Daily Archives: June 15, 2012

They Left Great Marks on Me: African American Testimonies of Racial Violence from Emancipation to World War I

Author Kidada E. Williams

The  slaying of Trayvon Martin brings to mind centuries of racial violence and white supremacy in America. Physical force by whites against blacks, including beatings, burnings, rapes, whippings and murders, accompanied every step of racial change from slavery to emancipation and from Jim Crow to desegregation.

In 1919, the black sociologist W.E.B. Du Bois explained that racial violence occurred because “too many Negroes are forging beyond the place in which the community thinks they ought to stay; they are evidencing too much prosperity; they are showing new independence in manner and expression; they are accumulating property.” In his classic essay “The Souls of White Folk” (1920), Du Bois proclaimed: “For two or more centuries America has marched proudly in the van of human hatred,– making bonfires of human flesh and laughing at them hideously, and making the insulting of millions more than a matter of dislike,–rather a great religion.”

Though scholars have painstakingly documented and interpreted strains of racial violence in American history, Kidada E. Williams, who teaches at Wayne State University, offers an important and fresh perspective on what Du Bois termed blacks’ “descent to hell.”

Focusing on racial violence from emancipation through the establishment of the NAACP’s anti-lynching crusade of the 1920s and 1930s, she analyzes the broad cultural, political and social meaning of blacks’ testifying about their experiences as victims of racial violence. Williams considers that testimony “an underappreciated form of resistance to white supremacy,” one that fashioned a “vernacular history” of racial violence.

In the post-emancipation era, white Southerners sought to return the freed people to the status of semi-slaves. To do so they subjected them to horrific terror in the form of night riding, lynching, massacring and rioting. Though some blacks remained traumatized by such acts, others took bold steps, risking their lives and their credibility “to recover their agency and resist violence by proclaiming their trauma to strangers.”

They did so by testifying before Army officials, Freedmen’s Bureau agents and courts, at congressional hearings, in autobiographies and in letters to officials. Williams interprets such acts as “resisting violence discursively.” They forced whites to “bear witness to black people’s suffering from racial violence” and helped “recruit allies to their campaigns to end violence and advance civil rights reform.”

In May 1871, for example, night riders broke into Mary Brown’s home in White County, Ga., convinced that she was withholding evidence regarding the murder of a white man. After whipping her husband, Joe, until he was incapacitated, the men turned to Mary, stripping and whipping her. She testified before congressmen that the attackers “left great marks on me.” Williams suspects that her assailants’ true motive was to retaliate against Joe, who had outbid a white man for the land on which his family lived.

Seven years later Alfred Blount, former Republican state senator from Natchitoches, La., armed himself to the teeth and fought off white Democrats who sought to assassinate him. Testifying before a Senate committee, Blount insisted: “No two or 3, or fifty, can contend with an organization in northern Louisiana who are in opposition to the Republican party. I will tell you that it will require the U.S. Army.”

Over generations, Williams concludes, such testimony coalesced into a multilayered “transcript of violence, terror, and suffering that later campaigns against racial violence suggest became embedded into the social memory of black people.” Those who testified against racial violence “helped African Americans and the nation edge closer to the Promised Land of full citizenship rights and participation in American life.”

That destination, as Trayvon Martin’s case seems to suggest, remains elusive.

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Sexual Terrorist Exposes His White Genitals To Children At Disney Resort Pool

Reblogged from Cynical Afrikan:

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This filthy sexual terrorist from New York is in jail, accused of exposing his "white" genitals to young children in a Walt Disney World swimming pool.

John Oldham, 68, was captured Monday after two incidences at the pool at Disney’s Animal Kingdom Lodge.

Deputies said two girls told them they saw Oldham expose his junk as they swam underwater.

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Stone Cold Pedophile Charged With Transporting Child Porn

Reblogged from Cynical Afrikan:

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This bald "white" savage from Sugar Grove was arrested and charged with transporting child pornography after the items were provided to an undercover FBI agent.

Dennis Houston, 43, was captured in his home on June 7, where agents found about 1,300 child pornography images and video files on his laptop computer, according to a press release issued by the FBI.

