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Why America Can't Get Beyond Race

Posted by Trish , Pensito Review at 6:48 AM on March 20, 2008.


As long as we continue to say racism doesn't exist, or that it only exists in the South, or never in us, we will remain mired in blame and anger.
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Tutu

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Obama's speech on race made me think back to what I was doing five years ago. Archbishop Desmond Tutu was a visiting professor at the University of North Florida, and offered a class to non-students which I was lucky enough to attend.

It was the eve of war, and all his comments were filtered through that certainty. We had some slight hope that Bush would back down, that the U.N. might somehow stop him, but we knew what was most likely coming.

But that's another subject. The class was on Tutu's Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which helped South Africa end apartheid without massive spilling of white blood, an alternative most South African whites never thought possible. The Truth and Reconciliation process involved first confronting what took place, allowing victims to speak their truth and requiring oppressors to hear it, arriving at punishments that acknowledge no one is beyond God's ability to redeem, and reparations that restore dignity and compensate for loss on the part of those who were mistreated.

American blacks and whites, who filled the room, listened to this description and avoided eye contact with people in the next seat. They wondered why race is just under the surface of everything in this country, and how this continues to be the case when slavery and reconstruction are so long past.

Someone finally found the nerve to ask Tutu why things are different here.

"In South Africa, we knew they intended to clobber us, and you had to deal with that and find ways to defend yourself and to survive. Here, there seemed to be a kind of conspiracy. And I have come to the conclusion that it seems to me that you are not going to be able to have normal relationships until you come to terms with the legacy of slavery and what happened to Native Americans. There seems to be a pain that is sitting in the pit of the tummy of almost all African Americans and Native Americans," Tutu said.

No, we haven't come to terms with it. Like Obama said in his speech, white people today, who never personally owned another person, can't understand why they should be held responsible for what was done in the past. And black people can't understand why we don't get their anger.

Obama's speech, even with all the attention it got, is underestimated because what people really wanted to hear was whether he denounced his pastor enough. They regarded everything else as just a backdrop for his anticipated but not delivered "apology." Instead, he gave us nothing less than the whole shooting match, folks.

The fact is that the comments that have been made and the issues that have surfaced over the last few weeks reflect the complexities of race in this country that we've never really worked through -- a part of our union that we have yet to perfect. And if we walk away now, if we simply retreat into our respective corners, we will never be able to come together and solve challenges like health care, or education, or the need to find good jobs for every American.

Understanding this reality requires a reminder of how we arrived at this point. As William Faulkner once wrote, "The past isn't dead and buried. In fact, it isn't even past."

We need this guy. This country is stuck, and it's going to stay that way until we do what Tutu and Obama urge. As long as we continue to say racism doesn't exist, or that it only exists in the South, or only in that person or this one but never in us, we will remain mired in blame and anger. Let's get beyond it. Let's do the hard work. Let's put Obama in the White House and see where it leads. I'm betting it's somewhere much better than where we are now.

AlterNet is a nonprofit organization and does not make political endorsements. The opinions expressed by its writers are their own.

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Tagged as: race, racism, obama, tutu

Trish is a regular blogger for the Pensito Review.


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Winners and losers
Posted by: fred_53_99 on Mar 20, 2008 5:53 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Many Years ago I read a book named "winners and Losers" One pasasge I have noticed over years to be very true is this " Winners admit thier predjucies and are able to get pass them , Losers never admit thier and never resolve them"We as apeople both black , white brown ,gay or other have not been able to admit or forgive themselves.

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Bravo Trish!
Posted by: ellispayne on Mar 20, 2008 7:59 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bravo, Trish. I really enjoyed reading your article. It puts what the US needs to do into its overall, rightful context. Senator Obama lifted the dialog to new heights and, in doing so, enabled a deeper discussion of race and racism in America--a real discussion, among all American citizens. Some of us have been waiting for this all our lives.

I pray that Sen. Obama gets elected, because he is by far the most Presidential of all the candidates, but most of all, because he is capable of lifting up the level of political discourse to where it needs to be.

He lifted all of us up--those of us who could hear him, that is. Some people have an interesting kind of deafness--they only hear what they have already decided, and never hear anything that might threaten their status quo.

Anyway, Trish, thanks again for keeping Sen. Obama's discussion going in a place where an old white woman can participate. Keep up the good work!!

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Barely out of the jungle
Posted by: nfamous on Mar 20, 2008 8:03 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Exactly how does electing Obama equate with improving race relations. The country is so divided that no matter who is elected the losing party's crowd is going to be angered and resentful. If Obama wins racist whites will be pissed. If Hillary wins sexists will be pissed. If McCain wins the hard left will be pissed. There is no win without compromise and there is no compromise, not anymore. Those days are over.

