About two years ago, I was living
in South Alabama working for an Episcopal Camp and Conference Center. One of my
very best friends came to visit me while I was living there and was excited
about doing some fishing in the estuary, Weeks Bay that the camp rests upon. My
friend that I speak of is a Korean man, who grew up in Tennessee, but his
parents grew up in North and South Korea. He is familiar with the social
climate in our country and the south in particular. My friend and his family
grew up experiencing the effects of racism in Memphis, Tennessee. While he was
visiting, he made plans with one of my coworkers at the camp to meet one
morning before sunrise to do a little trout fishing. He lives in a big city and
works a high stress job so for him the idea of watching the sunrise on the end
of a pier in south Alabama in the crisp fall air sounded like a dream. So, on
the way from my house to the camp, he stopped at a gas station to grab some
breakfast. As he perused the selection of high calorie options waiting under
the heat lamp, he politely asked the gas station employee a question about the
menu. The employee responded, “You and your people need to leave our country.” My
friend responded with a choice of words that are not appropriate for sharing in
this context.
When he shared with me what happened,
I was overcome with emotion. Initially I was enraged, I wanted to take action,
to hop into my car and drive to the gas station. My friend begged me not to go,
he was concerned about my safety if I were to walk in and confront the employee
in the state of mind that I was in. From that point on I have never supported
that business again. I happened to run into the oil representative for that
particular gas station and mentioned something to her about it. I may have also
shared the interaction with some of my closest friends who then also did not
support that business. All of my efforts to bring down this gas station were
futile and more importantly the man that made the hateful racial comment to my
friend probably still goes to bed at night with the same disdain for persons of
the Asian race. After being overcome with anger to the man that degraded my
friend in this way, I then felt deeply sad that he was made to feel this way.
Just thinking about the pain that experiences similar to this one cause him
made my insides turn and I soon felt angry again. I blamed myself for not going
with him, for not being there to protect him. Why did I think that the presence
of my whiteness would negotiate the hatred in the atmosphere? I felt responsible
for bringing him into that social atmosphere. I know that he will never forget
the words that were said to him that day, the words that have already been
spoken and not yet spoken; that hatred may be what he feels when someone asks
him about the time that he spent with me in south Alabama. In “Notes of a Native
Son,” James Baldwin wrote, “The man does not remember the hand that struck him,
the darkness that frightened him, as a child; nevertheless, the hand and the
darkness remain with him, indivisible from himself forever, part of the passion
that drives him whenever he thinks to take flight.” (30)
This personal story and reflection on relationship
and experience in my life is important because it is the closest to racism and
oppression that I have ever been. My friend that I speak about is not African
American but he lived and lives through similar experiences of oppression and
hatred that surround him every day. He is the first of my closest friends,
which I watched struggle because of his race and because of the way people did
and did not treat him in the world around him. Suffering becomes more real when
you love and walk next to the person that is despaired and clinging to any
glimpse of hope. My friend used to always say that what he loved about me and
part of what brought us to be so close was the fact that when I meet a person
of any race and gender that I usually assume there is going to be a goodness
about the person and I have a hope that I will be able to see God’s presence
within each person. He shared with me that he meets a new person and he assumes
that that person is going to let him down or disappoint him in some way and
until proven otherwise he would rather not be bothered by making polite
conversation with a stranger that will just prove to him that his minimal
efforts have been a waste of his time. He assumes that he cannot trust most and
that everyone at some point will let him down. Very much so similar to the
story that James Baldwin tells of his experience in the restaurant when the
waitress would not serve him, my friend at some point realized that his real
life, was in danger, and not from anything other people might do but from the hatred
in his own heart. (99)
After spending time in our African
American Social Ethics course work, listening to the dialogue in our class and
reading the weekly text assignments; I am in the beginning stages of identifying
that my friend is who he is because of the circumstances that he has been born
into. “The conundrum of color is the inheritance of every American be he/she
legally or actually Black or White.”(xx) I catch myself being much more aware
of the color line. In a guest lecture series, I attended here at Vanderbilt the
Theologian projected the image of a white Christ on the big screen in Benton
Chapel and it made me aware of the African Americans, Latinos and Asians that
were sitting in the pews as guests and I felt the tension but this time I was
participating in it. I was aware of the presence of the black mechanics quietly
laboring for their low-income wages underneath the cars at my mechanic’s garage
when I dropped my car off this week, they seemed surprised when I greeted them.
I noticed that there was only one African American woman on my church retreat
over the weekend. At the after school program that I work at, the community of
children are all African American and it is very seldom that within a whole
library of books I find a book with black characters. Growing up, my best
friend’s white family, attended a black church for worship on Sundays and on
many occasions I got to go with them; I have recently found myself wondering
what the people in that congregation really thought of their white family
making themselves welcome in their congregation. I worked for a church here in
Nashville a few years ago and became good friends with two of my African
American coworkers. I only recall seeing them once at a parishioner’s home for
a gathering outside of the church but each year when it came time for the youth
group to have its open mic fundraiser, my black coworkers were always begged to
sing and dance at the event. They were honored for the work they did for the
church and as a resource.