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cradle-to-grave prison system for africans

Reblogged from replace white supremacy with justice:

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cradle-to-grave prison system for africans

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The C.O.W.S. YURUGU Study Session (Pages 281 – 350) on Friday, June 15th 8:00PM Eastern/ 5:00PM Pacific

Talkshoe: http://www.talkshoe.com/tc/97250

Black Talk Radio Network: http://blacktalkradionetwork.com/page/the-context-of-white-supremacy

The Context of White Supremacy hosts the weekly study session on Dr. Marimba Ani’s crucial publication, YURUGU: An Afrkian-Centered Critique Of European Cultural Thought And Behavior. This week’s broadcast will cover Chapter 5 [Images of Others], Chapter 6 [Rhetoric And Behavior], Chapter 7 [Intracultural Behavior]. Dr. Ani dissects the White Supremacist view of non-white people and how these Racist images synthesize with White Racist impulses. She offers an exemplary explanation of White Rhetoric – false beliefs that are packaged for Victims of Racism. Dr. Ani explains how the grandiose promises and ideals of White people serve to confound non-white people – keep us from understanding the true nature of Racist Man, Racist Woman and Racist child.

HD Number: 760-569-7676 CODE 564943# *6 to Talk to Host

Talkshoe Number: 724-444-7444 Code 97250# *8 to Talk to Host

SKYPE: FREECONFERENCECALLHD.7676 CODE 564943#

The C.O.W.S. archives:

http://tiny.cc/76f6p

http://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-c.o.w.s./id471121328

Invest in The COWS: http://tiny.cc/ledjb

Categories: racism, racism is white supremacy is racism, racist man woman child, the religion of white supremacy, white supremacy | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 12 Comments

A Nigger is a Shapeshifter

Reblogged from Cree7's Blog:

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Nigger

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Nigger = victim of the global system of white domination/supremacy (any person not classified as white/cauc-asian)

If you are a Facebook friend of mine, you have likely already read my nigger views. I am re-posting them here with a few embellishments for readers from around the globe who aren't my friends.

Being identified as a nigger is not a negative reflection on the person being so called.

Read more… 391 more words

Categories: racism, racism is white supremacy is racism, white supremacy | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

How to Read a Racist Book to Your Kids

“Dad, why do the pirates have a gorilla?” This unexpected question intruded on a recent intergenerational cultural exchange: I was introducing my 6-year-old son to Asterix the Gaul. The pirates in the “Asterix” comics don’t travel with a gorilla, of course. One of the pirate crew is a grotesque caricature of an African who does indeed more closely resemble a gorilla than a person.

Freeze-frame on this parenting situation. What am I supposed to do? I figure I have three options.

1) Explain that the gorilla is supposed to be a black person.

2) Try to explain the history of French colonialism, how the economics of exploitation in sub-Saharan Africa led to an ideology of racism, which survived in a ghostly transfer even after the conclusion of the French Empire, infecting even silly comics about ancient Gaul.

3) Say, “I don’t know why the pirates have a gorilla” and flip to the next page.

Naturally I chose 3 — the cowardly choice. There will be time enough to explain the cruelties of history later, I figure. Nonetheless I am left with the queasy knowledge that I had better come up with a solution soon, because my lies and obfuscations are washing ever thinner, and the summer movie season is coming as well, with new “Ice Age” and “Madagascar” installments. Their ethnic typologies and attitudes — from Ray Romano as a Brooklyn-fuhgeddaboudit woolly mammoth to Chris Rock as a zebra whose catchphrase is “crackalackin!” — resemble a sort of preglobalization New York. Besides, much of the great old children’s material, like so much of the great old adult material, is either racist to the core or at least has seriously racist bits. Learning to negotiate around them or through them is something that every parent has to do, unless you want to waste your children’s precious young lives sticking strictly to “approved literature” and Winnie-the-Pooh.

Some decisions are easy. “The Story of Little Black Sambo,” say, or “Tintin in the Congo.” Hergé himself was deeply embarrassed by the latter book, brushing it off as a youthful error. The British bookstore chain Waterstones removed the book from the shelves of the children’s section. The Brooklyn Public Library has placed “Tintin in the Congo” in a special, by-appointment-only rare-books section. As parents, we know what to do with this stuff: Certainly never show it to young kids.

