Back before Martin Luther King junior day, Soledad O'Brien gave the annual MLK address here on campus. As I entered Memorial Hall to take my seat, I noticed something. I was in a mixed crowd. Don't get me wrong, Carolina isn't lily white by any means, we are filled with a diverse student body and faculty, but I am solidly in the majority at almost any event I attend. I rather enjoyed watching people interact with each other, the laughter the hushed conversations.
When O'Brien took the microphone she told a personal story. This was not a speech to dwell on the past, but through her own life show a modern day tale of civil rights. She hinged her speech on what she dubbed modern day context to civil rights ideals: love thy neighbor. She said that this is the new idea because civil rights can't be boiled down into black and white anymore. "Today, racism is less clear and overt than it was in my parents day when they got married in 1965," she said. As a child of a mixed-race marriage, the union of her parents was illegal for many years. The racism experienced by her mother is not the experience of many youth today, she argues. "Today it's 'you don't fit.'"
Her speech was empowering, from a civil rights standpoint, but also from a life standpoint. The struggles she used as examples, and the lessons gleaned from them can be applied to all facets of life. "Just because external forces tell you it can not be done," she said. "Does not mean it can not be done. ... There are opportunities for us mere mortals, and I see them every day." She talked about the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina and how in the St. Bernard Parish, which is 97% white, there were no cameras on them either. They, too were ignored. But she noted the ways the communities came together to rebuild and to endure together. "Given the opportunity, people can do great things," she said. "Love people. Serve humanity." And while she said that discussions of a "post racial" world are a complete joke, because that world will never happen, she left the audience with an adaptation of the famous "I have a dream" speech. I have a dream is about empowerment. It's "I will stand with you and empower you."
As everyone filed out of the auditorium, people muttered to themselves and their friends. I watched as Soledad graciously chatted with a few fans at the corner of the stage. I left feeling empowered and excited about the impact I could have in the world.
Love People. Serve Humanity.
Monday, April 25, 2011
Imagining the life of an immigrant
One of my favorite buildings on campus is the Fed Ex Global Education Center. I have two classes per week in that building, and it's always interesting to walk through the lobby and become immersed in a culture outside my own. One of the most compelling this year was a display about the immigrant experience, particularly the "illegal" immigrant one. Duct tape lined the floor from the beginning of the lobby to the exit symbolizing the border between the United States and Mexico. On either side of the tape were images of articles of clothing, shoes, toothbrushes, trash etc. Snapshots of a life left behind.
I imagined myself in their shoes for a minute. I'm trying to cross illegally an din the process of coming know I can not be weighed down by excess items. I can't imagine what I would leave behind, how I could start with nothing more than the clothes on my back and have any real expectation of a better life. The exhibit in the Global Ed Center made me consider my position on the US side of that line and how people literally die trying to reach it. How lucky am I?
I imagined myself in their shoes for a minute. I'm trying to cross illegally an din the process of coming know I can not be weighed down by excess items. I can't imagine what I would leave behind, how I could start with nothing more than the clothes on my back and have any real expectation of a better life. The exhibit in the Global Ed Center made me consider my position on the US side of that line and how people literally die trying to reach it. How lucky am I?
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
Implicit Association Test
I wouldn't classify myself as prejudiced. Privileged, sure. Aware of my privilege, absolutely. I never would say that I discriminate consciously against people. I have friends of many races and ethnicities; I have friends who are gay and straight. I'd like to consider myself as open to learning from and with the people around me, but I realize that it is likely that I'm in more of a bubble than I'd care to admit. Many of my friends are white, middle- to upper-class Christians. I grew up in a suburb of a Southern city in a majority white area. My high school, while diverse largely self-segregated itself into different cliques of students. And while I don't think I consciously judge those who are different from me, I imagined that subconsciously I've learned to associate good and bad with different groups of people.
That's where this implicit association test comes in. I've taken a couple of these before. During the test I was so focused on my fingers doing the right thing, and the fact that I couldn't really read the screen that I felt like it was hard to do the test. I wonder if being good at video games - or having the right type of glasses would have helped.
My results were "moderate automatic preference to other people over arabs." I was not surprised by the results, because I've found that automatically with these types of tests it is likely that you will choose the familiar. I do think that there is validity to the test though, especially in understanding that all people have some unconscious subtle preferences in the world around them. These attitudes color our interactions and our thoughts, and therefore are important.
That's where this implicit association test comes in. I've taken a couple of these before. During the test I was so focused on my fingers doing the right thing, and the fact that I couldn't really read the screen that I felt like it was hard to do the test. I wonder if being good at video games - or having the right type of glasses would have helped.
My results were "moderate automatic preference to other people over arabs." I was not surprised by the results, because I've found that automatically with these types of tests it is likely that you will choose the familiar. I do think that there is validity to the test though, especially in understanding that all people have some unconscious subtle preferences in the world around them. These attitudes color our interactions and our thoughts, and therefore are important.
Sunday, February 6, 2011
Race words
The first six words that come to mind when I think of race are:
- socially constructed
- culturally defined
- important
- beautiful
Race defines much of our society and the way people interact with each other.
http://michele-norris.com/the-race-card-2/
- socially constructed
- culturally defined
- important
- beautiful
Race defines much of our society and the way people interact with each other.
http://michele-norris.com/the-race-card-2/
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