Showing posts with label Martin Luther King. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Martin Luther King. Show all posts

Thursday, June 18, 2015

Tip of the iceberg: An average life

This is how I feel right now.  I am in 9th grade reading Huckleberry Finn with my class and each time they call Jim a nigger, I cringe.  And it's said over and over.  Many look at me sympathetically, shrug their shoulders, some even touch me on the arm if they are close enough because we all know, no matter how we all long for the adventure, that poor, ol' Jim and I have more in common than Huck and me.  I don't deny that most feel uncomfortable with the language that is explained away with a "that's how people spoke of black folks at that time" but when we move on to "A Farewell to Arms" everyone else can drop their shame, their melancholy, longing for the expectation that I have forgiven this past and that "we've come a long way, baby" and get back to modern living.

But I see Jim and I know him because, though you may be looking at me and seeing an upper middle class, well-educated, articulate, funny, put together (at times) African-American (I prefer Black) woman with a handsome, French husband and two beautiful mixed kids, I come from a long line where Jim and folks like him are roots on my tree.  I am, as the expression goes, the tip of the iceberg, but under the surface is a lineage of survivors and thrivers, former slaves and slavers.  We are mixed by choice and very often not.  I spent my early years and my summers on the front porch of my grandparents' home at the foot of the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia.  Though I lived in a white neighborhood in New Jersey and believed myself assimilated, I sat at the feet of my grands and great-grands and heard about racism firsthand.  Not just being called "nigger" or "blackie" or "brown sugar" by white kids testing their power and position in the wide streets of the suburbs, but pervasive, oppressive, strangulating cruelty that only served to threaten and stunt the mental, emotional, spiritual, and social growth of black people.  These were not stories or headlines.  These tales were the lives of my family and my ancestors.  No matter where I am in the world, this is the ground beneath me.

I did not grow up the way many envision black people growing up.  Not because it is so rare but because you don't know us.  And if you do, really do, then I am not talking to you, but I would venture to guess that you don't really.  I dream of a life that is banal, no more exciting or charged than that of anyone else, maybe even the default.  The life you think of when you think of every day life.  And then I wake up and remember that I am black.  That I am a black, sensitive, creative woman who, by nature of being black in America, cannot live an average life.  That my life is meant to define, describe, explain, assuage, and calm the feelings of other citizens allowed to live their mundane lives while mine is fraught with symbolism and metaphor and hyperbole.

My grandmother told me often that she wanted better for me, for all of us, was grateful for what she'd seen us achieve in such a short amount of time, hoped that "white people were fair and good" to us. There was palpable fear and doubt, but also hope.  I wanted to tell her, to show her that all her suffering and her efforts had not been in vain, that we were advancing.  That the rapes, assaults, laws, white supremacy, and pervasive and accepted racism were seen as the horrors they were, were being put firmly in the past, and that WE were being seen for the "content of our character."  And the advancement of our family specifically was tied to our advancement as black people in America collectively.  Many black families will tell you the same. For us to be able to just be average, regular, unspectacular, under the radar, just living our lives gave her hope.  It was the tip of the iceberg.  She was sure we'd overcome.  I carried that hope for her.

There were small things that reminded me we hadn't come as far as I'd hoped.  My father getting followed home by the police on a morning run.  People assuming he was a ball player because he drove a nice car.  Having a very hard time finding an apartment even with full time employment, good credit, and a clean record.  Having to consider that I had a clean record.  Listening to people tell me, when hearing my experience as a black woman in America that racism wasn't the problem but poverty and elitism.  Um, AND those too.  Having to qualify that though, yes, micro-aggressions were not the same as being beaten or killed in the street, dealing with them was still incredibly damaging to the psyche. Having someone, a "friend" write something about "hey, blacks, I've suffered too and look at me" on my Facebook wall in response to more proof of the systemic racism that prevails in our country.  Imagine trying to be part of a group or society or country but when the conch shell gets passed to you, everyone talks over you.  Tells you it's not your turn.  

If we meet you with rage, if we meet you with anger, you call us animals and beat us or pepper spray us or shoot us.  If we ask for a fair shake, an opportunity, a chance, you say we are angling for special privilege.  If we write stories or articles or blogs about our experiences on the outside, you say we, WE are the ones being divisive.  If we tell you we are hurting, we are tired, we are traumatized by the rhetoric, by the hatred, by the violence, the unrelenting insensitivity and ignorance, you say buck up. When innocent black men, women, and children are murdered, people who look like us, in epic abuses of power, and no justice comes on their behalf.  When we cry for them, brothers, sisters, sons, daughters, fathers, mothers, cousins, friends, we are asked to consider why they were in the wrong place at the wrong time, doing the wrong thing.  We are told that if they'd just listened, behaved, respected the law and the policies that were not designed with them in mind, they might have lived another day to face it all again.   

