Tuesday, June 28, 2016

raceAhead: June 28, 2016


Red Cross Apologizes For Pool Safety Poster, "View" Reacts | The View

On Sunday night, Greys Anatomy actor and activist Jesse Williams won a humanitarian award at the BET Awards, and stole the show.

If you havent seen the video or read the transcript, you should. It was one of the most lucid and heartfelt critiques of systemic racism, institutional violence, cultural appropriation and exploitation, and a love letter to black women who have spent their lifetimes dedicated to nurturing everyone before themselves. We can and will do better for you.

Weve been floating this country on credit for centuries, yo. And were done watching, and waiting while this invention called whiteness uses and abuses us. Burying black people out of sight and out of mind, while extracting our culture, our dollars, our entertainment like oil black gold. Ghettoizing and demeaning our creations then stealing them. Gentrifying our genius and then trying us on like costumes before discarding our bodies like rinds of strange fruit. The thing is, though, the thing is, that just because were magic doesnt mean were not real.

It was electrifying. He was calm, poised, focused, unflinching and light-skinned.

Of the millions of conversations that happened online, in solidarity and in complaint, one that caught my own light-skinned eye was a heartfelt exchange about whats called colorism and the easier time that people of lighter hues have in the world. Did Jesse Williams, a light-skinned man, have the credentials to speak this way?

Eve Ewing, a sociologist who studies race, racism and inequality in the public schools, and who uses her Twitter feed to hold difficult conversations about race, took the opportunity to discuss colorism. The conversation is uncomfortable because it threatens to divide us, says Ewing, even within families. She posted data showing that darker skinned students fare worse in schools and are disproportionately punished than their light skinned peers.

Light-skinned people also get shorter prison sentences. There is also some nascent data on colorism and how it may play out in hiring situations, she says. Bottom line, we end up better educated, offered better jobs and yes, occasionally win awards.

These are the sorts of implicit biases that are so deeply ingrained that they are hard to surface. But these difficult conversations help us remember that there is more than one type of black person, she says.

The key is embracing the privilege openly, which is exactly what Jesse Williams has always done. And it doesnt undermine our ability to do justice work.

Source: http://fortune.com/2016/06/28/raceahead-june-28-2016/

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