White Privilege Oblivion–Part 1

This post will be long….Be forewarned.

I think I am ready to get some thoughts down about the documentary The Color of Fear (1994).  It was a powerful movie that has forced me to look into myself and to admit that there are many things about race that I still don’t and will not be able to understand about race/racism/prejudice. 

Let me define first racism and prejudice.  The predominant social science definition of racism is that it is based in power–meaning that in our country (most of the western world) only white people can be racist as we are the ones who (as a group) hold the power in our society.  This means that there is no reverse racism–minorities by definition cannot be racist towards anyone as they do not have the power in our society–minorities can be prejudiced toward others but not racist.  I know there will be some of you that do not agree with that definition–but I do.  So it is where I operate from when I talk about racism. 

Here is the plot summary of the movie: Eight North American men, two African American, two Latinos, two Asian American and two Caucasian were gathered by director Lee Mun Wah, for a dialog about the state of race relations in America as seen through their eyes. The exchanges are sometimes dramatic, and put in plain light the pain caused by racism in North America.

I use to be of the mind that there is only one “race” and that we should really stop using the word race to define others.  I stand corrected.  There is only one “race” for me because I am white, “Whites don’t talk about themselves as white people but as human beings as if they are the same thing [white=human being]” (victor/TCoF).  I am humbled by this.  I thought I was so enlightened in my thinking.  I have often thought–naively I have now been reminded–that we are all human beings and why can’t we just all treat each other that way. 

The movie did a great job of bringing to light the often hidden white privilege.  The movie also talked about what it means to be considered American and how people of color view the word American and human being.  All of the men of color felt that to define yourself as just as an American was to lose something.  “When we [people of color] give up who we are to become Americans, we know that we are dying from it.  You’re dying from it to, but you don’t know it necessarily.  Get ethnic…” (victor).  This was a powerful moment in the film for me.  It really forced me to think about what being American is.  I consider myself lucky that I think about my ethnic heritage–Irish and German.  But it certainly isn’t part of my consciousness.  I describe myself as an American.  I never thought that the concept of being American meant something different to others. 

One of the Latino male participants brought up the presumptuousness of the term American–as everyone from North, Central and South American are technically Americans, yet we whites have taken the term America for ourselves and changed it for everyone else.  We made the term American synonymous with WHITE–making the term only apply to a small number of people who inhabit the Americas. 

I am so happy that I saw this movie.  As a white mother of a Ethiopian American, I understand the import of keeping his heritage prevalent in his consciousness.  To stop referring to him as an Ethiopian American means to deny him his sense of self.  He will always be seen as a black American or African American but the dominant culture and to deny that I am turning a blind eye(More on race labels in part 2).  I cannot afford to do that as his mother.  I have to teach him to love himself and to embrace himself not to teach him that assimilation is what he has to do.  As his parent I have to validate his experience.  I have to listen. 

We all have to listen and to validate the experiences of those different than us.  We cannot turn a blind eye because it hasn’t happened to us.  We cannot deny others the right to their heritage because it makes us uncomfortable.  Racism is essentially a white man’s issue/problem.  To say to those of color–why can’t we all just be human beings–is really saying “why can’t we all pretend to just be white?” 

As a white person living in a white community, I do not often have to deal with people of color outside of social situations (not in power relations).  But people of color always have to deal with white people in that power capacity and that influences the behavior.  To fit into corporate America ones has to effectively assimilate to white…I mean corporate culture.  To be an American is not what those of color aspire because the images of what an American is does not resemble them in anyway—doesn’t look, cry, play, etc., like them. 

To expect them to be “American” to participate in corporate culture is to strip them of their identity; thereby, making them vulnerable and stripped of all power.  As a white person, this is something that I will never have to do.  My son, as an Ethiopian American will be expected to do it.  Sadly, it will be easier for him because he will be raised in that community–but it will cause him to not fit into either community. 

We must listen.  We must validate.  We must accept.  We must support each other as we are, not as we think they should be. 

4 thoughts on “White Privilege Oblivion–Part 1

  1. Thanks for writing about this. Great Post – look forward to Part II. I’ll be watching this in addition to sharing the discussion with extended family. I don’t feel like many “get” the importance of assertively expressing our son’s reality as an Ethiopian-American.

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  2. Very powerful. I agree with Jenni – I get a lot of strange responses when I assert that Micah is Ethiopian-American. I’ve had family say, “No, he’s an American now.” It’s hard to relate to them, but perhaps sharing the ideas in your post could help them to understand.

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  3. A great post, DM. As a white newly-American who grew up in apartheid South Africa, I always have a hard time with people who think questions of racism/non-racism are simple and mindless and easy. Whites are often only “color-blind” when the people of color they encounter fit into a homogeneous and comfy niche involving middle-class (and western) values. It’s easy to pretend none of us feel any distinction one to the other if we are all equal in terms of income and culture, and all pursuing the same white capitalist corporate ideals. Go to South Africa and you will see the layers upon layers of complexity involved in how the different “races” interact — a country where at least these issues are spoken about OUT LOUD and ALL THE TIME by ALL PARTIES! It is extremely wonderful to imagine a world in which we are a great big “rainbow nation” with different tones to our skin yet equally validated cultural values. But until such time as we start looking deep within ourselves and recognizing that we all harbor prejudices and fears and cultural values that might not be the same as the person next to us, we will never accept each other. You have to understand yourself to understand others. As the mother of an American child who is of color and from Africa no less, you grapple with this stuff all the time. But many other white Americans think they understand and are tolerant of other cultures when in fact they just don’t ever have to really think about it.

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