This racist system is real and it's killing all of us.  Not just Black people, but our country.  It's not that we are a nation divided by black and white because that isn't true.  It wasn't then and it isn't now.  But racism, complacency, white privilege and its hideous cousin, white supremacy do threaten to tear us apart.  And everything that anyone finds great about this nation will crumble into the seas like the icebergs of white and blue and purple crumbling under the heat of global warming.  We are dying ever so slowly from a disease that feels impossible to stop.  We are sure it is going to overtake us, consume us.  It just might.  Like people suffering from illness, we can resign or we can fight it with all we have.  There is prayer, meditation, and there is love.  And love...

Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. 5It does not dishonor others, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. 6Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. 7It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres.  1 Corinthians 13

I don't deny it, I am sinking, melting into the sea, afraid I will never be solid again.  Each week, as I try to do what everyone else is doing, raising their children, trying to give them values and truths to uphold them, I am crying into the back of my hand, afraid to let them see what lies beneath the surface of their gleaming pyramid called life.  I held the hope for my grandmother and now I hold it for my daughters.  This conversation is just the start.  It's the tip of the iceberg but if we don't tend to it, we are bound to hit the parts below the surface and dash all our dreams of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, for an average life made special by our content, by our character, by our cooperation, and by our love.

RIP to the victims of the cowardly act of terrorism in at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina.


(c)  Copyright 2015.  Repatriated Mama:  Back to the Suburban Grind.

Thursday, January 23, 2014

Learning MLK

Black National Anthem

Lift every voice and sing, till earth and Heaven ring,
Ring with the harmonies of liberty;
Let our rejoicing rise, high as the listening skies,
Let it resound loud as the rolling sea.
Sing a song full of the faith that the dark past has taught us,
Sing a song full of the hope that the present has brought us;
Facing the rising sun of our new day begun,
Let us march on till victory is won.

Stony the road we trod, bitter the chastening rod,
Felt in the days when hope unborn had died;
Yet with a steady beat, have not our weary feet
Come to the place for which our fathers sighed
We have come over a way that with tears has been watered
We have come, treading our path through the blood of the slaughtered
Out from the gloomy past, till now we stand at last
Where the white gleam of our bright star is cast.

God of our weary years, God of our silent tears,
Thou Who hast brought us thus far on the way;
Thou Who hast by Thy might, led us into the light,
Keep us forever in the path, we pray.
Lest our feet stray from the places, our God, where we met Thee.
Lest our hearts, drunk with the wine of the world, we forget Thee.
Shadowed beneath Thy hand, may we forever stand,
True to our God, true to our native land.


Written by James Weldon Johnson (1899), music by his brother John Rosamond Johnson (1900)


When I was a little girl, though I suspect younger than my two ladybugs, to celebrate Martin Luther King, Jr.'s birthday and legacy, my family would spend the afternoon at a black church listening to people who'd lived the Civil Rights era, talking about about our history and the life of this man, and singing and clapping and dancing to some incredible church music and old Negro spirituals.  We were meant to reflect, consider, uplift, and rise, rise, rise above what our people, African-American people had endured in our own country.  A suffering that weighed heavily in the story of my immediate family.  This was not the story of just my ancestors, but of my people, my family, my father and mother and uncles and grands and greats.  It was not the past.  It was the ever-fluid present.

The emotion was so visceral, so intense in those moments that I was often embarrassed and humiliated by the heaviness.  I was "one of the only's," "the Cosby" at my school (calling it largely white would understate it).  That my father and mother were well-educated and had good jobs and provided for us well above even the national average allowed others to define us as "past all that."  But we weren't.  We aren't.  That our experience as middle class, educated, law abiding, good neighbors seemed beyond the norm was just the start of the misunderstanding.  That Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s birthday was still being debated as a national holiday confused the young me.  That I celebrated in a church full of African-Americans and very few others hit it home.  This was my cross to bear.  Everyone else got to have the day off.

