Thoughts on Racism

THOUGHTS ON RACISM

 

PINKSLIPS

Credit for this image goes to PooterGeek.com

 This comment was my online editorial written 5 years ago in response to an online posting of the project entitled "A GIRL Like ME"  that was done by Kiri Davis, a 16 year old African-American teenaged girl reproducing the results of an experiment that was done with White and Black dolls to show the effects of racism on children’s self-perception, originally conducted in the early 1960's by Dr. Kenneth Clark in Brown vs. the Board of Education. The project received heated discussion both pro and con, often with written attacks on the young girl.   You will read below my thoughts on the topic and on the criticism of the young girl.

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Kiri Davis A GIRL Like ME

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Uploaded by  on Mar 21, 2011

The legacy of racism & social learning is alive and well. Here, young Kiri Davis examines the tough issues of racial & Ethnic idenity amoung African American females.

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    ********·       Wow! This piece evoked so many thoughts, emotions and memories for me. There is nothing novel here. It confirmed what I already knew, but it was sad to see just how little has changed in our cultural self-perception. I commend Kiri on having enough awareness and enough of a sense of responsibility to even address the issue and want to investigate it, when she is growing up in an era of apathetic blindness. At 16, she has done well, because she is questioning and searching for answers. She is not randomly thrashing around, but rather taking an intellectual approach, looking at it scientifically. She is using an evidence-based approach, as opposed to just speaking on other people's opinions that get funneled down to her. At 16, she doesn't have the answers...but at 16, she is not supposed to have them. I am 46 and still don't have the answers to these very complex issues.


    Wow! This piece evoked so many thoughts, emotions and memories for me. There is nothing novel here. It confirmed what I already knew, but it was sad to see just how little has changed in our cultural self-perception. I commend Kiri on having enough awareness and enough of a sense of responsibility to even address the issue and want to investigate it, when she is growing up in an era of apathetic blindness. At 16, she has done well, because she is questioning and searching for answers. She is not randomly thrashing around, but rather taking an intellectual approach, looking at it scientifically. She is using an evidence-based approach, as opposed to just speaking on other people's opinions that get funneled down to her. At 16, she doesn't have the answers...but at 16, she is not supposed to have them. I am 46 and still don't have the answers to these very complex issues.