That decision is made so much easier by the fact that both of those books are lousy. The only memorable part of “Tintin in the Congo” is a scene in which Tintin hunts a rhinoceros by blowing it up with dynamite. And who will mourn Little Black Sambo?

Much trickier is material that is otherwise excellent but contains significant racist passages. Michael Chabon recently wrote about negotiating (and ultimately eliminating) the racial epithets while reading “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” to his kids, following a painful and honest discussion about it with them. I admire his spirit of openness, but I have to admit I would never have had the stomach to imitate him — either in the willful alteration or the discussion about it.

So we’re left wondering how to approach, say, “Dumbo” with its racist-stereotype crows, or the original “Pippi Longstocking” trilogy. The publishers of “Pippi Longstocking” long ago changed certain phrases in the books — the Swedish negerkung was traditionally translated as “Cannibal King” until a 2007 edition, in which the translation became “King of Natives.” But one German theologian has recently proposed explanatory footnotes to turn the most problematic passages — the black children abasing themselves before Pippi, for example — into educational opportunities. Even the most politically correct among us are unwilling to toss “Pippi” out completely; after all, despite her appearance in a book with racist elements, she has become a feminist icon.

Sometimes the racist passages can be excised completely, and our crimes can be covered up. If you really want to upset yourself, go to YouTube and look up the original 1940 “Pastoral Symphony” section from Disney’s “Fantasia.” Sunflower the centaur, an amalgam of antebellum pickaninny stereotypes, polishes the hooves and primps the tails of the pastel-colored female centaurs while they prepare to frolic in the wilderness. The scenario is one of maximum sadness and horror; in the American imagination of 1940, even the world of little-girl centaurs was one of humiliating subjugation. But Disney edited the sequence for rerelease in the ’60s, and all subsequent rereleases, which means that I can show “Fantasia” to my son.

Other classics have been successfully rewritten. In the first edition of Roald Dahl’s “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory,” the Oompa-Loompas were members of an African tribe displaced by Willy Wonka to the northern industrial hinterland. Not quite so funny anymore that his workers worship him like a god, is it? Or that he keeps them scrupulously isolated from the general population? Or that he pays them in cocoa beans? For the second edition in 1973, Dahl changed the Oompa-Loompas from black pygmies into “rosy-white” creatures with long “golden-brown” hair. The 1971 movie made them orange-skinned with green hair. Loompaland is a complicated place.

We rewrite the past to serve the needs of the present. The clarity of history is its great advantage. The racism in “Fantasia” or “Pippi Longstocking” is overt: instantly identifiable by its noxious odor and satisfyingly dismissible with enlightened disgust. More subtle instances may provoke hedging and justification. The “Babar” series of books has long been the subject of ferocious debates about its status as a propagandistic celebration of colonialism. The argument makes complete sense to me — the elephants return to their native land bearing the gifts of civilization learned in the metropolis and make war on the rhinoceroses who don’t share the benefits of acculturation. But as a practical parenting matter, I don’t care. My son won’t be turned into a more effective colonist by stories of elephants riding elevators.

Besides, “Babar” is boring. The influence of the more recent “Star Wars” installments is more profound, and it worries me. I managed to avoid the recent rerelease of “Episode I: The Phantom Menace” in 3-D, but only barely. Every father who loves the original “Star Wars” trilogy eventually runs into the fiasco that is Jar Jar Binks — a character capable of destroying a generation’s worth of affection with a single rustle of his oversize ears. While many have noted Jar Jar as a racist stereotype, it’s unclear exactly which stereotype he is. Is Jar Jar a Rastafarian stoner or a Stepin Fetchit or a Zuluesque savage? Or is he just a Gungan? And what about Watto, also from “The Phantom Menace”? A dark-skinned, hooknosed, greedy slaveholder, he’s an all-purpose anti-Semitic caricature. Or possibly he’s just a hovering bad guy in a fantasy world. The conundrum is how to explain to your kids that Jar Jar and Watto are stereotypes without first introducing the stereotypes that you are hoping to negate.

