socialtags

by Erin Aubry Kaplan

Recognizing that Black people deserve dignity isn’t progress.

The new unbridled enthusiasm for the cause of Black lives reminds me of the Dr. Seuss fable “Horton Hears a Who.”

A kindly elephant named Horton becomes aware of a whole planet of creatures called Whos living on a single speck of dust. Horton can hear the Whos perfectly, and accepts them as friends and equals. Horton’s friends, who can’t see or hear the Whos, denounce him as crazy, and a few set out to destroy the speck of dust.

It’s only when all the Whos raise their voices in a single chorus — “We are here!” — that they are heard by the larger world: In an instant, Horton’s friends’ skepticism turn into amazement, then into a celebration of the Whos, who they now know are real, and equal.

We are having a Horton moment. White people previously oblivious to the worst kind of racial oppression had their obliviousness shattered by the images of a police officer killing George Floyd.

The dam burst, reality rushed in, and a critical mass of whites and others finally saw — and heard, and felt — Black people as they never had before. Suddenly everyone is paying attention, loudly declaring their support and commitment to anti-racism, almost as if to make up for all the time they’d been in denial or silent.

This is where the Dr. Seuss story happily ends: by virtue of being recognized as equals by the wider world, the Whos are saved. They will never be devalued again.
Unfortunately, we are not living in a Dr. Seuss story. The burgeoning new white consciousness about Black lives, though significant and encouraging, is not an ending, but a beginning.

Recognizing that Black people matter as much as all other Americans is only acknowledging what’s always been true. Embracing Blackness as a something of value and dignity is a baseline for progress, not progress; it is moving into position at the starting line, but it is not the race.

Going from the current enthusiasm to doing the million things that need to be done — simultaneously — to start correcting systemic racism (whoever thought that phrase would trend on social media?) will be daunting, not least because it is unprecedented.
The last large-scale effort aimed at improving Black lives was the war on poverty back in the ’60s, and the backlash to that was swift and relentless. In some ways, we’re still living it. Critics of the war on poverty didn’t object just to money being spent, they objected to the notion of helping Black folks specifically because they were not worth helping, at least not to that degree. The idea of Black well-being being worth only so much became so embedded in our political life, we stopped seeing it. Now, it is coming back into focus.

It has taken a long time to get focused. It’s sobering to realize that the baseline message of Black life mattering has been running for generations, from Sojourner Truth’s anguished question, “Ain’t I a woman?” in 1851 to the Black sanitation workers in Memphis proclaiming, “I Am a Man,” in 1968 to Jesse Jackson’s revision of that declaration with “I Am Somebody” in the ’70s and ’80s, to the hashtag Black Lives Matter in 2013.

Over and over, Black people have asserted the simple but radical truth of their own humanity and worthiness, and over and over, America has not fully heard them. African-Americans kept up the messaging because they’ve had to — they’ve always known it’s Step 1 in our national process of racism recovery, and as anyone in a 12-step program can attest, you can’t make real progress with the higher steps until you get the first one right.

Our recovery has been complicated by the nature of our particular addiction. As a society we’ve been addicted to injustice — from slavery to lynchings to segregation to police brutality — all made possible by our repeated failure to embrace Step 1. Now that we are owning up to that failure, things look to be changing.

But can we change? History and culture are against it. Another one of our great national addictions is convenience, fueled by the uniquely American expectation that things essential for daily living be made cheap, easy and painless.

Racism is a form of convenience, in the sense that it’s designed to make life easier for its beneficiaries. So is white privilege — the phenomenon of not having to think about the costs of oppression, or about Black people at all.

Antiracism requires the opposite: engagement. We are starting to see it in the demands for police reforms, in the growing white rejection of symbols of white oppression like Confederate monuments and flags, even figures of presidents.

But this is all part of Step 1. Being truly antiracist will require white people to be inconvenienced by new policies and practices, legal and social, that affect everything in everyone’s daily lives, from jobs to arts and publishing.

It’s one thing to declare your support for Black Lives Matter with a lawn sign and quite another to give up segregated schools, or always seeing yourself and people like you as the center of the moral universe. The privilege to not engage is one that many may be loath to give up, even if they believe engagement is the right thing to do.

And yet the most optimistic part of me says that it could be that what has stood for so long is simply falling away. It could be that the latest Black assertion of “We are here” will be the one that breaks through with cumulative force of years of such assertions, opening a floodgate that will remain open not because whites allow it, but because it was supposed to be open all along.

If that happens, the road to recovery will not be just an ideal, but a straight line we can actually see.

Erin Aubry Kaplan, a contributing opinion writer, teaches writing at Antioch University, Los Angeles, and is the author of “Black Talk, Blue Thoughts, and Walking the Color Line” and “I Heart Obama.”


(Courtesy: The New York Times, July 6, 2020 | THis article is reproduced here for educational and non-commercial use)

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