    As a girl, I grew up in a multi-cultural environment, mostly outside of the United States. I learned to love and co-exist with people of all colors and cultures. That being said however, I was still a child who recalls being first "colored"or "negro" and then "Black." I remember my first awareness of race and self-hate...and I remember my first awakening of self-love within my own rich brown skin. I remember at 4 years old, looking around at my white playmates who had straight blonde or red hair that my mother called "good hair" and commenting that I wished I was white, so I could have red hair too. My mother reassured me that when I grew up, I could have any color hair that I wanted to have. She partially missed the point. She limited it to being about red hair and failed to fully address that I was already internalizing enough systemic and social racism to begin my self-loathing. It wasn't a White thing. It wasn't a Black thing. It was a systemic thing, borne out of years and years of systemic racism. At 4, it was already a part of my world...a part of my definition. Then, at the ripe old age of 5, I experienced a small event that would replay itself in my mind for years to come...a small thing, but one of the few actions in my life that I have ever truly regretted to a large  degree and still yet a small event that became a self-defining moment, the beginning of my awakening and my journey to self-acceptance and self-love. At the age of 5...almost..., I had a Black babydoll that looked very much like the babydoll in this video. You see, at that time, although many babydolls, both Black and White had rubber hair like the ones in the video, it was pretty much only the White babydolls that had "real," silken hair...even baby dolls could have "good hair." However, I loved my Black babydoll above all the others, because I felt like the rest of the world didn't love her as much. My White friends thought she was ugly. At night, I would hold her and cry and tell her how beautiful she was. One day, however, I was playing with my friends. They all had their lovely blonde White dolls with the real silken hair and I had my little, bald-headed Black babydoll. Our mothers were talking in the yard near by. I watched the other girls combing their dolls hair and slinging their own "good hair" over their shoulders. Mine was platted in thick, long, dark braids down my back. One girl brushed her own hair and then brushed the lovely cornsilk hair of her doll. With a knowing smile that I've seen so many times on different faces over the years, she handed me the hairbrush. I couldn't brush my own braided hair and I remember that brush made a horrible scratching sound over the little rubber head of my little Black baby doll. I remember thinking in my child's imagination how it must hurt her. I looked up as the trashman was coming down the street and creating a horrible ruckus with the truck. The other girls covered their ears, but not I. Instead, I ran over to my mother and said, "Mommy, I don't want this doll anymore. She is ugly! Can I throw her away?" My mother without breaking focus from the gossip of the day waved her approval. I ran up to the truck and threw her up into the truck with all of the force I could muster. Yet, almost immediately, as the crusher came down to crush the life out of her that exists in the mind of a child, I had the mad desire to rescue her. I knew in that instant that what I was throwing away was myself, my own Blackness. I stood silently and watched that truck roll down the street until it turned the corner. I vowed at that moment that I would never throw myself away again, because I am valuable just as I am. I saw beauty in that doll and until this day, at 46 I wish I could rescue her, if only to thank her for rescuing me!
    I understand the thread of this conversation, because I have experienced most of it. I am a darker brown skinned woman, so I experience the discrimination against the dark color of my skin. When I went to model in New York, I was told by an agent at Ford Modeling (to whom I had been given an insider referral), that they could possibly get some work, but in order to do so I would have to get my nose reconstructed to make it "finer." When I refused to do so, I was told that I would never be able to work with a "nose like that." Haters?....naw...motivators...see my myspace page at www.myspace.com/cheryl_denise! When I was told by my college academic advisor that I should not go to medical school, but should consider nursing school instead, I vowed that I would not just go to medical school, but I would go to one of the top ones! At the same time as I was being beaten up by the system outside of my ethnic roots, I was seeing discrimination from within, as my lighter skinned sistas have described. As we all are, I am of mixed descent, a combination down through the lines that has manifested in the way of very thick, strong hair that doesn't break as easily as the hair of some of my Black sisters, so it grows fast and easy. I had braids hanging all down my back as a child and although my features are clearly Black, many describe them as less traditional and I am frequently asked if I am from the islands or Brazil, amongst other places. As a result, I was ostracized by my aunts, experiencing resentment from them even until this day. Interestingly enough though, contrary to popular belief, this is not an African-American thing! It is more universal than that! Having grown up around the world, I see the theme repeated over and over again. Light Filipinos look down on dark filipinos. Eva Longoria commented in an interview that she always thought she was the ugly one growing up, because they called her the "ugly dark one". Eva is latina. White and light Australians look down on the Aborigines and their descendants. In spite of the fact that Brazil is claimed to be a melting pot, societally the darker Brazilians are at the bottom of the totem pole. Although Black Americans escape to Europe to gain acceptance in entertainment and sports, because they are underappreciated here, British Jamaicans are experiencing pretty severe racism. Dark-skinned Asians are less favored than light-skinned ones and Japanese women are flocking to plastic surgeons to look more Anglo-European. And even when it clashes horrendously with most of the darker skintones, multitudes of Asian, Latino and Black women are rushing out to become blondes. This is not specific to African-Americans. This is a bigger, cultural cancer. I don't have the answers, but I want to be a part of the solution, as opposed to a part of the problem, so I continue to search and to be active in promoting education and self-awareness. I believe that the answer lies in a large part in our promoting more and more within our communities a greater sense of values, so we focus more on the beauty within. The human experience does not come in shades. Love, hate, compassion, greed, pride, loneliness, joy, pain, etc.,...they are universals that we all share. Let's explore them for what they are. Honesty, integrity, compassion, strength, etc. are all virtues that we can promote in any of us. Let's push these things, especially in the areas where the self-esteem of entire communities is so readily apparently lacking. Let us promote intellectualism, tell our young people that being intelligent and educated is not a crime. Let's applaud and support the young people like Kiri who are developing a social and intellectual awareness of the world around them and how they fit into it. And let's encourage honest intellectual exchange. We can't solve a problem by ignoring it or by making excuses for it. We can't solve a problem by blaming the victim or by failing to acknowledge the part that we ourselves play in our own situation. Mainly, I think that each one of us has to start by examining our own attitudes, beliefs and prejudices (and yes, we DO all have them). As people of color, we have to stop seeing ourselves as victims and start seeing ourselves as strong survivors. We have to stop allowing ourselves to excuse ourselves out of responsibility for our present by blaming others for our past. Yes, there are some Whites who are blatant racists even today. Yet, that does not encompass most of the White population. However, they are racists still, as are we, because they are victims of institutionalized racism, just like we are. Most of it is born out of ignorance. EVERYBODY needs to become educated and only then can there be change. That education will come through honest communication. Kiri did a wonderful thing...she opened up a line of communication and provocative thinking. It isn't a new approach, but it uncovered something that we have been sweeping under the rug in the name of complacency. The civil rights movement was not an act! It was a movement....and movements must continue to move or stagnation occurs and ground is lost. The civil rights movement opened up lines of communication, but when gains were made, people became complacent and then apathetic, because that is the path of least resistance. It is time to wake-up and re-visit these issues that were never fixed. We just put a bandaid on a gaping wound. The world is still hemorrhaging and the flesh is beginning to decay from beneath the bandaid. It is time that we get in there and clean this thing up, so some real healing can begin. I challenge each of you to take this girl's video on and discuss it with your friends Black, White, Latino, Asian, etc. and to discuss it earnestly with an intent to search for a part you can actively play in the solution. Videos like A GIRL Like ME, movies like Crash and Monster's Ball, song's like India Arie's, "I Am Not My Hair," always stir up controversy, but that is a good thing, because it opens up lines of communication. Let us keep our foot in the door, so those open spaces don't keep closing up and getting forgotten about as soon as the newness of the stimulus at hand wears off. With open lines of communication, together we can come to a univeral acceptance of our oneness and develop some plans that can give our young people back their hope! We have not arrived!