Even Pixar, which deserves the gratitude of every parent for its nearly unbroken series of classics, indulges a surprising amount of relatively crude stereotyping. In one of my favorites, “Monsters, Inc.,” Sulley and Mike, on the way into the office, happen to pass an orange squidlike grocer with a handlebar mustache who kind of talks-a-like-a-this. Perhaps that kind of stereotype is not as gruesome or upsetting as the one in the original “Fantasia,” but I had the distinct impression, as my son laughed at the scene, that my Italian immigrant grandfather was turning over in his grave.

How am I supposed to explain to a child the superimposition of cultural generalizations onto toy cars and monsters and space aliens? I can barely explain it to myself. Blissfully unaware of what is being promoted, children love those movies. Try convincing any kid under the age of 12 that “The Empire Strikes Back” is a better movie than “The Phantom Menace,” or that “Finding Nemo” is better than “Cars 2.” You’ll be laughed at. Stereotypes are part of what children want from stories, which of course connects to what we all want from stories: simplification. We want all stepmothers to be evil. We want all huntsmen to be heroes. And apparently, for the most part, we want characters’ ethnicities to be equally simplistic, whether the movie is set in a monster world or an ice age or Madagascar. Who knows what the consequences are or whether there are any? Is it because children like the simplification? Or are our minds simplified by exposure to these early stereotypes?

Despite my misgivings, I know that I won’t be able to give up Asterix. My relationship to the comic is too deep; it was made too early, bound up with my own childhood. They were the only comics we were allowed to read in French class in Canada. (The Smurfs were banned because of their limited vocabulary.) When I gashed my knee playing tag in the back alley behind my house and had to have 15 stitches, the treat that I received for being brave was “Asterix in Britain.” And so I’m hedging, cravenly. I believe this is the very definition of white liberal guilt: I feel bad but I won’t change my behavior.

That familiar and insoluble knot of moral difficulty is infinitely complicated by the fact that I’m sharing it with a child. I don’t want to explain the human gorilla and all the chains of horror that went into that caricature because I’m afraid of the follow-up questions. Recently as I was laying down ant traps against the annual spring invasion, my son asked me, “Do ants have souls?” I didn’t have a good answer for that. What is he going to ask when I explain that for 400 years, white people took black people from their homes in Africa, carried them across the ocean in chains, beat them to death as they worked to produce sugar and cotton, separated them from their children and felt entitled to do so because of the difference in the color of their skin? Whatever he asks next, I’m pretty sure I won’t have an adequate reply.

Academic notions of the unspeakability of historical horrors become very immediate in the face of a child. There are many children’s books to help children understand the horror of history, or introduce them to the failure to understand the horror of history. But explaining how those horrors play out in everyday life, through a thousand subtle means, often unexpected, like children’s books, seems nearly impossible. No doubt I want to shelter my son and also myself, but I think, in some vague, indefinable way, I want to shelter the past too. I’m embarrassed for humanity at all this nonsense, and I don’t want to submit the world to the complete and perfect judgment of an innocent.

We all need to grow up, I know. Me, the moviemakers, the audience. The only person who seems mature enough for the situation is the 6-year old. All he sees is a gorilla with some pirates.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/17/magazine/how-to-read-a-racist-book-to-your-kids.html?pagewanted=all

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white female Burlington School Superintendent contract extended as racism talks head to City Hall

Jeanne Collins, center, superintendent of the Burlington School District

Jeanne Collins, superintendent of the Burlington School District

In response to mounting criticism Collins has released an action plan, based on recommendations in the original strategic plan, and has pledged to “eliminate race, ethnicity, class, gender, and sexual orientation as predictors of academic performance, discipline, and co-curricular participation.”

The steps she has described include strengthening complaint procedures, upgrading professional development, reorganizing administrative staffing to improve the handling of equity issues, improving retention of a more diverse staff, and creating an Equity Climate Team to monitor and follow up on incidents.

Somali students protest at Burlington High School in April. Photo by Greg Guma

Somali students protest at Burlington High School in April.

Her critics say that they have heard such promises before and do not believe, based on its past performance, that the current administration is up to the challenges.

In print and public statements Collins has repeatedly admitted that she missed opportunities, acted too slowly, and has been bureaucratic rather than heart-centered in her response. Beyond taking the steps outlined recently and refocusing her efforts, possibly under increased school board scrutiny, she therefore plans to spend more time actually interacting with students and teachers in the schools.

