https://www.independent.ie/opinion/comment/dont-be-paralysed-by-white-guilt-teach-yourself-and-your-children-about-racism-39277149.html
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The night before George
Floyd was killed, I watched the scene in Normal
People where a group of attractive young white students sat around a table
somewhere fabulous in Italy sipping champagne. One of the assembled made 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 white privilege in their
wake.
What bothered me, even more than twenty
somethings swilling fizz, was the missed opportunity of a contemporary drama,
written at a time when fascism is on the rise globally, to call out racism. The
wherewithal and moral conviction just wasn’t there.
Knowing how everyday racist remarks can
lead to everyday job discrimination, everyday racist abuse and sometimes
murder, I was vexed. I thought of all the normal people whose lives have been
brutally torn asunder by racism. Such as Stephen
Lawrence, whose mother Doreen, I met when I was advising the
Metropolitan Police on institutional racism. The grief laden eyes of a woman
whose life was normal until her teenage son was murdered by racists in London,
haunt me.
I built a life in England which ended ten
months ago when I returned home as a Brexit refugee. The epidemic of far
right bigotry unleashed by the EU referendum morphed into daily race hate
attacks directed, not against immigrants like me, but those of a darker hue.
A Leave voting mother approached me at the
school gates assuring me that “people like me” (white), didn’t vote to kick
“people like you” (also white) out. It’s the “other” foreigners she had a
problem with. The juxtaposition of Brexiteers issuing imaginary asylum passes
to white immigrants while concomitantly ordering black and Asians, many of whom
were born and bred in Britain, to “go home” was as surreal as it was sinister.
I replied, “If the black and brown immigrants get kicked out, I’ll be right
behind them”.
Racism exists in Ireland too and, with
black voices amplified in recent days, we are hearing heart-breaking stories,
such as that of Trés Jones.
The 11 year old who recounted racist abuse, from adults and children, calling
him the “n” word and telling him to go back to Africa.
The words of civil rights activist, Angela Davis, have
been widely invoked since George Floyd’s death.
“In a racist society, it’s not enough to be non-racist, we must be
anti-racist”. For white people wanting to know what to do in this moment,
anti-racism groups are urging us to educate ourselves and our children about
black history and racism.
I’ve been teaching my twelve old about
black history, mostly through stories, since he was four. When his teachers
talk about Florence Nightingale, he says, “What about Mary Seacole?”. In the
last year, we’ve watched The great
debaters (not suitable for younger children), Just Mercy, the spectacular dramatization of Malorie Blackman’s
ground breaking novel, Noughts &
crosses and Dr Who’s re-enactment
of Rosa Parks’ story.
None of the above made it easier for my
son to comprehend how George Floyd could die under the knee of a white police
officer who ignored his anguished pleas, “I can’t breathe” and “Momma, I’m
through”. It just helped him understand the anger that comes with generations
of pain and oppression.
There’s a plethora of educational
resources online but these are no substitute for listening to black voices in
this country, now. For leaders
of institutions like Trinity College, for example, that involves
hearing the everyday racism experienced by black and ethnic minority students
on campus, and stamping it out. For agents and publishers, it’s about
commissioning black stories and talent.
As well as educating and enabling, anti-racism
requires the courage to tirelessly challenge racist behaviour, wherever we
encounter it. Our children watch how we respond to racist “jokes”. Silence is
tacit approval.
Not sure if someone is racist? The
following is a useful litmus test.
Racists punch down on the powerless, be it
“Nigerians coming here for a better life and sending all their money home”
(unlike generations of Irish emigrants…) or “the sponging asylum seeking
racketeers living it up in 5 star hotels, while “our own” are abandoned in the
streets”.
Anti-racists
punch up at those in power, calling out systemically racist policies that pit
“our own” against asylum seekers.
Anti-racists
might be inclined to think that the sponging racketeers are the private
contractors who trousered an estimated €1
billion of taxpayers money for operating
often substandard,
unsafe, direct provision accommodation,
that some residents liken to prison.
Anti-racists will have done
their homework and know that the United Nations described the
system as a “severe violation of human rights” and will be calling for an end
to a barbaric, inhumane policy described as the Magdalene
Laundries of our time.
Our black friends are frightened and traumatised.
Now is not the time to be paralysed by white guilt. It’s
a time to educate ourselves and our children and to call racism out. It’s a
time to speak up, reach out and show people of colour that black lives do
matter.
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