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Tuesday, January 25, 2011

When Racism Masquerades as Something Else

    This was forwarded to me by an old friend:  one of the first black students at Duke University in 1967. 

     Don't let the virulent hatred of Obama's presidency - veiled in "policy differences" - fool you.  Just ask someone raised around bigotry. 
   Carlos Dews is an author, a professor of English literature, and chairman of the Department of English Language and Literature at John Cabot University in Rome.

‘'The nigger show."
     I first heard this expression used to describe the Obama administration during a visit to my hometown in East Texas during the early summer of 2009.  I understood what the epithet meant: Our minds are made up, the president lacks legitimacy, and there is nothing he can do that we will support. I was not surprised to hear such a phrase.

     I grew up in the 1960s during the ragged end of the Jim Crow era, where many of the books in my school library were stamped Colored School, meaning they had been brought to the white school when the town was forced to integrate the public school system. I recall my parents had instructed me, before my first day of elementary school, not to sit in a chair where a black child had sat. And I remember my sister joked that her yearbook, when it appeared at the end of her first year of integrated high school, was in "black and white."
     The outward signs of racism of my home state have now disappeared, but racial hatred remains. My father and his friends still use the word nigger to refer to all black people, and the people of my hometown don't hesitate to spout their racist rhetoric to my face, assuming I agree with them. I hold my tongue for the sake of having continued access to this kind of truth I learned long ago how not to accept the hatred I was being taught and how to survive not having done so. More recently, I realized that I also learned another lesson: how to recognize racism when it masquerades as something else.
     More than 40 years after my first experiences with racism, I am thousands of miles away in Rome, but surrounded by ghosts. Last year, I received a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts for a community program called the  Big Read, which sponsors activities to encourage communities to come together to read and discuss a single book. I chose Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird, in part because I thought that some of the most salient issues in the novel - racism, classism, xenophobia, the Jim Crow era - were perhaps relevant to an increasingly diverse, contemporary Italy.
     That there is racism in Italy is obvious to anyone who pays attention to current affairs. In fact, during the first week of the Big Read Rome, a story in one of Italy's national newspapers detailed the experience of a  Nigerian woman being called sporca nera (essentially, dirty nigger) by two women she asked to stop smoking on a Roman bus.
     But I never imagined that consideration of the novel would prove so relevant to a country that had just elected its first black president. Ironically, until the election of Barack Obama, my discussions of racism in the United States seemed historical. I felt that with the passage of the civil rights legislation of the mid-1960s, the country had turned a corner,  that the slow evaporation of overt racism was perhaps inevitable. Now, my personal experience of Southern racism feels current and all too familiar. A  news story about the Big Read that appeared in La Repubblica on Sept. 20 (unaware that my grant was awarded during the Bush  administration),  presciently brought Rome, Obama, To Kill a Mockingbird, and racism together in its headline: "Obama brings antiracist book to Rome." 

     Jimmy Carter was lambasted for having recently explained that the vehemence with which many Americans resist Obama's presidency is an expression of racism. Carter was accused of fanning the flames of racial misunderstanding  by labeling as "racist" what on the surface could be perceived as legitimate policy differences. Like Carter, as a white Southern man, I can see beyond the seemingly legitimate rhetoric to discern what is festering behind much of the opposition to Obama and to his administration's policy initiatives. I also have access, via the racist world from which I came, direct confirmation of the racial hatred toward Obama.
     The veiled racism I sense in the United States today is couched, in public discourse at least, in terms that allow for plausible deniability of racist intent. And those who resist any policy initiative from the Obama administration engage in a scorched-earth policy that reminds me of the self-centered white flight, the abandonment of public schools, and the  proliferation of private schools, that followed the 1954 Brown v. Board of  Education decision to desegregate public schools. The very people, like my own rural, working-class family back in East Texas, who stand to gain from  the efforts of the Obama administration and the Democratic Congress are,  because of their racism, willing to oppose policies that would benefit them  the most. Their racism outweighs their own self-interest.
     Unfortunately, racists in the United States have learned one valuable lesson since the 1960s: They cannot express their racism directly. In public, they must veil their racial hatred behind policy differences. This obfuscation  makes direct confrontation difficult. Anyone pointing out their racist motivations runs the risk of unfairly playing "the race card." But I know what members of my family mean when they say - as so many said during the town hall meetings in August - that they "want their country back." They want it back, safely, in the hands of someone like them, a white person.  They feel that a black man has no right to be the president of their country.
    During a phone conversation a few weeks after Obama's election, my father lamented that he and my mother might have to stop visiting the casinos in Shreveport, La.: Given Obama's election, "the niggers are already walking  around like they own the place. They won't even give up their seats for white women anymore. I don't know what we're going to do with 'em."     

      My students often ask me how I managed to avoid accepting the lesson in racism offered by my family. From the time I was 4 or 5 years old - roughly the same age as Scout Finch, the narrator of To Kill a Mockingbird - I  recall knowing that I didn't agree with racism More important, my paternal grandmother provided me with the encouragement that I could ignore what I  was being taught. She provided me with the courage to resist.
 
