In these times of chaos and uncertainty, the murder that
happened on Memorial Day in Minneapolis exacerbated our own sense of confusion,
anger, uncertainty, and fear.
Today, Friday, after days of rioting and looting, two posts from
two different friends on my Facebook time line stood out.
These posts were painful to read because the writers exposed
so much of their emotions, their pains, and their fears in their posts. It was
a naked, honest, and impromptu exposition about how this heinous act
affected the posters. One was from a white man whose name is Justin Pletcher.
The other is from a black woman whose name is Deltha Katherine Harbin
Justin Pletcher’s post
https://www.facebook.com/jjp119/posts/10112579068233321
Deltha Katherine Harbin’s post.
https://www.facebook.com/deltha.scott/posts/10102862110993933
Both are heartbreaking to read, both are heartfelt and
sincere. While Justin’s story ended with a sense of hope and a sign of hope and
understanding, Deltha’s had a sense of desperation, lost hope, and despair.
Justin talks about his experience as a white policeman in a town
adjoining Minneapolis. He briefly recites his life experience and how he came
to be a policeman. He very quickly talks
honestly about his revulsion and disbelief at what a fellow policeman perpetrated
and the emotions that went through his mind. He then proceed to tell of his serendipitous meeting with a black man named Calvin, a health inspector who has to walk around the neighborhoods and he didn't
want people to be calling the police on him because he’s a black man with
dreadlocks. Stop for a second. Think about that. He is doing his job and he is
afraid of being targeted because he is a black man wearing dreadlocks. This is
the United States of America in the year 2020.
Justin meets Calvin and Justin decides to walk with Calvin
to get his job done, just to make sure that he was OK. The post is so deserving
to be read, so I will skip much of the details, You need to read Justin’s
words.
Justin’s narrative and his gesture towards Calvin was heartwarming,
as it was inspiring. The story gave me, and I hope all the other readers, hope.
At the end of the narrative, Justin tells us that they parted as friends and
they hope to continue that friendship. Indeed, it was a bright ray of hope in a
very dark time.
Deltha’s story was the complete opposite from Justin’s. She
talks about her husband, the love of her life, the father of her children. She
talks about all things that made her fall in love with him. She tells us about
a night when he went to the gas station to fill up her tank because it was too late,
and he didn’t want her to do it in the morning.
Please read Deltha’s story from her posting as well because
she deserves to be read. She relates how an older white woman called the police
on her husband just because he is black. She tells about how it became an
instance of a white woman’s accusation against the black man, and the police
believed her words against him even though she had no evidence to make the
claim, just that he is a black man. It was not until another white person, a
white man, vouched for her husband that he was released. Imagine that, the
police refused to believe a black man they did not know but was willing to take
the word of a white woman and then a white man they did not know. Let that sink
in. This is the moment when all the handy disguises and camouflages disappears,
and the inherent biases take over the decision-making process. Given two
unknown people, one black and one white, the people in the position of
authority chose to believe the white person.
I will give the policemen the benefit of the doubt, that
they don’t secretly own white hoods and that they don’t, as they say, have a
racist bone in their body, at least not consciously. The problem is that we are
dealing with ingrained prejudices, something that is not at the forefront of
your consciousness. I am very sure that if you asked the officers why they
chose to believe the white people versus the black man, they would have no idea
why anyone is so upset, that is just the way they see the world, and that is
exactly the problem.
I implore you to read Deltha’s narrative as closely as you
read Justin’s because even though both narratives are heartfelt and blunt,
Justin made me feel much better about my friends and neighbors, Deltha’s made
me angry and paranoid. Justin made me hopeful and Deltha made me understand the
problem in a much deeper manner that I had before.
Earlier in the week, when the protests in Minneapolis for devolve
into riots, a close friend was expressing his own dismay and frustration with
the rioting and looting that went on. He expressed the sentiment of many people:
what are they thinking? Why are they destroying their own neighborhoods? Why
are they burning businesses, some of the black owned? It is the same sentiment
that is expressed time and again during the rioting and protesting after each
killing of black people, this happened in St. Louis, It happened in New York
City, it happened in Texas. Looting and rioting are obviously not acceptable at
any time in a civilized society, I am not condoning any of those actions,
especially the actions of those opportunists who took advantage of the chaos,
anger, and fear. But, and this is not a WhatAboutism, it is a statement of
fact.
I think James Baldwin in his interview with Esquire magazine
in 1968, laid it out clearly:
Q. How would you define somebody who smashes in the window of a
television store and takes what he wants?
BALDWIN: Before I get to that, how
would you define somebody who puts a cat where he is and takes all the money
out of the ghetto where he makes it? Who is looting whom? Grabbing off the TV
set? He doesn’t really want the TV set. He’s saying screw you. It’s just
judgment, by the way, on the value of the TV set. He doesn’t want it. He wants
to let you know he’s there. The question I’m trying to raise is a very serious
question. The mass media-television and all the major news agencies-endlessly
use that word “looter”. On television you always see black hands reaching in,
you know. And so the American public concludes that these savages are trying to
steal everything from us, And no one has seriously tried to get where the
trouble is. After all, you’re accusing a captive population who has been robbed
of everything of looting. I think it’s obscene.
My friend also pre-supposes that we have no precedence to
reference, that the black citizens of America have always received some modicum
of justice in the legal system created, executed, and operated by white people.
It also assumes that legal recourse, review, and exoneration are a regular part
of the black citizen’s experience with the American justice system. We know
better. We have seen the results from the justice system that is decidedly
skewed against all minority citizens, but especially skewed against the black
citizens. Strange fruits indeed.
Returning to my friend’s question: are the black citizen’s
who chose to riot and loot crazy? Do they not how the system work? Are they
just so ignorant and primitive that they are not capable of understanding what
is best for them? Or have they been figuratively and literally pinned against
the ground so many times, had their necks stepped on by a someone’s knee so
many time, and lost their lives so many times that they have lost hope of ever receiving
justice from a system that is designed to work against justice for all, but actually
gives justice to only those who possess less melanin? In short, have they given
up on this system and they figure they had nothing to lose. Maybe they figured
that destroying wealth and property, the keystone to the American soul, is the
only way to get the attention of those who created this unfair system?
Think about THAT for a moment. How desperate and oppressed
must one be in order to believe that their only chance for justice is to
destroy whatever they had in order to make progress. It certainly speaks
volumes.
Please go back and read Deltha’s post once again. If it
gives my melanin challenged friends the kind of sadness and pain that it gave
me, it gives me hope, just as Justin’s post gave me hope.
One more hope is that the next encounter Delitha’s husband
has with a white policeman, it is with Justin, and they can both have a laugh
at the Karen that called in.
3 comments:
Thank you for posting this. Both accounts from your friends brought tears to my eyes. You achieve a remarkable balance in these accounts to expose the real division that we must struggle with. The struggle between people who see people as people and the people who see people as things. Conversation is essential to bridge this gap.
Thoughtful analysis. Way forward?
I don't know. But asking good questions and looking for good answers is a great way to start.
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