Obama cannot even begin to repair the damage done to blacks in one or two terms, not that he would try. I have my doubts because he always have to walk a thin line to keep his white supporters loyal and that means not espousing the true changes necessary for equality that they fear. It's all fear in this country. It started with man afraid of the dark and has been extrapolated over hundreds of thousands of years to this moment in history. We are barely out of the jungle like George Carlin said.

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Time for America to Grow up
Posted by: dgleason on Mar 20, 2008 8:35 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am heartened that Obama responded to this ever incidiary issue with content worthy of the best in America.

We need to get over the rhetoric that is so simple it would have trouble qualifying as content for a saturday morning cartoon.

Issues of race in america uncovers first the great deep cognative dissonance of the USA. A constitution that asserts a dramatic statement of self determination and egaltarianism and codifies slavery.

It is a challenging as the christian bible, and as rich and rewarding.

We have to be able to enter these conversations and come out on the other side.

We have to recognize the inclination of individuals to try and use a political dynamic as a personal sledgehammer as much as we need to recognize our own individual attachments to what we want to be our anonimous priviledges.

I have known any number of men of color who very clearly wanted their turn as 'white guys', as I have known women who wanted the same.

I have known any number of cacasion men and women who if they took 2 seconds to think about it secretly counted on their advantage when they walked into an employment interview and any number of other venues.

I have been in awe of the generational fortitude it has taken for our citizens of color to manage somehow to create rich fulfilling lives in the very turbulent historical and interpersonal sea that is our society.

It is important for me to acknowledge that I, as a middle class caucasion female have not traveled the same road as a person of color and my accomplishments, while not insignificant, would have been unlikely at best as a person of color born in the late 50's.

Priviledge is complex in a society so unwilling to give up un-nuanced content poor pride for a realization of the accomplishment of an adult, with its disappointments as well as its achievements.

The nuanced dramatic adult rhetoric of Martin Luther King was silenced much too quickly and we struggled through the changes of the last 1/2 century, there is much to be proud of, in individual's willingness to move on, and in individual's willingness to embrace change.

I think Obama has been doing a pretty good job of addressing complex issues. I hope America has grown up enough to be able to give up its snap judgements for a more adult problem solving stance.

Sincerely,

Danielle Gleason

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Let us have it both ways then, and regret it deeply.
Posted by: riotoustanpdx on Mar 20, 2008 5:42 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We do not owe the White House to anyone and putting Obama in the presidency will solve nothing.

I grew up in the South. In "Tejas" I worked with scores of Black women, almost exclusively, in a service business. I got to understand the race issue from both sides, and I assert strongly that the percentage of prejudice varies from individual to individual and from place to place.

Whites happen to get most of the blame, as if the White population of today is responsible for the crimes of the past. Unfortunately those who believe this ignore the facts of history.

Tribal rivalries and hatred contributed much more to the selection of persons held and sold in slavery. That is, Black against Black in tribal warfare. Persons were sold to the market, and the Spaniards were the worst of the Europeans profiting from the trade.

Of course, in the slave states, the economy depended upon slave labor, and many - but not all - persons held in slavery were treated horribly. Unfortunately, history as it is used today conveniently excuses the hatred and racism of Black against White that prevails in many contemporary persons of color in these United States.

The same racism prevents a sensible integration policy regarding the thirty-one Mexican States with the northern fifty in this country.

Obama wants to have it both ways: he wants to claim that he is above using the race issue to gain votes and get elected, and he uses the race issue in an exceedingly clever way to gain sympathy and votes while stoking the fires of race division in very subtle ways. This is how some people come to the conclusion that "we need this guy" to heal our wounds of the past.

This is duplicitous. It is using cynicism to gain power, and this deception is more dangerous than the alternative, that of taking the positive road towards a legacy that we will leave our children.

There is only one positive legacy that we are capable of leaving our children and grandchildren: A clean and healthy green environment.

We have horribly ruined our only legacy.

But we have evaded the discussion of this truth throughout this presidential campaign.

Every word of the discussion of "race, no race in my campaign" is wasteful, except in how it is used to advance one candidate: 'unless you vote for Obama you are racist."

The Life-support system is dying, and all races have but one alternative: face the truth of this, and work together to save our Mother. Everything else said in this campaign stems from the fear of facing this One Great Issue, and accepting responsibility to lead us into the Solar Age.

It is a quest for Power without Accountability.

These are the words of Thomas A. Nagy.

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