My grandmother hoped that my father and his father represented the last  generations of the type of Southern man that had shaped her life - virulently racist, prone to violence, proud of their ignorance, and self-defeatingly stubborn. It was a type of Southern man that she hoped and prayed I could avoid becoming.
     However, my father and his father were not the last of their kind; their racial hatred has been passed on. My grandmother, if she were alive, would recognize the same tendencies among many of the people who shout down politicians and bring guns to public rallies. She would also see how the only change they have made is to replace overt racist epithets with more euphemistic language.
     Rather than seeing my home state and its racist attitudes, slowly, over time, pulled in the direction of more acceptance, the country as a whole has become more like the South, the racial or cultural equivalent of what is called the Walmartization of American retail.
     It might be easy to see literature as impotent in the face of the persistence and adaptability of racism. But I continue to believe in the transformative potential of literature and its ability to provide an alternative view of the world. And for children who are not lucky enough to have grandmothers like mine, I believe that books like To Kill a Mockingbird can provide inoculation against the virus that is racism.


Thursday, January 6, 2011

Gratitude and Generosity

Nature's beauty is generous
    A few years ago I was in a checkout line at the local Safeway.  There was an older fellow in front of me.  He was buying just a few things and some cookies.  He wanted to get a second box of cookies but I could tell he didn't have enough money, because he put some money down, counted his coins, and shook his head and looked downcast.   He wasn't exactly disheveled, but he wasn't wearing designer jeans either.  After a quick moment of realizing he was a retiree on a fixed income, I stepped up, put a few dollars down and  told him to enjoy both boxes or something like that.  He gave a surprised look, then pleased, and went on his way.  Many's the time over the years has some stranger been generous or helpful to me, so here was a chance to pay back a little.
     I've had this idea for years of doing a book called "50 Ways to be Generous."   We're born with it, but we also need to be shown how to do it.  My parents were good providers but we didn't have a home with emotional generosity.  They didn't draw me out so I could give to others.  Most of what I know about being generous I've learned from watching other people.   I remember when a dear friend of mine was diagnosed with leukemia her friends rallied around her and organized blood donations, rides to the hospital, food for the icebox, baby sitting ....  It was beautiful to see.  Generosity is  also something as simple as someone letting me cut into a long line of traffic or holding the door open.
     I've been lucky to work for years with Latino culture.  I don't think a week goes by without a potluck or baby shower.  People are always looking for a chance to share and celebrate.  So I try to remember, when I'm feeling  hassled and worried about something, I try to rise above myself, and do something generous for someone else, even if it's small.   Any comments about generosity are very welcome.

Labyrinths

    Yesterday I was hiking up in the Oakland Hills and took a photo of a labyrinth constructed by anonymous folks over the years.  It reminded me of our so called health care 'system' that Tea Party folks say they don't want taken away.   What system?   The one that tens of millions don't have?   The one that's like a labyrinth with obstacles at every turn?
   Let me tell you a sad story, one that should never have happened.   I'm going to disguise a few details for confidentiality reasons.   A few years ago a young adult in his mid 20s--we'll call him W--a very ethical person, eking out a living as meditation teacher, someone who ate thoughtfully, and who like many his age had no health insurance, began to have intermittent fevers and some transitory, mysterious symptoms and joint pains.  He also had some chronic dental problems.  After a couple of months and some more testing, one day he received a call from his clinic saying that he had a positive blood culture, that it could be dangerous,  and that he should go to the hospital immediately.  As it happened an MD friend was there and W played the message for him.  The MD reinforced that he should go to the hospital urgently, that the infection could spread to different places.  W said he would think about it, try to get things together, and maybe go the next day.  He wasn't seen again for two or three days, and people assumed that he had was in the hospital.  Then a friend from work came over saying that the hadn't been around.  The friend and a roommate went back to his room and found him semiconscious on the floor and paralyzed on one side.  The bacteria had formed a small clot on a heart valve which broke loose and blocked an artery in the brain, and he had a stroke.   I'm sure that had he not been worried about the expenses of the hospital and and about losing his meagre wages, he would have gone to the hospital and likely have avoided the stroke.  
     Think of all those people with jobs that don't have benefits: the waitress at your favorite restaurant, the guy at the 7-11 or the gas station, the clerk at the photo shop.  Regular people who deserve better.  I've worked 35 years in the current so called 'system' and it doesn't work that well for a lot of people with insurance, let alone those without.  I'm sure you all know someone with a 'preexisting condition' who can't get health insurance because of it--or who has to pay exorbitant rates.   We need a single payer system and universal coverage.  All of the industrialized countries have some version of it, and none is perfect; but none of them has the disgrace of millions of citizens without insurance.  Checkout Physicians for a National Health Plan--a lot of good information there, and you can find out ways to get involved.