In print and public statements Collins has repeatedly admitted that she missed opportunities, acted too slowly, and has been bureaucratic rather than heart-centered in her response. Beyond taking the steps outlined recently and refocusing her efforts, possibly under increased school board scrutiny, she therefore plans to spend more time actually interacting with students and teachers in the schools.

But as Appel’s May 10 letter to the board suggests, while frank discussions and rhetorical commitment are hopeful signs, they have happened before and continue to leave some issues unacknowledged. He argued, for example, that existing resources are not being smartly deployed, specifically asking why Diversity Director Dan Balon “appears to be being kept on the sidelines.”

Confirming suspicions that some school administrators do not adhere to the superintendent’s zero tolerance standard, Appel also reported from “multiple credible sources” that Vice Principal Nick Molander tried to intimidate speakers after the May public forum. Appel said his sources reported that Molander sought out several people of color and “in a confrontational manner informed them, in so many words, that their perspectives were not valid. The perception of those who received this message from Mr. Molander was that he was attempting to intimidate them.”

Claudine Nkurinziza, far right, addresses race issues in Burlington schools with members of the House Education Committee in April. Photo by Taylor Dobbs

Claudine Nkurinziza, far right, addresses race issues in Burlington schools with members of the House Education Committee in April.

Appel informed the board bluntly that an administrator who does that “should not be in a school setting, and should have his licensure investigated.” If Molander behaves like this with adults, he added, “just imagine how overbearing and abusive he may well be one-on-one with a student of color in an unsupervised context.”

Asked about Appel’s letter Molander said he had not seen it, but “would have no comment at this point.”

Denying itself the option of an executive session to discuss personnel, evaluation and contract matters the school board did not get near this level of scrutiny in dealing with Collins’ responsibilities and contract. There were only indirect references to the difficulties of supervisory oversight and how to define and distinguish board and management responsibilities.

School board members meanwhile emphasized that equity issues were not the only matters being addressed, in general or in relation to Collins’ tenure. As Evans, one of several commissioners on the losing side of Wednesday’s contract votes, put it in a local newspaper column, the school board “is not exclusively concerned with race in its decision.” But the district does need “a visionary leader who can be proactive and take risks.”

http://vtdigger.org/2012/06/15/collins-contract-extended-as-racism-talks-head-to-city-hall-2/

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Eight-match ban for football referee after racist remarks at game

A Dunedin football referee has been banned from officiating for eight matches after being found guilty of racially abusing a spectator at a match earlier this month.

Footballsouth chairman Dougal McGowan yesterday confirmed a judicial hearing found the referee guilty of making a racially abusive comment to the spectator.

He declined to name the referee.

However, the Otago Daily Times has learnt the referee suspended is Dave Langley.

Mr Langley, who has the right to appeal the suspension, had no comment when he was contacted by the newspaper yesterday.

Mr Langley (57) is a referee with more than 15 years’ experience.

In the game at which the incident took place, a premier match between Grants Braes and Roslyn-Wakari at Ellis Park on June 2, Mr Langley handed out three red cards.

Mr McGowan said a Grants Braes player, who had been sent off the previous week, was watching the game when he was subjected to a racial comment from the referee.

Mr McGowan said there was still debate about exactly what Mr Langley said, but all parties agreed on the intent of the statement.

Mr Langley admitted to the judiciary he said words of “a certain nature”.

The player was standing with a group of people away from the coach and bench of the Grants Braes side.

Mr McGowan said under Fifa rules, the minimum suspension which could be given was five matches, but the panel hearing the case decided an eight-match ban was appropriate.

The incident occurred on June 2 and Mr Langley was stood down by Footballsouth later that week.

He had then refereed a division 2 game on June 9.

Mr McGowan said, legally, the referee was allowed at that time to continue with his duties because the hearing had not taken place and he was innocent until proven guilty.

He was not punished for refereeing when he had been stood down by Footballsouth.

Mr McGowan said there was no place in football for what was said by the referee.

“If you accept what was said in a football match then you are accepting it in society, and that is not good enough,” he said.

Racial abuse is not right anywhere. We need to reflect what is right in society and what isn’t.”

He was disappointed it had occurred but such incidents were rare.

http://www.odt.co.nz/news/dunedin/213501/eight-match-ban-football-referee-after-racist-remarks-game

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