The author, James Baldwin, in “Notes of a Native Son,” writes, “Our
dehumanization of the Negro then is indivisible from our dehumanization.”(26)
The reality is that raw truth will never survive in a society or a relationship
in which an entire race of people are struggling for identity. The oppressors
that have determined this struggle themselves and in their role will never be
whole either. I do believe that there is hope. I’m not saying that the gradual
change in my perspective, presence and new awareness are making me a better
person or that I will never contribute to being a part of the problem as the
white race or that my efforts will end racism but I do think that through my
experience there is hope. A hope that I will share with others, that could
change the way that I see and interact with African American persons for the
rest of my life. There has to be some kind of hope in changing the way that
people think. But once we begin to make an effort to control our thoughts, then
God’s love rushes in.
I would like to spend time learning
about how to daily live into reconciliation? How do I make sure not to treat
African Americans people as a resource? How do I respond to something that I
have contributed to? Through this text, there is an acknowledgment that it
would be pretty much impossible to change our society’s social climate. I can
start by changing the way that I think about and see people. I can share with
friends and family my new perspective of thinking and learning about African
American people. It’s hard not to want to say, “Just tell me what I need to
do.” Maybe this is my white guilt speaking? If I have been part of a community of
life that does not acknowledge racism as a problem, then I need to take the
steps to identify this, claim the injustices that I have been a part of or
silently condoned. I know that I will
need help in identifying experiences in the past that have been a part of this unjust
social atmosphere. I acknowledge that I cannot do it on my own because my
perspective of the world and life is seen through the context of a white lens
and beating heart that is housed in a body protected by a white exterior.
Lara, as always, thanks for your honest reflection. I know that being introduced to the materials, personal stories, and honest dialogue in African American Social Ethics has probably been at times overwhelming, but you have sought to understand. I reflected on your story of your friend and such things are an everyday occurrence in lives of African Americans. Interestingly enough, the same discrimination that your Asian friend faces is the same discrimination that many African Americans experience in their own neighborhoods from Asian merchants. Most immigrants who come to this country learn very quickly that they going to viewed as other, but the other thing they learn is that they are still viewed with a high social standing than blacks. It makes me wonder in such cases why we don't treat each other-just in regards to being human beings, especially when one knows what it feels like to be viewed as somewhat of a problem.
ReplyDeleteI understand very well your friend's suspicion of people, and I hope to one day get to the point where I can perhaps view people the way you do, but it is extremely difficult within the social construct of race in America. I think you asked very validate and sincere questions. Do you think that either the Divinity School or your church could be a starting place for such reconciliation?
Lara, I appreciate the post from you this week. It seems you have taken a good deal of time and effort into internalizing the issues of oppression and the struggle for identity for people characterized as 'other' in America. I can imagine that participating in discussion about these things can be uncomfortable.
ReplyDeleteDo you think that uncomfortability is what other people in your position need to experience to begin the process of reconciliation? I had the discussion last week with one of my closest friends where we related our opinions of feeling that there are White persons who feel unable to be completely honest with themselves about their privileges and prejudices because they feel they will be hated for it. Do you think this is valid?
Thank you for your post Lara. I appreciate the way in which you personalized the discrimination that your Asian friend experienced, and was willing to act upon this experience to ensure that it would not occur again. I believe that this is one of the principles that Baldwin was addressing in "Notes of a Native Son" as it relates to racial reconciliation and proceeding toward America's collaborative future. What ways do you believe that white Americans can help to make black "issues" American issues? Do you believe that these issues will get the major attention without white Americans acknowledging their existence?
ReplyDeleteI suggest that you consider studying ways in which the participation, or the lack thereof, of those in the popular class have effected the resolution of issues concerning minorities in varying classes. Again Lara, thanks for your post.
Thanks for your transparency in this post, Lara, and for putting yourself out there through these reflections. Your story about the experience of your Korean American friend and your response--and your subsequent reflection on that response--are quite compelling. I really appreciate how you wrestle with both the futility and the hopefulness of doing something about the injustice of racism. I actually thought the same thing during the same lecture at Vanderbilt (I assume we're talking about the same image of Christ projected). That is the gift of these readings and discussions and conversations: to be able to see differently, and to see race at all. I also really appreciate your attentiveness to your whiteness and how to negotiate that as you seek ways to be an agent of reconciliation. I hope you keep sharing your insights and thoughts-along-the-way in this regard. What do you think the role of a white woman (or man) is in a situation like your friend experienced? Would it be to use our privilege to say something--and be heard as a white person. Our would that be inappropriate? I guess it depends on the situation? Have you ever heard of Will D. Campbell? He's an interesting figure in that he was one of the only trust white ministers deeply involved in the civil rights movement. He's a personal hero of sorts; and he actually died a few months ago. He lived in Mt. Juliet, outside Nashville. I don't agree with every single thing he said, but he lived reconciliation, as a white man, in some compelling ways. He's got a number of writings on race and reconciliation and Christianity. His memoir "Brother to a Dragonfly" is beautiful. There's also a documentary about him called "God's Will" that you can find online, I think. Thanks again for this post!
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