I supposed that my white friends were spending the day shopping or watching TV, hanging out, while the weight of my people and really the future of our nation, felt like it rested on my shoulders, or ours, as we endured to keep the memory, the truth, and the history alive.  I wanted everyone to be considering Martin Luther King, Jr. in the same way I was.  As a man, a true person, not just an idea, who lived and breathed among us, the same air I was breathing now, and who saw severe racism and institutional injustice and wanted it changed.  I felt burdened in a way different than my parents and their parents had because, according to so many who "don't see color" I was not living the outright barbaric terrorism of the times before the Civil Rights era and was living in a nearly all white community, proof to so many that things had changed.  But I still felt racism's sting in the subtlest of ways and much of it was internalized.  I still felt that it was mine to prove that we were equal, alike, multidimensional and multifaceted. 

It has been an interesting lesson for my husband and me as we teach our children who are biracial and bicultural  about this very particular man from this very particular moment and then open up the discussion to the greater topics of racism and equality, tolerance and acceptance.  They are so young and still at an age where they see the differences but do not have cultural references as to what those differences mean to some people.  Because I experienced that sense of other, I have been both protective of their feelings as such and have also opened the dialogue before their questions about otherness have even arisen.  Since they were very small, they have seen both of our families either in person or via Skype.  My husband speaks French with them and they see him speaking with his friends and family only in French.  We have looked at the map and the globe to discover just "how close and how far" we are to where Papa grew up.  We have visited with my parents and family full of aunts, uncles, and cousins down South in Virginia, Washington, DC, Georgia, Florida, and the Carolinas.  When we lived in Barbados, they saw what looked to them like a thriving nation where black and white people worked along side one another, where they saw many more people of color in positions of power, where racism was, of course,  in play, as it is everywhere, but where they were not isolated because of their racial make up, where they were, in fact, part of the majority.  They learned there about the East Indians and Chinese in the Caribbean through the friendships they made, and though they certainly asked questions about where folks came from, it was more a curiosity of geography than fear or confusion about race.

We have made it clear through our friendships and relations and the way we speak about all people that intolerance based on color, creed, religion, or sexual orientation will not be accepted in our home.  They have never said they wished they were not black.  Have never said they don't believe themselves to be beautiful.  Have never said that boys are smarter than girls, that white is better than black, that something is a girl game or a boy color or only for one group or another.  We talk about other peoples' customs and religions, even practicing some of the holiday customs and going to services when we can to demonstrate how all people are just striving for the same goals for their families.  And yet, when the specifics of the pre-Civil Rights era come up, I am taken back to that pain. 

As they have begun to learn the very cursory history and stories they are shocked.  If the separate water fountains and segregated schools are enough to burn their cheeks and hurt their hearts, imagine how they were brought to silence, sucking the insides of their cheeks, when I told them that Grandma and Grandpa had grown up, been little kids, just as they were now, and had lived this abject racism and in the case of my parents, poverty.  That Grandma and Grandpa and their brothers and sisters and so many other families and children just like them could not look away from it, rather had to live it and breathe it every day of their lives.  That their lives, in the minds of many, institutionalized in the country they called home, were not as valuable as the lives of others.  They see the absolute injustice right away and struggle and fumble for words.  It is not an abstraction talked about as if a bygone era, but a tangible truth for people they love and hold dear.  Because they still see us all as equal, they are just unable to comprehend.  This is how it hurts.  As the true terror and violence of that time comes to light for them, they will need the strength to endure and to forgive and to continue the legacy of a real, live man who gave his life in that struggle.  For them, a real, live man who looks like Grandpa, for whom their eyes sparkle and who is loved infinitely.

Both girls are extremely empathic and feel for others so deeply and compassionately.  I feel so lucky that we are the same in that way.  But they, as I long ago, cannot define how it hurts, just feel the lumps in their throats, the flush of their cheeks, the knot in their hearts and they weep.  They have cried for friends that "would not be our friends if the brown and the white could not be together."  The oldest has a dear girlfriend who said she'd just have to be in jail because she loved her friend so and would not put up with that nonsense.  I loved this comment more than I realized because it keeps returning to me, to my heart.  I love it because during those MLK celebrations of my youth, I would have loved a professing of love and commitment such as that from someone who "didn't have to," was able to choose her commitment to the rights of others when the privilege was hers.

I was a young person and am now a grown woman.  What I shared is not shame but the real visceral pain of that history, of what separation, exclusion, divisiveness of any kind does not only to us on a global scale, but what it does just to our own individual selves. We miss the true evolution of ourselves--physically, emotionally, spiritually, nationally, internationally, globally.  We miss transcendence if we cannot "lift every voice and sing."  I am working hard to keep that love in mine.  I hope as we celebrate the man and his actions, we each make a commitment to ourselves and our actions. 


(c)  Copyright 2014.  Repatriated Mama:  Back to the Suburban Grind.