The
night before George Floyd’s racist murder, I watched the scene in Normal People where a group of
attractive young white people are sitting around a table somewhere divine in
Italy sipping champagne. One of the assembled makes a racist remark which was
laughed off by half the gathering and ignored by the other two who fled the
scene leaving a contrail of smugness in their wake.
Knowing
how everyday racist remarks can lead to everyday job discrimination, everyday
racist abuse and murder, that scene made me angry. It’s bad enough that the
Dublin street shots airbrushed out the homeless people in its quest for cinematic
beauty but glossing over racism in a contemporary drama at a time when the far
right is on the rise, set in a country where racism is brushed under the
carpet?
When
I saw the video footage of George Floyd being choked to death under the knee of
a white police officer the next day, I felt sick, outraged, horrified and
scared. Meghan Markle’s words resonated when she said, at times like this the
only wrong thing to say is nothing (except if your name is Lawrence Fox).
I
thought of all the normal people whose lives have been abnormally, brutally
torn asunder by racism. Such as Stephen Lawrence, whose mother Doreen, I met.
The grief laden eyes of a woman whose life was normal until her son was
murdered by racists, haunt me.
Black
history isn’t taught in British or Irish schools which makes it difficult to
explain to our children how generations of systemic racism, dehumanisation and
marginalisation of black people enabled the murder of an unarmed black man by a
white police officer. Worse, that it’s not an isolated incident.
I’ve
been teaching my 12 year old about slavery for years. A friend organises black
history walks around London so my son knows that London was built on the back
of the slave trade. When his teachers talk about Florence Nightingale, he says,
“What about Mary Seacole”.
None of the above helped him understand the barbaric, racist, killing of George Floyd. It did help him understand and share the anger that comes from 400 years of pain and oppression.
None of the above helped him understand the barbaric, racist, killing of George Floyd. It did help him understand and share the anger that comes from 400 years of pain and oppression.
Education
is important but so is having the tools and courage to call out racism. The
best way to learn this is by role modelling anti-racist behaviour. My son has
seen me challenge everyday, Brexit bolstered, racism in the local Shops, at the
school gates and on public transport. So when his teacher in the UK said he’d
stood up to racist bullying in the playground last year, I wasn’t surprised.
His
role model is the daughter of a Sudanese friend who came to Britain as a
refugee and, at 10 years of age, asked for my help challenging a private school
that denied her a bursary place. She knew her grades were good enough, so did
I. When I called the school they admitted her grades weren’t the problem and when
I asked what the “problem” was, they couldn’t answer. When I asked how many
black kids from council estates they had granted bursaries to in the last 5
years? None.
That
little girl got the place that she earned, on merit. I explained to her that getting in was the easy bit.
That life as the only black kid surrounded by rich white kids and white
teachers would be tough. “Are you sure that's what you want?” Without missing
a beat, this kick ass 10 year old said, “Why should their racism stop me from
becoming a doctor and not many kids from my school get accepted into medicine?”
That
was 15 years ago. Last week she started working as a doctor in an NHS hospital
and although I’m so proud of this inspirational young woman, I’m also worried
sick.
While
20% of the NHS workforce is BAME, just 7% of NHS leaders are from BAME backgrounds. Meanwhile, more than 50% of healthcare workers who have died with the
Coronavirus are from BAME backgrounds.
There
is no evidence that black lives matter to the alt right Tory government. This
month marks the third anniversary of Grenfell Tower. 72
mostly BAME men, women and children were burned alive. The ‘Hostile Environment’,
despite being lambasted as a racist policy designed to rid Britain of the
Windrush Generation, continues today but without the pretence of remorse.
There’s a protest planned in Dublin tomorrow in solidarity with Black
Lives Matter. I share Amnesty International's view, that peaceful protesting is
a human right and should not be banned. Outlawing peaceful demonstrations is undemocratic and adds fuel to the flames, as seen in Trump's increasingly dystopian America.
A great many anti-fascists, anti-racists, like myself, will not be
physically present, in Dublin, or elsewhere. I made a personal choice not to
put my family at risk by attending. I also have loved ones who are front-line workers, some of whom are BAME and vulnerable to coronavirus.
That said, I respect the right of those who chose to attend and
make their message heard. Black Lives Matter. It would be a good use of
Gardai resources, in my view, to work with the organisers to ensure road
closures so that there's enough space to facilitate social distancing. The
organisers, Black Pride Ireland, has set out clear safety precautions on social
media for those attending.
There
are many ways to protest but protest we must. Put posters in your car and house windows, donate to Black Lives Matter or other anti-racism groups. Start the process of educating yourself and your children. I took my 12 year old to see "Just Mercy" in January and we watched "Noughts and Crosses" together. "The great debaters" is a powerful film but not suitable for younger children.
Now is
not the time to hide in a bunker, or to be paralysed by white guilt. Don’t
turn a deaf ear and a blind eye. It’s our collective responsibility to fight for a society that values
all lives equally, where our BAME family, friends and neighbours aren’t
deprived entry to elite schools and universities based on their colour or
creed, where they’re not demonised and scapegoated by despots who whip up
hatred and divide communities to distract from their own failings.
Our
black friends are frightened and traumatised. We have to speak up, reach out and
show our solidarity.
Black
Lives Matter 💓✊
RIP
George Floyd.
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