    Many thanks to Kiri for being brave enough look at this problem head on and trying to do it with some objectivity. You are a leader. I challenge you to keep the strength to work towards a solution of which you are already becoming a part.

    Be blessed little sister!
    Dr. Cheryl Denise BryantBruce

    From ucsomeonespecial on 23 August, 2006 at 7:47 AM   Just as another aside, the comment was made that someone didn't understand why we are searching for our "Roots." It is nothing that complex. It is a need for self-definition.  We see the same search repeatedly in children who are adopted. Even the most well- adjusted children who are adopted experience a void and search for an identity that they have difficulty finding. Some reach a comfortable place, where they find their own definition of self, independent of their parentage. Others search for a lifetime. One of the most glaring examples of this is the percentage of young men, both Black and White in the penal system who never knew their fathers. Although their situations have multifactorial causes, invariably they describe a sense of undetermined identity, not knowing who they are or how they are really supposed to fit in. We initially build our identity and self-esteem from external cues. The knowledge of our heritage can be a strong positive cue. It is not impossible to build a strong sense of self without that cultural background information, but in order for it to occur, there must be a strong, nurturing supportive environment that regularly defines and re-affirms and individuals worth.   We are most comfortable when we are validated by the cultural tenets of our tribe, whichever tribe with which we may choose to identify.  Afterall, one of each individuals most basic drives no matter what color the skin is to fill the need to be loved and the need to be understood.  

     I hope that both Kiri and the PinkSlips have continued to develop into socially conscious young adults who continue to take on the challenge of creating a world where we all can live as one,   embracing all of our diversity and appreciating each other for all of the richness that we bring as unique individuals with and without our respective tribes.

     

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